Skeletal Dysplasia Mutations Effect on Human Filamins' Structure and Mechanosensing

Cells' ability to sense mechanical cues in their environment is crucial for fundamental cellular processes, leading defects in mechanosensing to be linked to many diseases. The actin cross-linking protein Filamin has an important role in the conversion of mechanical forces into biochemical sign...

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Published inScientific reports Vol. 7; no. 1; pp. 4218 - 14
Main Authors Seppälä, Jonne, Bernardi, Rafael C, Haataja, Tatu J K, Hellman, Maarit, Pentikäinen, Olli T, Schulten, Klaus, Permi, Perttu, Ylänne, Jari, Pentikäinen, Ulla
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Nature Publishing Group 26.06.2017
Nature Publishing Group UK
Nature Portfolio
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Summary:Cells' ability to sense mechanical cues in their environment is crucial for fundamental cellular processes, leading defects in mechanosensing to be linked to many diseases. The actin cross-linking protein Filamin has an important role in the conversion of mechanical forces into biochemical signals. Here, we reveal how mutations in Filamin genes known to cause Larsen syndrome and Frontometaphyseal dysplasia can affect the structure and therefore function of Filamin domains 16 and 17. Employing X-ray crystallography, the structure of these domains was first solved for the human Filamin B. The interaction seen between domains 16 and 17 is broken by shear force as revealed by steered molecular dynamics simulations. The effects of skeletal dysplasia associated mutations of the structure and mechanosensing properties of Filamin were studied by combining various experimental and theoretical techniques. The results showed that Larsen syndrome associated mutations destabilize or even unfold domain 17. Interestingly, those Filamin functions that are mediated via domain 17 interactions with other proteins are not necessarily affected as strongly interacting peptide binding to mutated domain 17 induces at least partial domain folding. Mutation associated to Frontometaphyseal dysplasia, in turn, transforms 16-17 fragment from compact to an elongated form destroying the force-regulated domain pair.
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Academy of Finland
National Inst. of Health (NIH) (United States)
USDOE Office of Science (SC)
AC02-05CH11231; 9P41GM104601; 283481; 138327; 278668; 288235; 2000268; jyy2516
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-017-04441-x