Co-reporter:Stephen Hearnshaw, Claire West, Chloe Singleton, Liang Zhou, Margaret A. Kihlken, Richard W. Strange, Nick E. Le Brun and Andrew M. Hemmings
Biochemistry 2009 Volume 48(Issue 40) pp:
Publication Date(Web):September 11, 2009
DOI:10.1021/bi9011995
Copper trafficking proteins and copper-sensitive regulators are often found to be able to bind multiple Cu(I) ions in the form of Cu(I) clusters. We have determined the high-resolution X-ray crystal structure of an Atx1-like copper chaperone protein from Bacillus subtilis containing a novel tetranuclear Cu(I) cluster. The identities and oxidation states of the cluster ions were established unambiguously by refinement of X-ray energy-dependent anomalous scattering factors. The [Cu4(S-Cys)4(N-His)2] cluster geometry provides new structural insights into not only the binding of multiple cuprous ions by metallochaperones but also protein-associated tetranuclear Cu(I) clusters, including those found in eukaryotic copper-responsive transcription factors.
Co-reporter:Thomas A. Clarke, Gemma L. Kemp, Jessica H. Van Wonderen, Rose-Marie A. S. Doyle, Jeffrey A. Cole, Nick Tovell, Myles R. Cheesman, Julea N. Butt, David J. Richardson and Andrew M. Hemmings
Biochemistry 2008 Volume 47(Issue 12) pp:
Publication Date(Web):March 1, 2008
DOI:10.1021/bi702175w
The pentaheme cytochrome c nitrite reductase (NrfA) of Escherichia coli is responsible for nitrite reduction during anaerobic respiration when nitrate is scarce. The NrfA active site consists of a hexacoordinate high-spin heme with a lysine ligand on the proximal side and water/hydroxide or substrate on the distal side. There are four further highly conserved active site residues including a glutamine (Q263) positioned 8 Å from the heme iron for which the side chain, unusually, coordinates a conserved, essential calcium ion. Mutation of this glutamine to the more usual calcium ligand, glutamate, results in an increase in the Km for nitrite by around 10-fold, while Vmax is unaltered. Protein film voltammetry showed that lower potentials were required to detect activity from NrfA Q263E when compared with native enzyme, consistent with the introduction of a negative charge into the vicinity of the active site heme. EPR and MCD spectroscopic studies revealed the high spin state of the active site to be preserved, indicating that a water/hydroxide molecule is still coordinated to the heme in the resting state of the enzyme. Comparison of the X-ray crystal structures of the as-prepared, oxidized native and mutant enzymes showed an increased bond distance between the active site heme Fe(III) iron and the distal ligand in the latter as well as changes to the structure and mobility of the active site water molecule network. These results suggest that an important function of the unusual Q263-calcium ion pair is to increase substrate affinity through its role in supporting a network of hydrogen bonded water molecules stabilizing the active site heme distal ligand.
Co-reporter:Olatomirin O. Kolade, Vicki A. Bamford, Gema Ancillo Anton, Jonathan D.G. Jones, Pablo Vera, Andrew M. Hemmings
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Proteins and Proteomics 2006 Volume 1764(Issue 6) pp:1043-1053
Publication Date(Web):June 2006
DOI:10.1016/j.bbapap.2006.03.014
Plant leucine rich repeat (LRR) proteins have diverse functions and cellular locations. An important unresolved question involves the role of the cysteine-rich capping domains which flank the LRR domain. Such studies have been hampered by difficulties in producing recombinant LRR proteins in yields sufficient for biochemical analysis. We have used Escherichia coli to overproduce Leucine Rich Protein (LRP), a small model LRR protein from tomato containing approximately five LRRs. The LRP capping domain sequences resemble those from plant disease resistance proteins and receptor-like protein kinases. LRP was purified as a soluble, crystallizable, monomeric protein by renaturation of a GST-fusion protein. The four cysteine residues in LRP were found to form two disulfide bonds, one each in the N- and C-terminal LRR-capping domains, the presence of which is necessary to protect the LRR domain from proteolysis in vitro. Fluorescence and CD spectroscopies together with molecular modelling revealed that structural features of the N-capping domain may be destabilised on reduction. These include a tryptophan stacking interaction and a long α-helix of residues 30–44. LRP deletion mutants lacking the capping domains showed a propensity to aggregate and increased proteolytic sensitivity. These results have important implications for future structure–function studies of plant LRR proteins.
Co-reporter:
Nature Structural and Molecular Biology 1999 6(12) pp:1104 - 1107
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1038/70039
Co-reporter:
Nature Structural and Molecular Biology 1999 6(3) pp:243-252
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1038/6683
The crystal structure of the cytotoxic endonuclease domain from the bacterial
toxin colicin E9 in complex with its cognate immunity protein Im9 reveals
that the inhibitor does not bind at the active site, the core of which comprises
the HNH motif found in intron-encoded homing endonucleases, but rather at
an adjacent position leaving the active site exposed yet unable to bind DNA
because of steric and electrostatic clashes with incoming substrate. Although
its mode of action is unorthodox, Im9 is a remarkably effective inhibitor
since it folds within milliseconds and then associates with its target endonuclease
at the rate of diffusion to form an inactive complex with sub-femtomolar binding
affinity. This hyperefficient mechanism of inhibition could be well suited
to other toxic enzyme systems, particularly where the substrate is a polymer
extending beyond the boundaries of the active site.