Biomolecules (Dec 2021)

Mechanism of Zn<sup>2+</sup> and Ca<sup>2+</sup> Binding to Human S100A1

  • Viktoriia E. Baksheeva,
  • Andrei Yu. Roman,
  • Claude Villard,
  • François Devred,
  • Deborah Byrne,
  • Dahbia Yatoui,
  • Arthur O. Zalevsky,
  • Alisa A. Vologzhannikova,
  • Andrey S. Sokolov,
  • Sergei E. Permyakov,
  • Andrey V. Golovin,
  • Gary S. Shaw,
  • Philipp O. Tsvetkov,
  • Evgeni Yu. Zernii

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biom11121823
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
p. 1823

Abstract

Read online

S100A1 is a member of the S100 family of small ubiquitous Ca2+-binding proteins, which participates in the regulation of cell differentiation, motility, and survival. It exists as homo- or heterodimers. S100A1 has also been shown to bind Zn2+, but the molecular mechanisms of this binding are not yet known. In this work, using ESI-MS and ITC, we demonstrate that S100A1 can coordinate 4 zinc ions per monomer, with two high affinity (KD~4 and 770 nm) and two low affinity sites. Using competitive binding experiments between Ca2+ and Zn2+ and QM/MM molecular modeling we conclude that Zn2+ high affinity sites are located in the EF-hand motifs of S100A1. In addition, two lower affinity sites can bind Zn2+ even when the EF-hands are saturated by Ca2+, resulting in a 2Ca2+:S100A1:2Zn2+ conformer. Finally, we show that, in contrast to calcium, an excess of Zn2+ produces a destabilizing effect on S100A1 structure and leads to its aggregation. We also determined a higher affinity to Ca2+ (KD~0.16 and 24 μm) than was previously reported for S100A1, which would allow this protein to function as a Ca2+/Zn2+-sensor both inside and outside cells, participating in diverse signaling pathways under normal and pathological conditions.

Keywords