Bonding for color

A RIKEN-led team of molecular biologists has determined the specific bonding leading to the formation of a protein complex involved in distributing pigment throughout the skin. Disruption of this membrane transport complex leads to the rare, lethal Griscelli syndrome for which there is no effective treatment.

Patients show symptoms of albinism, suffer immunodeficiency, and typically die in early childhood. The work may stimulate the development of therapeutic drugs for the condition.

Members of the Rab protein family—of which there are more than 60 in humans—are thought to be essential to membrane trafficking, an important form of communication and distribution within cells. Rab proteins are typically bound to membranes either in an inactive guanine diphosphate form or an active triphosphate form which works through specific effector molecules to promote membrane trafficking.

The pigment melanin, which protects against radiation damage, is made and distributed within vesicles called melanosomes in skin color cells known as melanocytes. Rab27, which comes in two forms A and B, binds into a complex with the effector protein Slac2-a and myosin Va to transfer melanosomes onto actin filaments. The complex then transports the melanosomes along the filaments to where Rab27 uses another effector molecule to anchor them to the outer membrane of the cell.

Researchers from the RIKEN Systems and Structural Biology Center in Yokohama together with colleagues from Tohoku University were able to crystallize the Rab27B/Slac2-a complex and solve its structure using x-ray diffraction. As active Rab27 proteins are notoriously difficult to crystallize, this was the first mammalian complex where the binding of such a protein with its effector molecule could be thoroughly investigated. The results were published recently in the journal Structure1.

The researchers found three contact regions between Rab27B and Slac2-a, of which only one was involved in specific recognition. Mutations affecting any of the several specific intermolecular hydrogen bonds in this region were fundamentally disruptive, and some of them led to Griscelli’s syndrome. The group was able to verify the structure by taking another Rab protein, Rab3A, and engineering it to bind Slac2-a. The Rab3A amino acid sequence had to be altered by only four amino acid residues in the critical binding area to form the complex with Slac2-a.

“We are hoping that pharmaceutical companies will be able to use our structure as a basis for drugs which can be used to treat conditions like Griscelli’s syndrome,” says first author Mutsuko Kukimoto-Niino.

Reference

1. Kukimoto-Niino, M., Sakamoto, A., Kanno, E., Hanawa-Suetsugu, K., Terada, T., Shirouzu, M., Fukuda, M. & Yokoyama, S. Structural basis for the exclusive specificity of Slac2-a/melanophilin for the Rab27 GTPases. Structure 16, 1478–1490 (2008).

The corresponding author for this highlight is based at the RIKEN Systems and Structural Biology Research Center

Media Contact

Saeko Okada ResearchSEA

All latest news from the category: Health and Medicine

This subject area encompasses research and studies in the field of human medicine.

Among the wide-ranging list of topics covered here are anesthesiology, anatomy, surgery, human genetics, hygiene and environmental medicine, internal medicine, neurology, pharmacology, physiology, urology and dental medicine.

Back to home

Comments (0)

Write a comment

Newest articles

High-energy-density aqueous battery based on halogen multi-electron transfer

Traditional non-aqueous lithium-ion batteries have a high energy density, but their safety is compromised due to the flammable organic electrolytes they utilize. Aqueous batteries use water as the solvent for…

First-ever combined heart pump and pig kidney transplant

…gives new hope to patient with terminal illness. Surgeons at NYU Langone Health performed the first-ever combined mechanical heart pump and gene-edited pig kidney transplant surgery in a 54-year-old woman…

Biophysics: Testing how well biomarkers work

LMU researchers have developed a method to determine how reliably target proteins can be labeled using super-resolution fluorescence microscopy. Modern microscopy techniques make it possible to examine the inner workings…

Partners & Sponsors