Journal of Synchrotron Radiation

Volume 15, Part 3 (May 2008)


diffraction structural biology



J. Synchrotron Rad. (2008). 15, 285-287    [ doi:10.1107/S0909049508004470 ]

Mutagenesis of the crystal contact of acidic fibroblast growth factor

E. Honjo, T. Tamada, M. Adachi, R. Kuroki, A. Meher and M. Blaber

Abstract: An attempt has been made to improve a crystal contact of human acidic fibroblast growth factor (haFGF; 140 amino acids) to control the crystal growth, because haFGF crystallizes only as a thin-plate form, yielding crystals suitable for X-ray but not neutron diffraction. X-ray crystal analysis of haFGF showed that the Glu81 side chain, located at a crystal contact between haFGF molecules, is in close proximity with an identical residue related by crystallographic symmetry, suggesting that charge repulsion may disrupt suitable crystal-packing interactions. To investigate whether the Glu residue affects the crystal-packing interactions, haFGF mutants in which Glu81 was replaced by Ala, Val, Leu, Ser and Thr were constructed. Although crystals of the Ala and Leu mutants were grown as a thin-plate form by the same precipitant (formate) as the wild type, crystals of the Ser and Thr mutants were grown with increased thickness, yielding a larger overall crystal volume. X-ray structural analysis of the Ser mutant determined at 1.35 Å resolution revealed that the hydroxy groups of Ser are linked by hydrogen bonds mediated by the formate used as a precipitant. This approach to engineering crystal contacts may contribute to the development of large protein crystals for neutron crystallography.

Keywords: acidic fibroblast growth factor; crystal contacts; mutagenesis.

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