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      The isolated C-terminal domain of Ring1B is a dimer made of stable, well-structured monomers.

      Biochemistry
      Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Chromatography, Gel, DNA-Binding Proteins, chemistry, isolation & purification, metabolism, Dimerization, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Mice, Molecular Sequence Data, Polycomb Repressive Complex 1, Protein Binding, Protein Denaturation, Protein Folding, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Repressor Proteins, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases

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          Abstract

          The Ring1B is a core subunit protein of the PRC1 (polycomb repressive complex 1), which plays key roles in the regulation of the Homeobox gene expression, X-chromosome inactivation, stem cell self-renewal, and tumorigenesis. The C-terminal region of Ring1B interacts with RYBP, a transcriptional repressor in transiently transfected cells, and also with M33, another transcriptional repressor involved in mesoderm patterning. In this work, we show that the C-terminal domain of Ring1B, C-Ring1B, is a dimer in solution, with a dissociation constant of 200 microM, as shown by NMR, ITC, and analytical gel filtration. Each monomer is stable at physiological conditions in a wide pH range ( approximately 5 kcal mol-1 at 298 K), with a well-formed core and a spherical shape. The dimer has a high content of alpha-helix and beta-sheet, as indicated by FTIR spectra, and it is formed by the mutual docking of the preformed folded monomers. Since the C-terminal region is important for interaction with other proteins of the PRC1, the dimerization and the presence of those well-structured monomers might be a form of regulation.

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