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Order and disorder—An integrative structure of the...
Journal article

Order and disorder—An integrative structure of the full-length human growth hormone receptor

Abstract

Because of its small size (70 kilodalton) and large content of structural disorder (>50%), the human growth hormone receptor (hGHR) falls between the cracks of conventional high-resolution structural biology methods. Here, we study the structure of the full-length hGHR in nanodiscs with small-angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) as the foundation. We develop an approach that combines SAXS, x-ray diffraction, and NMR spectroscopy data obtained on individual domains and integrate these through molecular dynamics simulations to interpret SAXS data on the full-length hGHR in nanodiscs. The hGHR domains reorient freely, resulting in a broad structural ensemble, emphasizing the need to take an ensemble view on signaling of relevance to disease states. The structure provides the first experimental model of any full-length cytokine receptor in a lipid membrane and exemplifies how integrating experimental data from several techniques computationally may access structures of membrane proteins with long, disordered regions, a widespread phenomenon in biology.

Authors

Kassem N; Araya-Secchi R; Bugge K; Barclay A; Steinocher H; Khondker A; Wang Y; Lenard AJ; Bürck J; Sahin C

Journal

Science Advances, Vol. 7, No. 27,

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Publication Date

July 2, 2021

DOI

10.1126/sciadv.abh3805

ISSN

2375-2548

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