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1.
Knowledge about the conformational dynamics of a protein is key to understanding its biochemical and biophysical properties. In the present work we investigated the dynamic properties of the enzymatic domain of DNase colicins via time-resolved fluorescence and anisotropy decay analysis in combination with steady-state acrylamide quenching experiments. The dynamic properties of the apoenzyme were compared to those of the E9 DNase ligated to the transition metal ion Zn(2+) and the natural inhibitor Im9. We further investigated the contributions of each of the two tryptophans within the E9 DNase (Trp22 and Trp58) using two single-tryptophan mutants (E9 W22F and E9 W58F). Wild-type E9 DNase, E9 W22F, and E9 W58F, as well as Im9, showed multiple lifetime decays. The time-resolved and steady-state fluorescence results indicated that complexation of E9 DNase with Zn(2+) induces compaction of the E9 DNase structure, accompanied by immobilization of Trp22 along with a reduced solvent accessibility for both tryptophans. Im9 binding resulted in immobilization of Trp22 along with a decrease in the longest lifetime component. In contrast, Trp58 experienced less restriction on complexation of E9 DNase with Im9 and showed an increase in the longest lifetime component. Furthermore, the results point out that the Im9-induced changes in the conformational dynamics of E9 DNase are predominant and occur independently of the Zn(2+)-induced conformational effects.  相似文献   

2.
We report the first stopped-flow fluorescence analysis of transition metal binding (Co(2+), Ni(2+), Cu(2+), and Zn(2+)) to the H-N-H endonuclease motif within colicin E9 (the E9 DNase). The H-N-H consensus forms the active site core of a number of endonuclease groups but is also structurally homologous to the so-called treble-clef motif, a ubiquitous zinc-binding motif found in a wide variety of metalloproteins. We find that all the transition metal ions tested bind via multistep mechanisms. Binding was further dissected for Ni(2+) and Zn(2+) ions through the use of E9 DNase single tryptophan mutants, which demonstrated that most steps reflect conformational rearrangements that occur after the bimolecular collision, many common to the two metals, while one appears specific to zinc. The kinetically derived equilibrium dissociation constants (K(d)) for transition metal binding to the E9 DNase agree with previously determined equilibrium measurements and so confirm the validity of the derived kinetic mechanisms. Zn(2+) binds tightest to the enzyme (K(d) approximately 10(-)(9) M) but does not support endonuclease activity, whereas the other metals (K(d) approximately 10(-)(6) M) are active in endonuclease assays implying that the additional step seen for Zn(2+) traps the enzyme in an inactive but high affinity state. Metal-induced conformational changes are likely to be a conserved feature of H-N-H/treble clef motif proteins since similar Zn(2+)-induced, multistep binding was observed for other colicin DNases. Moreover, they appear to be independent both of the conformational heterogeneity that is naturally present within the E9 DNase at equilibrium, as well as the conformational changes that accompany the binding of its cognate inhibitor protein Im9.  相似文献   

3.
We explore the thermodynamic strategies used to achieve specific, high-affinity binding within a family of conserved protein-protein complexes. Protein-protein interactions are often stabilized by a conserved interfacial hotspot that serves as the anchor for the complex, with neighboring variable residues providing specificity. A key question for such complexes is the thermodynamic basis for specificity given the dominance of the hotspot. We address this question using, as our model, colicin endonuclease (DNase)-immunity (Im) protein complexes. In this system, cognate and noncognate complexes alike share the same mechanism of association and binding hotspot, but cognate complexes (K(d) approximately 10(-)(14) M) are orders of magnitude more stable than noncognate complexes (10(6)-10(10)-fold discrimination), largely because of a much slower rate of dissociation. Using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), we investigated the changes in enthalpy (DeltaH), entropy (-TDeltaS), and heat capacity (DeltaC(p)) accompanying binding of each Im protein (Im2, Im7, Im8, and Im9) to the DNase domains of colicins E2, E7, E8, and E9, in the context of both cognate and noncognate complexes. The data show that specific binding to the E2, E7, and E8 DNases is enthalpically driven but entropically driven for the E9 DNase. Analysis of DeltaC(p), a measure of the change in structural fluctuation upon complexation, indicates that E2, E7, and E8 DNase specificity is coupled to structural changes within cognate complexes that are consistent with a reduction in the conformational dynamics of these complexes. In contrast, E9 DNase specificity appears coupled to the exclusion of water molecules, consistent with the nonpolar nature of the interface of this complex. The work highlights that although protein-protein interactions may be centered on conserved structural epitopes the thermodynamic mechanism underpinning binding specificity can vary considerably.  相似文献   

