Fission yeast cold-sensitive mutants ndal-376 and nda4-108 display a cell cycle block phenotype at the restrictive temperature (cell elongation with the single nucleus) accompanied by an alteration in the nuclear chromatin region. DNA content analysis shows that the onset of DNA synthesis is blocked or greatly delayed in both mutant cells, the block being reversible in nda4-108. Upon release to the permissive temperature, nda4-108 cells resumed replicating DNA, followed by mitosis and cytokinesis. The nda4 phenotype was partly rescued by the addition of Ca21 to the medium; Ca21 plays a positive role in the nda4+ function. The predicted protein sequences of ndal+ and nda4+ isolated by complementation are similar to each other and also, respectively, to those of the budding yeast, MCM2 and CDC46, both of which are members of the gene family required for the initiation of DNA replication. The central domains of these proteins are conserved, whereas the NH2-and COOH-domains are distinct. Results of the disruption of the ndal+ and nda4+ genes demonstrates that they are essential for viability.
A growing list of proteins, including the β-sheet-rich SH3 domain, is known to transiently populate a compact α-helical intermediate before settling into the native structure. Examples have been discovered in cryogenic solvent as well as by pressure jumps. Earlier studies of lambda repressor mutants showed that transient states with excess helix are robust in an all-α protein. Here we extend a previous study of src SH3 domain to two new SH3 sequences, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) and a Fyn mutant, to see how robust such helix-rich transients are to sequence variations in this β-sheet fold. We quantify helical structure by circular dichroism (CD), protein compactness by small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), and transient helical populations by cryo-stopped flow CD. Our results show that transient compact helix-rich intermediates are easily accessible on the folding landscape of different SH3 domains. In molecular dynamics simulations, force field errors are often blamed for transient non-native structure. We suggest that experimental examples of very fast α-rich transient misfolding could become a more subtle test for further force field improvements than observation of the native state alone.
To elucidate a role of the Src homology 3 (SH3)-conserved acidic residue Asp21 of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) SH3 domain, structural changes induced by the D21N mutation (Asp21 --> Asn) were examined by circular dichroism (CD) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopies. In the previous study, we demonstrated that environmental alterations occurred at the side chains of Trp55 and some Tyr residues from the comparison of the near-UV CD spectra of the PI3K SH3 domain with or without a D21N mutation [Okishio, N., et al. (2000) Biopolymers 57, 208-217]. In this work, the affected Tyr residues were identified as Tyr14 and Tyr73 by the CD analysis of a series of mutants, in which every single Tyr residue was replaced by a Phe residue with or without a D21N mutation. The (1)H and (15)N resonance assignments of the PI3K SH3 domain and its D21N mutant revealed that significant chemical shift changes occurred to the aromatic side-chain protons of Trp55 and Tyr14 upon the D21N mutation. All these aromatic residues are implicated in ligand recognition. In addition, the NMR analysis showed that the backbone conformations of Lys15-Asp23, Gly54-Trp55, Asn57-Gly58, and Gly67-Pro70 were affected by the D21N mutation. Furthermore, the (15)N[(1)H] nuclear Overhauser effect values of Tyr14, Glu19, and Glu20 were remarkably changed by the mutation. These results show that the D21N mutation causes structural deformation of more than half of the ligand binding cleft of the domain and provide evidence that Asp21 plays an important role in forming a well-ordered ligand binding cleft in cooperation with the RT loop (Lys15-Glu20).
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