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1.
The ligation of O antigen polysaccharide to lipid A-core oligosaccharide is a late step in the formation of the complex glycolipid known as lipopolysaccharide. Although the process has been localized to the periplasmic face of the inner membrane, details of the ligation mechanism have not been resolved. To date, there is only one gene product (WaaL, often referred to as "ligase") known to be required. There exists a requirement for a specific lipid A-core oligosaccharide acceptor structure for ligation activity, and it has been proposed that the WaaL protein imparts this acceptor specificity. Here the structural requirements in the core oligosaccharide acceptor for O antigen ligation are investigated in prototype serovars of Salmonella enterica. Complementation experiments in mutants with defined core oligosaccharide structure indicate that the specificity of the ligation reaction for a particular core oligosaccharide structure is not dependent on the WaaL protein alone. The data provide the first indication of a more complicated recognition process involving additional cellular components.  相似文献   

2.
In lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis of gram-negative bacteria the lipid A-core oligosaccharide (LA-core) and O-polysaccharide (O-PS) biosynthesis pathways proceed separately and converge in periplasmic space where the waaL-encoded ligase joins O-PS onto LA-core. Enterobacterial common antigen (ECA) biosynthesis follows that of O-PS except that ECA is usually ligated to phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and only rarely to LA-core. In Yersinia enterocolitica serotype O:3 LPS is composed of LA-inner core (IC) onto which a homopolymeric O-PS, a hexasaccharide called outer core (OC), and/or ECA are ligated. We found that an individual O:3 LPS molecule carries either OC or O-PS substitution but not both. Related to this, we identified three genes in Y. enterocolitica O:3 that all expressed O-PS ligase activity in the Escherichia coliΔwaaL mutant. The LPS phenotypes of Y. enterocolitica O:3 single, double and triple ligase mutants indicated that two of ligases, named as WaaL(os) and WaaL(ps) , had a preferred substrate specificity for OC and O-PS, respectively, although with some promiscuity between the ligases; the third ligase named as WaaL(xs) was not involved in LPS or ECA biosynthesis. In Y. enterocolitica O:8 the WaaL(os) homologue (Ye1727) ligated a single pentasaccharide O-unit to LA-IC suggesting that in both Y. enterocolitica O:3 and O:8 WaaL(os) is an oligosaccharide (OS)-specific ligase. Finally, Yersinia pestis and Y. pseudotuberculosis carry only the waaL(ps) gene, while either waaL(os) or waaL(xs) or both are additionally present in other Yersinia species. This is the first report on the presence of three different oligo-/polysaccharide-specific ligases in a single bacterium.  相似文献   

3.
WaaL is a membrane enzyme implicated in ligating undecaprenyl‐diphosphate (Und‐PP)‐linked O antigen to lipid A‐core oligosaccharide. We determined the periplasmic location of a large (EL5) and small (EL4) adjacent loops in the Escherichia coli K‐12 WaaL. Structural models of the EL5 from the K‐12, R1 and R4 E. coli ligases were generated by molecular dynamics. Despite the poor amino acid sequence conservation among these proteins, the models afforded similar folds consisting of two pairs of almost perpendicular α‐helices. One α‐helix in each pair contributes a histidine and an arginine facing each other, which are highly conserved in WaaL homologues. Mutations in either residue rendered WaaL non‐functional, since mutant proteins were unable to restore O antigen surface expression. Replacements of residues located away from the putative catalytic centre and non‐conserved residues within the centre itself did not affect ligation. Furthermore, replacing a highly conserved arginine in EL4 with various amino acids inactivates WaaL function, but functionality reappears when the positive charge is restored by a replacement with lysine. These results lead us to propose that the conserved amino acids in the two adjacent periplasmic loops could interact with Und‐PP, which is the common component in all WaaL substrates.  相似文献   

