Residue proximity information and protein model discrimination using saturation-suppressor mutagenesis

Elife. 2015 Dec 30:4:e09532. doi: 10.7554/eLife.09532.

Abstract

Identification of residue-residue contacts from primary sequence can be used to guide protein structure prediction. Using Escherichia coli CcdB as the test case, we describe an experimental method termed saturation-suppressor mutagenesis to acquire residue contact information. In this methodology, for each of five inactive CcdB mutants, exhaustive screens for suppressors were performed. Proximal suppressors were accurately discriminated from distal suppressors based on their phenotypes when present as single mutants. Experimentally identified putative proximal pairs formed spatial constraints to recover >98% of native-like models of CcdB from a decoy dataset. Suppressor methodology was also applied to the integral membrane protein, diacylglycerol kinase A where the structures determined by X-ray crystallography and NMR were significantly different. Suppressor as well as sequence co-variation data clearly point to the X-ray structure being the functional one adopted in vivo. The methodology is applicable to any macromolecular system for which a convenient phenotypic assay exists.

Keywords: Pairwise contacts; biophysics; model discrimination; none; protein stability; structural biology; structure prediction.

MeSH terms

  • Bacterial Proteins / chemistry*
  • Bacterial Proteins / genetics
  • Diacylglycerol Kinase / chemistry*
  • Diacylglycerol Kinase / genetics
  • Escherichia coli / chemistry
  • Escherichia coli / enzymology*
  • Escherichia coli / genetics
  • Models, Molecular
  • Mutagenesis*
  • Protein Conformation
  • Suppression, Genetic*

Substances

  • Bacterial Proteins
  • CcdB protein, Plasmid F
  • Diacylglycerol Kinase

Grants and funding

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.