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Thymosin-beta-4-fragment

Ac-SDKP, Goralatide, Seraspenide

Quick Stats
Studies 83
Trials 3
Score 3
1996 pubmed

The actin binding site of thymosin beta 4 mapped by mutational analysis.

Van Troys. M M; Dewitte. D D; Goethals. M M; Carlier. M F MF; Vandekerckhove. J J; Ampe. C C

Key Findings

  • The N‑terminal residues 1‑16 must adopt an alpha‑helix to bind actin effectively.
  • A hydrophobic patch (Met6, Ile, Phe12) on one side of the helix and lysines at positions 14 and 18 provide the main contact points with actin.
  • These critical residues are conserved in the beta‑thymosin family and resemble patterns in villin and dematin headpieces.

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY users, any shortened or synthetic version of thymosin‑beta‑4 should retain the first 22 amino acids, especially the helix‑forming N‑terminal segment and the identified hydrophobic/lysine spots, to keep activity. This insight helps guide the design of peptide fragments or analogs, but it doesn’t change dosing recommendations.

Summary

Scientists figured out exactly which parts of thymosin‑beta‑4 stick to actin: the first 16 amino acids need to form a helix, and a small stretch of six amino acids (17‑22) adds important charged spots. Specific hydrophobic and lysine residues are key for the binding, and these spots are shared across related proteins.

Abstract

We characterized in detail the actin binding site of the small actin-sequestering protein thymosin beta 4 (T beta 4) using chemically synthesized full-length T beta 4 variants. The N-terminal part (residues 1-16) and a hexapeptide motif (residues 17-22) form separate structural entities. In both, we identified charged and hydrophobic residues that participate in the actin interaction using chemical cross-linking, complex formation in native gels and actin-sequestering experiments. Quantitative data on the activity of the variants and circular dichroism experiments allow to present a model in which the N-terminal part needs to adopt an alpha-helix for actin binding and interacts through a patch of hydrophobic residues (6M-I-F12) on one side of this helix. Also, electrostatic contacts between actin and lysine residues 18, in the motif, and 14, in the N-terminal alpha-helix, appear important for binding. The residues critical for contacting actin are conserved throughout the beta-thymosin family and in addition to this we identify a similar pattern in the C-terminal headpiece of villin and dematin.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1996

Date

1996-01-15T00:00:00.000Z