4.
The WaaL-mediated ligation of O-antigen onto the core region of the lipid A-core block is an important step in the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthetic pathway. Although the LPS biosynthesis has been largely characterized, only a limited amount of in vitro biochemical evidence has been established for the ligation reaction. Such limitations have primarily resulted from the barriers in purifying WaaL homologues and obtaining chemically defined substrates. Accordingly, we describe herein a chemical biology approach that enabled the reconstitution of this ligation reaction. The O-antigen repeating unit (O-unit) of Escherichia coli O86 was first enzymatically assembled via sequential enzymatic glycosylation of a chemically synthesized GalNAc-pyrophosphate-undecaprenyl precursor. Subsequent expression of WaaL through use of a chaperone co-expression system then enabled the demonstration of the in vitro ligation between the synthesized donor (O-unit-pyrophosphate-undecaprenyl) and the isolated lipid A-core acceptor. The previously reported ATP and divalent metal cation dependence were not observed using this system. Further analyses of other donor substrates revealed that WaaL possesses a highly relaxed specificity toward both the lipid moiety and the glycan moiety of the donor. Lastly, three conserved amino acid residues identified by sequence alignment were found essential for the WaaL activity. Taken together, the present work represents an in vitro systematic investigation of the WaaL function using a chemical biology approach, providing a system that could facilitate the elucidation of the mechanism of WaaL-catalyzed ligation reaction.  相似文献   

5.
WaaL is a membrane enzyme that catalyzes a key step in lipopolysaccharide (LPS) synthesis: the glycosidic bonding of a sugar at the proximal end of the undecaprenyl-diphosphate (Und-PP) O-antigen with a terminal sugar of the lipid A-core oligosaccharide (OS). Utilizing an in vitro assay, we demonstrate here that ligation with purified Escherichia coli WaaL occurs without adenosine-5'-triphosphate (ATP) and magnesium ions. Furthermore, E. coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa WaaL proteins cannot catalyze ATP hydrolysis in vitro. We also show that a lysine substitution of the arginine (Arg)-215 residue renders an active protein, whereas WaaL mutants with alanine replacements in the periplasmic-exposed residues Arg-215, Arg-288 and histidine (His)-338 and also the membrane-embedded aspartic acid-389 are nonfunctional. An in silico approach, combining predicted topological information with the analysis of sequence conservation, confirms the importance of a positive charge at the small periplasmic loop of WaaL, since an Arg corresponding to Arg-215 was found at a similar position in all the WaaL homologs. Also, a universally conserved H[NSQ]X(9)GXX[GTY] motif spanning the C-terminal end of the predicted large periplasmic loop and the membrane boundary of the transmembrane helix was identified. The His residue in this motif corresponds to His-338. A survey of LPS structures in which the linkage between O-antigen and lipid A-core OS was elucidated reveals that it is always in the β-configuration, whereas the sugars bound to Und-PP are in the α-configuration. Together, our biochemical and in silico data argue that WaaL proteins use a common reaction mechanism and share features of metal ion-independent inverting glycosyltransferases.  相似文献   

6.
Burkholderia cenocepacia is an important opportunistic pathogen of patients with cystic fibrosis. This bacterium is inherently resistant to a wide range of antimicrobial agents, including high concentrations of antimicrobial peptides. We hypothesized that the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of B. cenocepacia is important for both virulence and resistance to antimicrobial peptides. We identified hldA and hldD genes in B. cenocepacia strain K56-2. These two genes encode enzymes involved in the modification of heptose sugars prior to their incorporation into the LPS core oligosaccharide. We constructed a mutant, SAL1, which was defective in expression of both hldA and hldD, and by performing complementation studies we confirmed that the functions encoded by both of these B. cenocepacia genes were needed for synthesis of a complete LPS core oligosaccharide. The LPS produced by SAL1 consisted of a short lipid A-core oligosaccharide and was devoid of O antigen. SAL1 was sensitive to the antimicrobial peptides polymyxin B, melittin, and human neutrophil peptide 1. In contrast, another B. cenocepacia mutant strain that produced complete lipid A-core oligosaccharide but lacked polymeric O antigen was not sensitive to polymyxin B or melittin. As determined by the rat agar bead model of lung infection, the SAL1 mutant had a survival defect in vivo since it could not be recovered from the lungs of infected rats 14 days postinfection. Together, these data show that the B. cenocepacia LPS inner core oligosaccharide is needed for in vitro resistance to three structurally unrelated antimicrobial peptides and for in vivo survival in a rat model of chronic lung infection.  相似文献   

