RhoA protein is a small GTPase that acts as a molecular switch. When bound to guanosine triphosphate (GTP), RhoA can activate several key signal pathways. Recently, nanobody Rh57 specific binding with GTP bound active RhoA was discovered and developed as a BRET biosensor without cytotoxicity. To further clarify the nanobody Rh57's mechanism of action, we co-expressed, purified, and crystallized the RhoA-Rh57 nanobody complex and solved the structure by X-ray diffraction with a resolution of 2.76 Å. The structure showed that the interaction is mainly through hydrogen bonds, salt bridges, aromatic-aromatic interactions, and hydrophobic interactions. The involved regions include CDR3 and non-hypervariable loop of Rh57, and the SWI switch loops of RhoA, respectively. The different SWI conformation of inactivated RhoA-GDP prevented the Rh57's binding. The possible explanation of Rh57 as a non-cytotoxic BRET intracellular tracer is that Rh57's binding did not overlap with downstream PRK1 and thus did not interfere with the downstream signaling pathway. Our research provides an in-depth understanding of how nanobodies recognize activated RhoA-GTP while not binding inactivated RhoA-GDP. This structural information may also provide critical information for further optimization of relevant nanobodies.
Keywords: Epitope; GTP; Nanobody; Rh57; RhoA; Structure.
Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.