PLoS ONE (Mar 2011)

Crystal structure of a coiled-coil domain from human ROCK I.

  • Daqi Tu,
  • Yiqun Li,
  • Hyun Kyu Song,
  • Angela V Toms,
  • Christopher J Gould,
  • Scott B Ficarro,
  • Jarrod A Marto,
  • Bruce L Goode,
  • Michael J Eck

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018080
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3
p. e18080

Abstract

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The small GTPase Rho and one of its targets, Rho-associated kinase (ROCK), participate in a variety of actin-based cellular processes including smooth muscle contraction, cell migration, and stress fiber formation. The ROCK protein consists of an N-terminal kinase domain, a central coiled-coil domain containing a Rho binding site, and a C-terminal pleckstrin homology domain. Here we present the crystal structure of a large section of the central coiled-coil domain of human ROCK I (amino acids 535-700). The structure forms a parallel α-helical coiled-coil dimer that is structurally similar to tropomyosin, an actin filament binding protein. There is an unusual discontinuity in the coiled-coil; three charged residues (E613, R617 and D620) are positioned at what is normally the hydrophobic core of coiled-coil packing. We speculate that this conserved irregularity could function as a hinge that allows ROCK to adopt its autoinhibited conformation.