7.
Lipopolysaccharide of Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a major constituent of the outer membrane, and it is composed of three distinct regions: lipid A, core oligosaccharide, and O antigen. Lipid A and core oligosaccharides (OS) are synthesized and assembled at the cytoplasmic side of the inner membrane and then translocated to the periplasmic side of the membrane where lipid A-core becomes the acceptor of the O antigens. Here we show that MsbA encoded by pA4997 of the P. aeruginosa genome is a member of the ABC transporter family, but this protein has distinctive features when compared with other MsbA proteins. msbA is an essential gene in this organism since mutation in this gene is lethal to the bacterium. Disruption of the chromosomal msbA was achieved only when a functional copy of the gene was provided in trans. msbA from Escherichiacoli (msbA(Ec)) could not cross complement the msbA merodiploid cells of P. aeruginosa. MsbA was expressed and purified, and the kinetic of its ATPase activity is vastly different than that of MsbA(Ec). The activity of MsbA could be selectively stimulated by different truncated versions of core OS of P. aeruginosa LPS. Specifically, phosphate substituents in the lipid A-core are important for stimulating ATPase activity of MsbA. Expression of MsbA(Ec) but not MsbA(Pa) conferred resistance to erythromycin in P. aeruginosa.  相似文献   

8.
Extracellular polysaccharides are major immunogenic components of the bacterial cell envelope. However, little is known about their biosynthesis in the genus Acinetobacter, which includes A. baumannii, an important nosocomial pathogen. Whether Acinetobacter sp. produce a capsule or a lipopolysaccharide carrying an O antigen or both is not resolved. To explore these issues, genes involved in the synthesis of complex polysaccharides were located in 10 complete A. baumannii genome sequences, and the function of each of their products was predicted via comparison to enzymes with a known function. The absence of a gene encoding a WaaL ligase, required to link the carbohydrate polymer to the lipid A-core oligosaccharide (lipooligosaccharide) forming lipopolysaccharide, suggests that only a capsule is produced. Nine distinct arrangements of a large capsule biosynthesis locus, designated KL1 to KL9, were found in the genomes. Three forms of a second, smaller variable locus, likely to be required for synthesis of the outer core of the lipid A-core moiety, were designated OCL1 to OCL3 and also annotated. Each K locus includes genes for capsule export as well as genes for synthesis of activated sugar precursors, and for glycosyltransfer, glycan modification and oligosaccharide repeat-unit processing. The K loci all include the export genes at one end and genes for synthesis of common sugar precursors at the other, with a highly variable region that includes the remaining genes in between. Five different capsule loci, KL2, KL6, KL7, KL8 and KL9 were detected in multiply antibiotic resistant isolates belonging to global clone 2, and two other loci, KL1 and KL4, in global clone 1. This indicates that this region is being substituted repeatedly in multiply antibiotic resistant isolates from these clones.  相似文献   

9.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is a major component on the surface of Gram negative bacteria and is composed of lipid A-core and the O antigen polysaccharide. O polysaccharides of the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori contain Lewis antigens, mimicking glycan structures produced by human cells. The interaction of Lewis antigens with human dendritic cells induces a modulation of the immune response, contributing to the H. pylori virulence. The amount and position of Lewis antigens in the LPS varies among H. pylori isolates, indicating an adaptation to the host. In contrast to most bacteria, the genes for H. pylori O antigen biosynthesis are spread throughout the chromosome, which likely contributed to the fact that the LPS assembly pathway remained uncharacterized. In this study, two enzymes typically involved in LPS biosynthesis were found encoded in the H. pylori genome; the initiating glycosyltransferase WecA, and the O antigen ligase WaaL. Fluorescence microscopy and analysis of LPS from H. pylori mutants revealed that WecA and WaaL are involved in LPS production. Activity of WecA was additionally demonstrated with complementation experiments in Escherichia coli. WaaL ligase activity was shown in vitro. Analysis of the H. pylori genome failed to detect a flippase typically involved in O antigen synthesis. Instead, we identified a homolog of a flippase involved in protein N-glycosylation in other bacteria, although this pathway is not present in H. pylori. This flippase named Wzk was essential for O antigen display in H. pylori and was able to transport various glycans in E. coli. Whereas the O antigen mutants showed normal swimming motility and injection of the toxin CagA into host cells, the uptake of DNA seemed to be affected. We conclude that H. pylori uses a novel LPS biosynthetic pathway, evolutionarily connected to bacterial protein N-glycosylation.  相似文献   

