Segmental Isotope Labelling of the Prion Protein: Identification of a Key Residue for Copper-Mediated Interdomain Structure
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The cellular prion protein is composed of two domains: a disordered N-terminal toxic effector domain and a three-helix C-terminal regulatory domain. Copper is thought to form a bridge between these two domains, inhibiting the protein’s inherent neurotoxicity. However, the molecular details of how copper interacts with the C-terminal regulatory surface are unclear. To assess the potential role of conserved C-terminal His residues in copper coordination, we applied sortase-mediated ligation to create an expressed, murine prion protein with segmental 15 N-labeling of the N-terminal domain. Pulsed EPR methods applied to a 1:1 protein:copper complex revealed both 14 N and 15 N couplings, consistent with simultaneous coordination of the two protein’s domains to the copper center. Mutagenesis studies localized C-terminal copper coordination to His176, present on the second α-helix. The cumulative EPR results reveal a copper coordination environment composed of three His residues from the protein’s N-terminal domain, along with His176. The feasibility of these findings was tested with AlphaFold 3 simulations. These results further refine the molecular details of the prion protein’s autoregulation, emphasizing the critical role of its copper cofactor. Moreover, this interdisciplinary work demonstrates how sortase-mediated ligation combined with pulsed EPR sensitive to distinct nuclear spin systems provides a new strategy for assessing metal ion binding to proteins.