The Ca2+ response of a smart forisome protein is dependent on polymerization.

Rose J; Brand I; Bilstein-Schloemer M; Jachimska B; Twyman RM; Prüfer D; Noll GA

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Forisomes are giant self-assembling mechanoproteins that undergo reversible structural changes in response to Ca2+ and various other stimuli. Artificial forisomes assembled from the monomer MtSEO-F1 can be used as smart biomaterials, but the molecular basis of their functionality is not understood. To determine the role of protein polymerization in forisome activity, we tested the Ca2+ association of MtSEO-F1 dimers (the basic polymerization unit) by circular dichroism spectroscopy and microscale thermophoresis. We found that soluble MtSEO-F1 dimers neither associate with Ca2+ nor undergo structural changes. However, polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy revealed that aggregated MtSEO-F1 dimers and fully-assembled forisomes associate with Ca2+ , allowing the hydration of poorly-hydrated protein areas. A change in the signal profile of complete forisomes indicated that Ca2+ interacts with negatively-charged regions in the protein complexes that only become available during aggregation. We conclude that aggregation is required to establish the Ca2+ response of forisome polymers.

Details about the publication

JournalProtein Science (Protein Sci)
Volume31
Issue3
Page range602-612
StatusPublished
Release year2022 (31/03/2022)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1002/pro.4256
KeywordsPlant Proteins; Polymerization

Authors from the University of Münster

Noll, Gundula
Plant Biotechnology - Group Prof. Dirk Prüfer