10.
Helicobacter pylori produces a unique surface lipopolysaccharide (LPS) characterized by strikingly low endotoxicity that is thought to aid the organism in evading the host immune response. This reduction in endotoxicity is predicted to arise from the modification of the Kdo–lipid A domain of Helicobacter LPS by a series of membrane bound enzymes including a Kdo (3‐deoxy‐d ‐manno‐octulosonic acid) hydrolase responsible for the modification of the core oligosaccharide. Here, we report that Kdo hydrolase activity is dependent upon a putative two‐protein complex composed of proteins Hp0579 and Hp0580. Inactivation of Kdo hydrolase activity produced two phenotypes associated with cationic antimicrobial peptide resistance and O‐antigen expression. Kdo hydrolase mutants were highly sensitive to polymyxin B, which could be attributed to a defect in downstream modifications to the lipid A 4′‐phosphate group. Production of a fully extended O‐antigen was also diminished in a Kdo hydrolase mutant, with a consequent increase in core–lipid A. Finally, expression of O‐antigen Lewis X and Y epitopes, known to mimic glycoconjugates found on human tissues, was also affected. Taken together, we have demonstrated that loss of Kdo hydrolase activity affects all three domains of H. pylori LPS, thus highlighting its role in the maintenance of the bacterial surface.  相似文献   

11.
O-antigen units are nonuniformly distributed among lipid A-core molecules in lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from gram-negative bacteria, as revealed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate; the actual distribution patterns are complex, multimodal, and strain specific. Although the basic biochemical steps involved in synthesis and polymerization of O-antigen monomers and their subsequent attachment to lipid A-core are known, the mechanism by which specific multimodal distribution patterns are attained in mature LPS has not been previously considered theoretically or experimentally. We have developed probability equations which completely describe O-antigen distribution among lipid A-core molecules in terms of the probability of finding a nascent polymer (O antigen linked to carrier lipid) of length k (Tk) and the probability that a nascent polymer of length k will be extended to k + 1 by polymerase (pk) or transferred to lipid A-core by ligase (qk). These equations were used to show that multimodal distribution patterns in mature LPS cannot be produced if all pk are equal to p and all qk are equal to q, conditions which indicate a lack of selectivity of polymerase and ligase, respectively, for nascent O-antigen chain lengths. A completely stochastic model (pk = p, qk = q) of O-antigen polymerization and transfer to lipid A-core was also inconsistent with observed effects of mutations which resulted in partial inhibition of O-antigen monomer synthesis, lipid A-core synthesis, or ligase activity. The simplest explanation compatible with experimental observations is that polymerase or ligase, or perhaps both, have specificity for certain O-antigen chain lengths during biosynthesis of LPS. Our mathematical model indicates selectively probably was associated with the polymerase reaction. Although one may argue for a multimodal distribution pattern based on a kinetic mechanism i.e., varying reaction parameters in space or in time during cell growth, such a model requires complex sensory and regulatory mechanisms to explain the mutant data and mechanisms for sequestering specific components of LPS biosynthesis to explain the distribution pattern in normal cells. We favor the simple alternative of enzyme specificity and present generalized equations which should be useful in analysis of other analogous biochemical systems.  相似文献   

12.
The following structure of the lipid A-core region of the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from Proteus vulgaris serotype O25 was determined by using NMR and chemical analysis of the core oligosaccharide, obtained by mild acid hydrolysis of LPS, of the products of alkaline deacylation of the LPS, and of the products of LPS deamination: [structure: see text] Terminal residues of beta-GlcNAc and beta-Kdo (indicated by bold italics) are present alternatively in approximately 3:2 amount, leaving no unsubstituted beta-Gal. All sugars are in the pyranose form, alpha-Hep is the residue of L-glycero-alpha-D-manno-Hep, alpha-DDHep is the residue of D-glycero-alpha-D-manno-Hep.  相似文献   

