Affiliation:
1. Graduate School of Life Science, University of Hyogo, Ako-gun, Japan
2. Graduate School of Science and Technology, Gunma University, Kiryu, Japan
Abstract
Background:
Head-to-tail polymerising domains generating heterogeneous aggregates
are generally difficult to crystallise. DIX domains, exclusively found in the Wnt signalling
pathway, are polymerising factors following this head-to-tail arrangement; moreover, they are
considered to play a key role in the heterotypic interaction between Dishevelled (Dvl) and Axin,
which are cytoplasmic proteins also positively and negatively regulating the canonical Wnt/β-
catenin signalling pathway, but this interaction mechanism is still unknown.
Objective:
This study mainly aimed to clarify whether the Dvl2 and Axin-DIX domains (Dvl2-DIX
and Axin-DIX, respectively) form a helical polymer in a head-to-tail way during complexation.
Methods:
Axin-DIX (DAX) and Dvl2-DIX (DIX), carrying polymerisation-blocking mutations,
were expressed as a fusion protein by using a flexible peptide linker to fuse the C-terminal of the
former to the N-terminal of the latter, enforcing a defined 1:1 stoichiometry between them.
Results:
The crystal of the DAX–DIX fusion protein diffracted to a resolution of about 0.3 nm and
a data set was collected at a 0.309 nm resolution. The structure was solved via the molecular
replacement method by using the DIX and DAX structures. A packing analysis of the crystal
revealed the formation of a tandem heterodimer in a head-to-tail way, as predicted by the Wntsignalosome
model.
Conclusion:
The results demonstrated that the combination of polymerisation-blocking mutations
and a fusion protein of two head-to-tail polymerising domains is effective especially for
crystallising complexes among heterologous polymerising proteins or domains.
Funder
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Biochemistry,General Medicine,Structural Biology