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Journal of Molecular Biology 2010-Jul

Crystal structure of mouse MD-1 with endogenous phospholipid bound in its cavity.

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Hitomi Harada
Umeharu Ohto
Yoshinori Satow

Keywords

Abstract

MD-1 is a glycoprotein that associates with a B-cell-specific RP105 protein and has a low sequence identity of 16% to MD-2 that associates with Toll-like receptor 4 and recognizes endotoxic lipopolysaccharide. MD-1 and RP105 are supposed to mediate lipopolysaccharide recognition; however, little is known about their structures and functions. Here, the crystal structure of mouse MD-1 is determined at 1.65 A resolution. MD-1 has a hydrophobic cavity sandwiched by two beta-sheets as is MD-2. The cavity is 25 A long, 5 A wide, and 10 A deep: longer, narrower, and shallower than that of MD-2. No charged residues are located on the cavity entrance. MD-1 is primarily monomeric in solution but shows a dimeric assembly in the crystal lattices, with their cavity entrances facing each other. In the cavity, electron densities attributable to phosphatidylcholine are located. Together with the binding assay with tetra-acylated lipid IVa, MD-1 is shown to be a lipid-binding coreceptor.

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