posted on 2019-11-25, 19:39authored byZhen Li, Shuyu Chen, Chendi Gao, Zhiwei Yang, Kuo-Chih Shih, Zdravko Kochovski, Guang Yang, Lu Gou, Mu-Ping Nieh, Ming Jiang, Lei Zhang, Guosong Chen
Polymorphism has been the subject of investigation across
different
research disciplines. In biology, polymorphism could be interpreted
in such a way that discrete biomacromolecules can adopt diversiform
specific conformations/packing arrangement, and this polymorph-dependent
property is essential for many biochemical processes. For example,
bacterial flagellar filament, composed of flagellin, switches between
different supercoiled state allowing the bacteria to swim and tumble.
However, in artificial supramolecular systems, it is often challenging
to achieve polymorph control and prediction, and in most cases, two
or more concomitant polymorphs of similar formation energies coexist.
Here, we show that a tetrameric protein with properly oriented binding
sites on its surface can arrange into diverse protein tubes with distinct
helical parameters by adding specifically designed inducing ligands.
We examined several parameters of the ligand that would influence
the protein tube formation and found that the flexibility of the ligand
linker and the dimerization pose of the ligand complex is critical
for the successful production of the tubes and eventually influence
the specific helical polymorphs of the formed tubes. A surface lattice
accommodation model was further developed to rationalize the geometrical
relationship between each helical tube type. Molecular simulation
was used to elucidate the interactions between ligands and SBA and
molecular basis for polymorphic switching of the protein tubes. Moreover,
the kinetics of structural formation was studied and the ligand design
was found that can affect the kinetics of the protein polymerization
pathway. In short, our designed protein tubes serves as an enlightening
system for understanding how a protein polymer composed of a single
protein switches among different helical states.