A Second Backbone: The Contribution of a Buried Asparagine Ladder to the Global and Local Stability of a Leucine-Rich Repeat Protein
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Parallel β-sheet-containing repeat proteins often display a structural motif in which conserved asparagines form a continuous ladder buried within the hydrophobic core. In such "asparagine ladders", the asparagine side-chain amides form a repetitive pattern of hydrogen bonds with neighboring main-chain NH and CO groups. Although asparagine ladders have been thought to be important for stability, there is little experimental evidence to support such speculation. Here we test the contribution of a minimal asparagine ladder from the leucine-rich repeat protein pp32 to stability and investigate lattice rigidity and hydrogen bond character using solution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Point substitutions of the two ladder asparagines of pp32 are strongly destabilizing and decrease the cooperativity of unfolding. The chemical shifts of the ladder side-chain H protons are shifted significantly downfield in the NMR spectrum and have low temperature coefficients, indicative of strong hydrogen bonding. In contrast, the H protons are shifted upfield and have temperature coefficients close to zero, suggesting an asymmetry in hydrogen bond strength along the ladder. Ladder NH groups have weak H-N cross-peak intensities; H-N nuclear Overhauser effect and N CPMG experiments show this to be the result of high rigidity. Hydrogen exchange measurements demonstrate that the ladder NH groups exchange very slowly, with rates approaching the global exchange limit. Overall, these results show that the asparagine side chains are held in a very rigid, nondynamic structure, making a significant contribution to the overall stability. In this regard, buried asparagine ladders can be considered "second backbones" within the cores of their elongated β-sheet host proteins.
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