In Silico Structure-Based Interactomic Analysis of the Scaffolding Protein DCAF7
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WD40 domains share a widespread β-propeller fold, and often act as versatile scaffold proteins. Despite their central role in organizing dynamic cellular complexes, the molecular and structural mechanisms of many WD40 proteins remain poorly understood. Among them, DCAF7, an ubiquitously expressed and essential gene in human, also encodes a highly conserved WD40 protein in eukaryotic organisms. It is known to interact with multiple and functionnally diverse partners to coordinates cellular activity of several protein kinases as well as transcriptional regulators, thereby modulating key cellular processes such as cell growth, differentiation, and transcriptional regulation. However, the precise mode of action of DCAF7 is unknown and its important divergence in sequence from better characterize WD40 prevent information transfer by similarity.
Structural interactomic can reveal how protein–protein interactions (PPIs) occur within an organism and are essential for understanding biological functions and developing new therapeutic strategies. Using SLiMAn2, AlphaFold2/3 and PSSMsearch, we identified a conserved α-helical short linear motif (SLiM) in several well known DCAF7 partners that binds to the top surface of its β-propeller. This motif was subsequently used to generate a regular expression, to identify potential new direct binders across the DCAF7 meta-interactome and the human proteome. Domain-domain interactions were also predicted for some other partners. Finally, modeling of oligomeric complexes with such new hits reveals the structural basis of DCAF7 scaffolding, with links to neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism.