PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

The C-terminal random coil region tunes the Ca²⁺-binding affinity of S100A4 through conformational activation.

  • Annette Duelli,
  • Bence Kiss,
  • Ida Lundholm,
  • Andrea Bodor,
  • Maxim V Petoukhov,
  • Dmitri I Svergun,
  • László Nyitray,
  • Gergely Katona

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097654
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 5
p. e97654

Abstract

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S100A4 interacts with many binding partners upon Ca2+ activation and is strongly associated with increased metastasis formation. In order to understand the role of the C-terminal random coil for the protein function we examined how small angle X-ray scattering of the wild-type S100A4 and its C-terminal deletion mutant (residues 1-88, Δ13) changes upon Ca2+ binding. We found that the scattering intensity of wild-type S100A4 changes substantially in the 0.15-0.25 Å-1 q-range whereas a similar change is not visible in the C-terminus deleted mutant. Ensemble optimization SAXS modeling indicates that the entire C-terminus is extended when Ca2+ is bound. Pulsed field gradient NMR measurements provide further support as the hydrodynamic radius in the wild-type protein increases upon Ca2+ binding while the radius of Δ13 mutant does not change. Molecular dynamics simulations provide a rational explanation of the structural transition: the positively charged C-terminal residues associate with the negatively charged residues of the Ca2+-free EF-hands and these interactions loosen up considerably upon Ca2+-binding. As a consequence the Δ13 mutant has increased Ca2+ affinity and is constantly loaded at Ca2+ concentration ranges typically present in cells. The activation of the entire C-terminal random coil may play a role in mediating interaction with selected partner proteins of S100A4.