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  • Disulfide Trapping for Modeling and Structure Determination of Receptor: Chemokine Complexes.

Disulfide Trapping for Modeling and Structure Determination of Receptor: Chemokine Complexes.

Methods in enzymology (2016-02-29)
Irina Kufareva, Martin Gustavsson, Lauren G Holden, Ling Qin, Yi Zheng, Tracy M Handel
ABSTRACT

Despite the recent breakthrough advances in GPCR crystallography, structure determination of protein-protein complexes involving chemokine receptors and their endogenous chemokine ligands remains challenging. Here, we describe disulfide trapping, a methodology for generating irreversible covalent binary protein complexes from unbound protein partners by introducing two cysteine residues, one per interaction partner, at selected positions within their interaction interface. Disulfide trapping can serve at least two distinct purposes: (i) stabilization of the complex to assist structural studies and/or (ii) determination of pairwise residue proximities to guide molecular modeling. Methods for characterization of disulfide-trapped complexes are described and evaluated in terms of throughput, sensitivity, and specificity toward the most energetically favorable crosslinks. Due to abundance of native disulfide bonds at receptor:chemokine interfaces, disulfide trapping of their complexes can be associated with intramolecular disulfide shuffling and result in misfolding of the component proteins; because of this, evidence from several experiments is typically needed to firmly establish a positive disulfide crosslink. An optimal pipeline that maximizes throughput and minimizes time and costs by early triage of unsuccessful candidate constructs is proposed.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Monoclonal ANTI-FLAG® M2-FITC antibody produced in mouse, clone M2, purified immunoglobulin, buffered aqueous solution
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-HA−FITC antibody, Mouse monoclonal, clone HA-7, purified from hybridoma cell culture