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IDENTIFICATION OF PROTEIN PARTNERS FOR NIBP, A NOVEL NIK-AND IKKB-BINDING PROTEIN THROUGH EXPERIMENTAL, COMPUTATIONAL AND BIOINFORMATICS TECHNIQUES

NIBP is a prototype member of a novel protein family. It forms a novel subcomplex of NIK-NIBP-IKKB and enhances cytokine-induced IKKB-mediated NFKB activation. It is also named TRAPPC9 as a key member of trafficking particle protein (TRAPP) complex II, which is essential in trans-Golgi networking (TGN). The signaling pathways and molecular mechanisms for NIBP actions remain largely unknown. The aim of this research is to identify potential proteins interacting with NIBP, resulting in the regulation of NFKB signaling pathways and other unknown signaling pathways. At the laboratory of Dr. Wenhui Hu in the Department of Neuroscience, Temple University, sixteen partner proteins were experimentally identified that potentially bind to NIBP. NIBP is a novel protein with no entry in the Protein Data Bank. From a computational and bioinformatics standpoint, we use prediction of secondary structure and protein disorder as well as homology-based structural modeling approaches to create a hypothesis on protein-protein interaction between NIBP and the partner proteins. Structurally, NIBP contains three distinct regions. The first region, consisting of 200 amino acids, forms a hybrid helix and beta sheet-based domain possibly similar to Sybindin domain. The second region comprised of approximately 310 residues, forms a tetratrico peptide repeat (TPR) zone. The third region is a 675 residue long all beta sheet and loops zone with as many as 35 strands and only 2 helices, shared by Gryzun-domain containing proteins. It is likely to form two or three beta sheet sandwiches. The TPR regions of many proteins tend to bind to the peptides from disordered regions of other proteins. Many of the 16 potential binding proteins have high levels of disorder. These data suggest that the TPR region in NIBP most likely binds with many of these 16 proteins through peptides and other domains. It is also possible that the Sybindin-like domain and the Gryzun-like domain containing beta sheet sandwiches bind to some of these proteins. / Bioengineering

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TEMPLE/oai:scholarshare.temple.edu:20.500.12613/635
Date January 2013
CreatorsAdhikari, Sombudha
ContributorsKiani, Mohammad F., Hu, Wenhui, Dunbrack, Roland L., Lelkes, Peter I.
PublisherTemple University. Libraries
Source SetsTemple University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation, Text
Format41 pages
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Relationhttp://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/617, Theses and Dissertations

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