Cholesterol-binding sequence is a key regulatory motif of cellular folding and conformational activation for C-reactive protein

Human, rat, and mouse C-reactive protein (CRP) possess distinct expression patterns, but have similar conformations and conserved in vivo functions. We have previously demonstrated that this level-function mismatch is delicately tuned by the hidden activities of unfolded CRP. The cholesterol-binding sequence (CBS; a.a. 35–47) is a major functional motif exposed on monomeric CRP, which is the unfolded and activated conformation of CRP. We replaced the CBS of rat CRP with that of either mouse or human CRP, yielding two grafting mutants with unaffected pentameric assembly. However, these mutants exhibited altered cellular foldability and conformational activation efficiency that matched those of the CRP that provided the grafted CBS. These results indicate that CBS is a critical regulatory motif, whose variation maintains the pentameric assembly of CRP but derives distinct cellular foldabilities and conformational activation efficiencies, therefore helping to ensure that CRPs with various expression patterns exhibit overall conserved functions.

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