Klara Briknarova

Find an error

Name: Briknarová, Klára; Klára Briknarová
Organization: University of Montana , USA
Department: Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Title: Associate(PhD)
Co-reporter:Jessica M. Stine, Gabriel J. H. Ahl, Casey Schlenker, Domnita-Valeria Rusnac, and Klára Briknarová
Biochemistry September 5, 2017 Volume 56(Issue 35) pp:4667-4667
Publication Date(Web):August 18, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.7b00633
Anastellin is a small recombinant fragment derived from the extracellular matrix protein fibronectin; it comprises the first type III (FN3) domain without the two N-terminal β-strands. It inhibits angiogenesis, tumor growth, and metastasis in mouse models and requires endogenous fibronectin for its in vivo anti-angiogenic activity. It binds to fibronectin in vitro and converts the soluble protein to insoluble fibrils that structurally and functionally resemble fibronectin fibrils deposited in the extracellular matrix by cells. Anastellin binds to several FN3 domains in fibronectin, but how it interacts with these domains and why the interactions lead to aggregation of fibronectin are not well understood. In this work, we investigated the interaction between anastellin and the third FN3 domain (3FN3) from fibronectin. We show that anastellin binds with high affinity to a peptide comprising the two N-terminal β-strands from 3FN3, and we present here the structure of the resulting complex. The peptide and anastellin form a composite FN3 domain, with the two N-terminal β-strands from 3FN3 bound in place of the two β-strands that are missing in anastellin. We also demonstrate using disulfide cross-linking that a similar interaction involving the two N-terminal β-strands of 3FN3 occurs when intact 3FN3 binds to anastellin. 3FN3 adopts a compact globular fold in solution, and to interact with anastellin in a manner consistent with our data, it has to open up and expose a β-strand edge that is not accessible in the context of the folded domain.
Co-reporter:Yizhi Sun, Jessica M. Stine, Daniel Z. Atwater, Ayesha Sharmin, J. B. Alexander Ross, and Klára Briknarová
Biochemistry 2015 Volume 54(Issue 6) pp:1390-1400
Publication Date(Web):February 2, 2015
DOI:10.1021/bi501398w
RIZ (retinoblastoma protein-interacting zinc finger protein), also denoted PRDM2, is a transcriptional regulator and tumor suppressor. It was initially identified because of its ability to interact with another well-established tumor suppressor, the retinoblastoma protein (Rb). A short motif, IRCDE, in the acidic region (AR) of RIZ was reported to play an important role in the interaction with the pocket domain of Rb. The IRCDE motif is similar to a consensus Rb-binding sequence LXCXE (where X denotes any amino acid) that is found in several viral Rb-inactivating oncoproteins. To improve our understanding of the molecular basis of binding of Rb to RIZ, we investigated the interaction between purified recombinant AR and the pocket domain of Rb using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, isothermal titration calorimetry, and fluorescence anisotropy experiments. We show that AR is intrinsically disordered and that it binds the pocket domain with submicromolar affinity. We also demonstrate that the interaction between AR and the pocket domain is mediated primarily by the short stretch of residues containing the IRCDE motif and that the contribution of other parts of AR to the interaction with the pocket domain is minimal. Overall, our data provide clear evidence that RIZ is one of the few cellular proteins that can interact directly with the LXCXE-binding cleft on Rb.
Co-reporter:Jessica M. Stine, Yizhi Sun, Geoffrey Armstrong, Bruce E. Bowler, and Klára Briknarová
Biochemistry 2015 Volume 54(Issue 44) pp:6724-6733
Publication Date(Web):October 30, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.5b00818
Fibronectin is a modular extracellular matrix protein that is essential for vertebrate development. The third type III domain (3FN3) in fibronectin interacts with other parts of fibronectin and with anastellin, a protein fragment that causes fibronectin aggregation. 3FN3 opens readily both as an isolated domain in solution and when part of fibronectin in stretched fibrils, and it was proposed that this opening is important for anastellin binding. We determined the structure of 3FN3 using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and we investigated its stability, folding, and unfolding. Similar to most other FN3 domains, 3FN3 contains two antiparallel β-sheets that are composed of three (A, B, and E) and four (C, D, F, and G) β-strands, respectively, and are held together by a conserved hydrophobic interface. cis–trans isomerization of P847 at the end of β-strand C leads to observable conformational heterogeneity in 3FN3, with a cis peptide bond present in almost one-quarter of the molecules. The chemical stability of 3FN3 is relatively low, but the folding rate constant in the absence of denaturant is in the same range as those of other, more stable FN3 domains. Interestingly, the unfolding rate constant in the absence of denaturant is several orders of magnitude higher than the unfolding rate constants of other FN3 domains investigated to date. This unusually fast rate is comparable to the rate of binding of 3FN3 to anastellin at saturating anastellin concentrations, consistent with the model in which 3FN3 has to unfold to interact with anastellin.
S-(5'-deoxyadenosin-5'-yl)-L-Homocysteine
GTP-GAMMA-S SODIUM SALT