Structural characterization of the caveolin scaffolding domain in association with cholesterol-rich membranes

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Abstract

Members of the caveolin protein family are implicated in the formation of caveolae and play important roles in a number of signaling pathways and in the regulation of various proteins. We employ complementary spectroscopic methods to study the structure of the caveolin scaffolding domain (CSD) in caveolin-1 fragments, while bound to cholesterol-rich membranes. This key domain is thought to be involved in multiple critical functions that include protein recognition, oligomerization, and cholesterol binding. In our membrane-bound peptides, residues within the flanking intramembrane domain (IMD) are found to adopt an α-helical structure, consistent with its commonly believed helical hairpin conformation. Intriguingly, in these same peptides, we observe a β-stranded conformation for residues in the CSD, contrasting with earlier reports, which commonly do not reflect β-structure. Our experimental data based on solid-state NMR, CD, and FTIR are found to be consistent with computational analyses of the secondary structure preference of the primary sequence. We discuss how our structural data of membrane binding Cav fragments may match certain general features of cholesterol-binding domains and could be consistent with the role for CSD in protein recognition and homo- oligomerization. © 2011 American Chemical Society.

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Hoop, C. L., Sivanandam, V. N., Kodali, R., Srnec, M. N., & Van Der Wel, P. C. A. (2012). Structural characterization of the caveolin scaffolding domain in association with cholesterol-rich membranes. Biochemistry, 51(1), 90–99. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi201356v

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