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Publication : Identification and mutagenesis of a highly conserved domain in troponin T responsible for troponin I binding: potential role for coiled coil interaction.

First Author  Stefancsik R Year  1998
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  95
Issue  3 Pages  957-62
PubMed ID  9448267 Mgi Jnum  J:45650
Mgi Id  MGI:1195805 Doi  10.1073/pnas.95.3.957
Citation  Stefancsik R, et al. (1998) Identification and mutagenesis of a highly conserved domain in troponin T responsible for troponin I binding: potential role for coiled coil interaction. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 95(3):957-62
abstractText  Troponin T (TnT), a thin filament myofibrillar protein, is essential for the Ca2+ regulation of striated muscle contraction in vertebrates, both in vivo and in vitro. To understand the role of TnT in this process, its interaction with two other troponin components, troponin I (TnI) and troponin C (TnC) was examined by using the yeast two hybrid system, which is a genetic approach to detect protein-protein interactions. Computer assisted analysis of phylogenetically distant TnT amino acid sequences unveiled a highly conserved protein domain that is characterized by a heptad repeat (HR) motif with a potential for alpha-helical coiled coil formation. A similar, potentially coiled coil forming domain is also conserved in all known TnI sequences. These protein motifs appeared to be the regions where TnI-TnT interaction may take place. Deletions and point mutations in TnT, which disrupted its HR motif, severely reduced or abolished TnI binding, but binding to TnC was not affected, indicating that the TnT-TnI and TnT-TnC binary interactions can be uncoupled. Remarkably, the truncated fragments of TnT and TnI in which the HR motifs were retained showed binary interaction in the yeast two hybrid system. It was also observed that the formation of the TnT-TnI heterodimers is favored over the homodimers TnT-TnT and TnI-TnI. These results indicate that the evolutionarily conserved HR motifs may play a role in TnT-TnI dimerization, presumably through the formation of alpha-helical coiled coils.
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