Crystal structure of the pheromone Er-13 from the ciliate Euplotes raikovi, with implications for a protein-protein association model in pheromone/receptor interactions

J Struct Biol. 2022 Mar;214(1):107812. doi: 10.1016/j.jsb.2021.107812. Epub 2021 Nov 17.

Abstract

In the ciliate Euplotes raikovi, water-borne protein pheromones promote the vegetative cell growth and mating by competitively binding as autocrine and heterologous signals to putative cell receptors represented by membrane-bound pheromone isoforms. A previously determined crystal structure of pheromone Er-1 supported a pheromone/receptor binding model in which strong protein-protein interactions result from the cooperative utilization of two distinct types of contact interfaces that arrange molecules into linear chains, and these into two-dimensional layers. We have now determined the crystal structure of a new pheromone, Er-13, isolated from cultures that are strongly mating reactive withculturessource of pheromone Er-1.The comparison between the Er-1 and Er-13 crystal structuresreinforces the fundamental of the cooperative model of pheromone/receptor binding, in that the molecules arrange into linear chains taking a rigorously alternate opposite orientation reflecting the presumed mutual orientation of pheromone and receptor molecules on the cell surface. In addition, the comparison provides two new lines of evidence for a univocal rationalization of observations on the differentbehaviourbetween the autocrine and heterologous pheromone/receptor complexes. (i) In the Er-13 crystal, chains do not form layers which thus appear to be an over-structureunique tothe Er-1 crystal, not essential for the pheromone signalling mechanisms. (ii) In both crystal structures, the intra-chain interfaces are equally derived from burying amino-acid side-chains mostly residing on helix-3 of the three-helical pheromonefold. This helix is thus identified as the key structural motif underlying the pheromone activity, in line with its tight intra- and interspecificstructuralconservation.

Keywords: Ciliate mating; Protein–protein interactions; Self/non-self recognition; Signal proteins; Three-helix proteins; Water-borne pheromones.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Euplotes* / chemistry
  • Euplotes* / metabolism
  • Membrane Proteins / chemistry
  • Pheromones / chemistry
  • Pheromones / metabolism
  • Protein Binding
  • Protozoan Proteins / metabolism

Substances

  • Membrane Proteins
  • Pheromones
  • Protozoan Proteins