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  4. Dynamin-2 R465W Mutation Induces Long Range Perturbation In Highly Ordered Oligomeric Structures
 
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Dynamin-2 R465W Mutation Induces Long Range Perturbation In Highly Ordered Oligomeric Structures

Date Issued
2020-10-23
Author(s)
Cárdenas, Ana  
Facultad de Ciencias  
Latorre, Ramón  
Facultad de Ciencias  
Neely, Alan  
Facultad de Ciencias  
Fernando Hinostroza
Ingrid Araya‐Durán
Vanessa Marabolí
Jonathan Canan
Maximiliano Rojas
Daniel Aguayo
Fernando D. González‐Nilo
DOI
10.1038/s41598-020-75216-0
WoS ID
WOS:000586485700009
Abstract
Abstract High order oligomers are crucial for normal cell physiology, and protein function perturbed by missense mutations underlies several autosomal dominant diseases. Dynamin-2 is one of such protein forming helical oligomers that catalyze membrane fission. Mutations in this protein, where R465W is the most frequent, cause dominant centronuclear myopathy, but the molecular mechanisms underpinning the functional modifications remain to be investigated. To unveil the structural impact of this mutation in dynamin-2, we used full-atom molecular dynamics simulations and coarse-grained models and built dimers and helices of wild-type (WT) monomers, mutant monomers, or both WT and mutant monomers combined. Our results show that the mutation R465W causes changes in the interactions with neighbor amino acids that propagate through the oligomer. These new interactions perturb the contact between monomers and favor an extended conformation of the bundle signaling element (BSE), a dynamin region that transmits the conformational changes from the GTPase domain to the rest of the protein. This extended configuration of the BSE that is only relevant in the helices illustrates how a small change in the microenvironment surrounding a single residue can propagate through the oligomer structures of dynamin explaining how dominance emerges in large protein complexes.
Subjects

Multidisciplinary Sci...

Multidisciplinary

OCDE Subjects

Multidisciplinary

Quartile (Date Issued)
Q1
License
acceso abierto
Open Science Path
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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