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Journal Article

Exon Inclusion Modulates Conformational Plasticity and Autoinhibition of the Intersectin 1 SH3A Domain

MPS-Authors

Schmitt,  Xiao Jakob
Ion Mobility-Mass Spectrometry, Institute of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Freie Universität Berlin;
Molecular Physics, Fritz Haber Institute, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Gerth, F., Jäpel, M., Sticht, J., Kuropka, B., Schmitt, X. J., Driller, J. H., et al. (2019). Exon Inclusion Modulates Conformational Plasticity and Autoinhibition of the Intersectin 1 SH3A Domain. Structure, 27(6), 977-987. doi:10.1016/j.str.2019.03.020.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0003-BD7E-C
Abstract
The scaffolding protein intersectin 1 plays important roles in clathrin-mediated endocytosis and in the replenishment of release-ready synaptic vesicles (SV). Two splice variants of intersectin's SH3A domain are expressed in the brain, and association of the neuron-specific variant with synapsin I has been shown to enable sustained neurotransmission and to be regulated by an adjacent C-terminal motif. Here, we demonstrate that the ubiquitously expressed short SH3A variant of intersectin 1 interacts with an N-terminal intramolecular sequence that operates synergistically with the C-terminal motif. NMR spectroscopic investigations show that the five-amino acid insertion into the β strand 2 of the neuronal SH3A variant introduces conformational plasticity incompatible with binding of the N-terminal sequence. The difference in the autoregulatory mechanism of the domain's variants differentially affects its synaptic binding partners, thereby establishing alternative splicing in conjunction with autoinhibitory motif variation as a mechanism to regulate protein interaction networks.