13.
Actin cross-linking domains (ACDs) are distinct domains found in several bacterial toxins, including the Vibrio cholerae MARTX toxin. The ACD of V. cholerae (ACDVc) catalyses the formation of an irreversible iso-peptide bond between lysine 50 and glutamic acid 270 on two actin molecules in an ATP- and Mg/Mn2+-dependent manner. In vivo , cross-linking depletes the cellular pool of G-actin leading to actin cytoskeleton depolymerization. While the actin cross-linking reaction performed by these effector domains has been significantly characterized, the ACDVc catalytic site has remained elusive due to lack of significant homology to known proteins. Using multiple genetic approaches, we have identified regions and amino acids of ACDVc required for full actin cross-linking activity. Then, using these functional data and structural homology predictions, it was determined that several residues demonstrated to be important for ACDVc activity are conserved with active-site residues of the glutamine synthetase family of enzymes. Thus, the ACDs are a family of bacterial toxin effectors that may be evolutionarily related to ligases involved in amino acid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Detailed comparisons of 16 editosome proteins from Trypanosoma brucei, Trypanosoma cruzi and Leishmania major identified protein motifs associated with catalysis and protein or nucleic acid interactions that suggest their functions in RNA editing. Five related proteins with RNase III-like motifs also contain a U1-like zinc finger and either dsRBM or Pumilio motifs. These proteins may provide the endoribonuclease function in editing. Two other related proteins, at least one of which is associated with U-specific 3′ exonuclease activity, contain two putative nuclease motifs. Thus, editosomes contain a plethora of nucleases or proteins presumably derived from nucleases. Five additional related proteins, three of which have zinc fingers, each contain a motif associated with an OB fold; the TUTases have C-terminal folds reminiscent of RNA binding motifs, thus indicating the presence of numerous nucleic acid and/or protein binding domains, as do the two RNA ligases and a RNA helicase, which provide for additional catalytic steps in editing. These data indicate that trypanosomatid RNA editing is orchestrated by a variety of domains for catalysis, molecular interaction and structure. These domains are generally conserved within other protein families, but some are found in novel combinations in the editosome proteins.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Jaffee MB  Imperiali B 《Biochemistry》2011,50(35):7557-7567
The central enzyme in N-linked glycosylation is the oligosaccharyl transferase (OTase), which catalyzes glycan transfer from a polyprenyldiphosphate-linked carrier to select asparagines within acceptor proteins. PglB from Campylobacter jejuni is a single-subunit OTase with homology to the Stt3 subunit of the complex multimeric yeast OTase. Sequence identity between PglB and Stt3 is low (17.9%); however, both have a similar predicted architecture and contain the conserved WWDxG motif. To investigate the relationship between PglB and other Stt3 proteins, sequence analysis was performed using 28 homologues from evolutionarily distant organisms. Since detection of small conserved motifs within large membrane-associated proteins is complicated by divergent sequences surrounding the motifs, we developed a program to parse sequences according to predicted topology and then analyze topologically related regions. This approach identified three conserved motifs that served as the basis for subsequent mutagenesis and functional studies. This work reveals that several inter-transmembrane loop regions of PglB/Stt3 contain strictly conserved motifs that are essential for PglB function. The recent publication of a 3.4 ? resolution structure of full-length C. lari OTase provides clear structural evidence that these loops play a fundamental role in catalysis [ Lizak , C. ; ( 2011 ) Nature 474 , 350 - 355 ]. The current study provides biochemical support for the role of the inter-transmembrane domain loops in OTase catalysis and demonstrates the utility of combining topology prediction and sequence analysis for exposing buried pockets of homology in large membrane proteins. The described approach allowed detection of the catalytic motifs prior to availability of structural data and reveals additional catalytically relevant residues that are not predicted by structural data alone.  相似文献   

17.
The rol (cld) gene encodes a protein involved in the expression of lipopolysaccharides in some members of the family Enterobacteriaceae. Rol interacts with one or more components of Rfc-dependent O-antigen biosynthetic complexes to regulate the chain length of lipopolysaccharide O antigens. The Rfc-Rol-dependent pathway for O-antigen synthesis is found in strains with heteropolysaccharide O antigens, and, consistent with this association, rol-homologous sequences were detected in chromosomal DNAs from 17 different serotypes with heteropolysaccharide O antigens. Homopolymer O antigens are synthesized by a pathway that does not involve either Rfc or Rol. It was therefore unexpected when a survey of Escherichia coli strains possessing mannose homopolymer O8 and O9 antigens showed that some strains contained rol. All 11 rol-positive strains coexpressed a group IB capsular K antigen with the O8 or O9 antigen. In contrast, 12 rol-negative strains all produced group IA K antigens in addition to the homopolymer O antigen. Previous research from this and other laboratories has shown that portions of the group I K antigens are attached to lipopolysaccharide lipid A-core, in a form that we have designated K(LPS). By constructing a hybrid strain with a deep rough rfa defect, it was shown that the K40 (group IB) K(LPS) antigen exists primarily as long chains. However, a significant amount of K40 antigen was surface expressed in a lipid A-core-independent pathway. The typical chain length distribution of the K40 antigen was altered by introduction of multicopy rol, suggesting that the K40 group IB K antigen is equivalent to a Rol-dependent O antigen. The prototype K30 (group IA) K antigen is expressed as short oligosaccharides (primarily single repeat units) in K(LPS), as well as a high-molecular-weight lipid A-core-independent form. Introduction of multicopy rol into the K30 strain generated a novel modal pattern of K(LPS) with longer polysaccharide chains. Collectively, these results suggested that group IA K(LPS) is also synthesized by a Rol-dependent pathway and that the typically short oligosaccharide K(LPS) results from the absence of Rol activity in these strains.  相似文献   

