Using Optical Tweezers to Monitor Allosteric Signals Through Changes in Folding Energy Landscapes

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Abstract

Signaling proteins are composed of conserved protein interaction domains that serve as allosteric regulatory elements of enzymatic or binding activities. The ubiquitous, structurally conserved cyclic nucleotide binding (CNB) domain is found covalently linked to proteins with diverse folds that perform multiple biological functions. Given that the structures of cAMP-bound CNB domains in different proteins are very similar, it remains a challenge to determine how this domain allosterically regulates such diverse protein functions and folds. Instead of a structural perspective, we focus our attention on the energy landscapes underlying the CNB domains and their responses to cAMP binding. We show that optical tweezers is an ideal tool to investigate how cAMP binding coupled to interdomain interactions remodel the energy landscape of the regulatory subunit of protein kinase A (PKA), which harbors two CNB domains. We mechanically manipulate and probe the unfolding and refolding behavior of the CNB domains as isolated structures or selectively as part of the PKA regulatory subunit, and in the presence and absence of cAMP. Optical tweezers allows us to dissect the changes in the energy landscape associated with cAMP binding, and to examine the allosteric interdomain interactions triggered by the cyclic nucleotide. This single molecule approach can be used to study other modular, multidomain signaling proteins found in nature.

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Bai, L., Malmosi, M., Good, L., & Maillard, R. A. (2022). Using Optical Tweezers to Monitor Allosteric Signals Through Changes in Folding Energy Landscapes. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 2478, pp. 483–510). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-2229-2_18

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