IIBBA   05544
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES BIOQUIMICAS DE BUENOS AIRES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Targeting mechanism of the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor by a prototypical viral oncoprotein. Structural modularity, intrinsic disorder and phosphorylation of human papillomavirus E7.
Autor/es:
CHEMES LB; SÁNCHEZ IE; SMAL C; DE PRAT GAY G
Revista:
FEBS JOURNAL
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Año: 2010 vol. 277 p. 973 - 988
ISSN:
1742-464X
Resumen:
DNA tumor viruses ensure genome amplification by hijacking the cellular
replication machinery and forcing infected cells to enter the S phase.
The retinoblastoma (Rb) protein controls the G1/S checkpoint, and is
targeted by several viral oncoproteins, among these the E7 protein from
human papillomaviruses (HPVs). A quantitative investigation of the
interaction mechanism between the HPV16 E7 protein and the RbAB domain
in solution revealed that 90% of the binding energy is determined by the
LxCxE motif, with an additional binding determinant (1.0 kcal.mol(-1))
located in the C-terminal domain of E7, establishing a dual-contact
mode. The stoichiometry and subnanomolar affinity of E7 indicated that
it can bind RbAB as a monomer. The low-risk HPV11 E7 protein bound 2.0
kcal.mol(-1) more weakly than the high-risk HPV16 and HPV18 type
counterparts, but the modularity and binding mode were conserved.
Phosphorylation at a conserved casein kinase II site in the natively
unfolded N-terminal domain of E7 affected the local conformation by
increasing the polyproline II content and stabilizing an extended
conformation, which allowed for a tighter interaction with the Rb
protein. Thus, the E7-RbAB interaction involves multiple motifs within
the N-terminal domain of E7 and at least two conserved interaction
surfaces in RbAB. We discussed a mechanistic model of the interaction of
the Rb protein with a viral target in solution, integrated with
structural data and the analysis of other cellular and viral proteins,
which provided information about the balance of interactions involving
the Rb protein and how these determine the progression into either the
normal cell cycle or transformation.