18.
Bacterial protein glycosylation systems from varying species have been functionally reconstituted in Escherichia coli. Both N- and O-linked glycosylation pathways, in which the glycans are first assembled onto lipid carriers and subsequently transferred to acceptor proteins by an oligosaccharyltransferase (OTase), have been documented in bacteria. The identification and characterization of novel OTases with different properties may provide new tools for engineering glycoproteins of biotechnological interest. In the case of OTases involved in O-glycosylation (O-OTases), there is very low sequence homology between those from different bacterial species. The Wzy_C signature domain common to these enzymes is also present in WaaL ligases; enzymes involved in lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis. Therefore, the identification of O-OTases using solely bioinformatic methods is problematic. The hypothetical proteins BTH_I0650 from Burkholderia thailandensis E264 and VC0393 from Vibrio cholerae N16961 contain the Wzy_C domain. In this work, we demonstrate that both proteins have O-OTase activity and renamed them PglL(Bt) and PglL(Vc), respectively, similar to the Neisseria meningitidis counterpart (PglL(Nm)). In E. coli, PglL(Bt) and PglL(Vc) display relaxed glycan and protein specificity. However, effective glycosylation depends upon a specific combination of the protein acceptor, glycan and O-OTase analyzed. This knowledge has important implications in the design of glycoconjugates and provides novel tools for use in glycoengineering applications. The codification of enzymatically active O-OTase in the genomes of members of the Vibrio and Burkholderia genera suggests the presence of still unknown O-glycoproteins in these organisms, which might have a role in bacterial physiology or pathogenesis.  相似文献   

19.

Background  

The lipopolysaccharide is a major antigen and virulence factor of Brucella, an important bacterial pathogen. In smooth brucellae, lipopolysaccharide is made of lipid A-core oligosaccharide and N-formylperosamine O-polysaccharide. B. ovis and B. canis (rough species) lack the O-polysaccharide.  相似文献   

20.
Most cellular processes requiring RNA structure rearrangement necessitate the action of Asp-Glu-Ala-Asp (DEAD) proteins. Members of the family, named originally for the conserved DEAD amino acid sequence, are thought to disrupt RNA structure and facilitate its rearrangement by unwinding short stretches of duplex RNA. BstDEAD is a novel 436 amino acid representative of the DEAD protein family from Bacillus stearothermophilus that contains all eight conserved motifs found in DEAD proteins and is homologous with other members of the family. Here, we describe the 1.85 A resolution structure of the N-terminal domain (residues 1-211) of BstDEAD (BstDEAD-NT). Similar to the corresponding domains of related helicases, BstDEAD-NT adopts a parallel alpha/beta structure with RecA-like topology. In general, the conserved motifs superimpose on closely related DEAD proteins and on more distantly related helicases such as RecA. This affirms the current belief that the core helicase domains, responsible for mechanistic activity, are structurally similar in DEAD proteins. In contrast, however, the so-called Walker A P-loop, which binds the beta- and gamma-phosphates of ATP, adopts a rarely seen "closed" conformation that would sterically block ATP binding. The closed conformation may be indicative of a general regulatory feature among DEAD proteins (and RNA helicases) that differs from that used by DNA helicases. BstDEAD also contains a unique extension of approximately 60 residues at the C terminus that is highly basic, suggesting that it might bind nucleic acids and, in so doing, confer specificity to the helicase activity of the core region.  相似文献   

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