4.
The cytotoxic activity of the secreted bacterial toxin colicin E9 is due to a non-specific DNase housed in the C-terminus of the protein. Double-resonance and triple-resonance NMR studies of the 134-amino acid15 N- and 13C/15N-labelled DNase domain are presented. Extensive conformational heterogeneity was evident from the presence of far more resonances than expected based on the amino acid sequence of the DNase, and from the appearance of chemical exchange cross-peaks in TOCSY and NOESY spectra. EXSY spectra were recorded to confirm that slow chemical exchange was occurring. Unambiguous sequence-specific resonance assignments are presented for one region of the protein, Pro65-Asn72, which exists in two slowly exchanging conformers based on the identification of chemical exchange cross-peaks in 3D 1H-1H-15N EXSY-HSQC, NOESY-HSQC and TOCSY-HSQC spectra, together with C and C chemical shifts measured in triple-resonance spectra and sequential NH NOEs. The rates of conformational exchange for backbone amide resonances in this stretch of amino acids, and for the indole NH of either Trp22 or Trp58, were determined from the intensity variation of the appropriate diagonal and chemical exchange cross-peaks recorded in 3D1 H-1H-15N NOESY-HSQC spectra. The data fitted a model in which this region of the DNase has two conformers, NA and NB, which interchange at 15 °C with a forward rate constant of 1.61 ± 0.5 s-1 and a backward rate constant of 1.05 ± 0.5 s-1. Demonstration of this conformational equilibrium has led to a reappraisal of a previously proposed kinetic scheme describing the interaction of E9 DNase with immunity proteins [Wallis et al. (1995) Biochemistry, 34, 13743–13750 and 13751–13759]. The revised scheme is consistent with the specific inhibitor protein for the E9 DNase, Im9, associating with both the NA and NB conformers of the DNase and with binding only to the NB conformer detected because the rate of dissociation of the complex of Im9 and the NA conformer, NAI, is extremely rapid. In this model stoichiometric amounts of Im9 convert, the E9 DNase is converted wholly into the NBI form. The possibility that cis–trans isomerisation of peptide bonds preceding proline residues is the cause of the conformational heterogeneity is discussed. E9 DNase contains 10 prolines, with two bracketing the stretch of amino acids that have allowed the NA NB interconversion to be identified, Pro65 and Pro73. The model assumes that one or both of these can exist in either the cis or trans form with strong Im9 binding possible to only one form.  相似文献   

5.
We have shown previously that the 134-residue endonuclease domain of the bacterial cytotoxin colicin E9 (E9 DNase) forms channels in planar lipid bilayers (Mosbahi, K., Lema?tre, C., Keeble, A. H., Mobasheri, H., Morel, B., James, R., Moore, G. R., Lea, E. J., and Kleanthous, C. (2002) Nat. Struct. Biol. 9, 476-484). It was proposed that the E9 DNase mediates its own translocation across the cytoplasmic membrane and that the formation of ion channels is essential to this process. Here we describe changes to the structure and stability of the E9 DNase that accompany interaction of the protein with phospholipid vesicles. Formation of the protein-lipid complex at pH 7.5 resulted in a red-shift of the intrinsic protein fluorescence emission maximum (lambda(max)) from 333 to 346 nm. At pH 4.0, where the E9 DNase lacks tertiary structure but retains secondary structure, DOPG induced a blue-shift in lambda(max), from 354 to 342 nm. Changes in lambda(max) were specific for anionic phospholipid vesicles at both pHs, suggesting electrostatics play a role in this association. The effects of phospholipid were negated by Im9 binding, the high affinity, acidic, exosite inhibitor protein, but not by zinc, which binds at the active site. Fluorescence-quenching experiments further demonstrated that similar protein-phospholipid complexes are formed regardless of whether the E9 DNase is initially in its native conformation. Consistent with these observations, chemical and thermal denaturation data as well as proteolytic susceptibility experiments showed that association with negatively charged phospholipids destabilize the E9 DNase. We suggest that formation of a destabilizing protein-lipid complex pre-empts channel formation by the E9 DNase and constitutes the initial step in its translocation across the Escherichia coli inner membrane.  相似文献   

6.
The bacterial toxin colicin E9 is secreted by producing Escherichia coli cells with its 9.5 kDa inhibitor protein Im9 bound tightly to its 14.5 kDa C-terminal DNase domain. Double- and triple-resonance NMR spectra of the isolated DNase domain uniformly labeled with 13C/15N bound to unlabeled Im9 contain more signals than expected for a single DNase conformer, consistent with the bound DNase being present in more than one form. The presence of chemical exchange cross peaks in 750 MHz 15N-1H-15N HSQC-NOESY-HSQC spectra for backbone NH groups of Asp20, Lys21, Trp22, Leu23, Lys69, and Asn70 showed that the bound DNase was in dynamic exchange. The rate of exchange from the major to the minor form was determined to be 1.1 +/- 0.2 s(-1) at 298 K. Previous NMR studies have shown that the free DNase interchanges between two conformers with a forward rate constant of 1.61 +/- 0.11 s(-1) at 288 K, and that the bound Im9 is fixed in one conformation. The NMR studies of the bound DNase show that Im9 binds similarly to both conformers of the DNase and that the buried Trp22 is involved in the dynamic process. For the free DNase, all NH groups within a 9 A radius of any point of the Trp22 ring exhibit heterogeneity suggesting that a rearrangement of the position of this side chain is connected with the conformational interchange. The possible functional significance of this feature of the DNase is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The cytotoxic domain of the bacteriocin colicin E9 (the E9 DNase) is a nonspecific endonuclease that must traverse two membranes to reach its cellular target, bacterial DNA. Recent structural studies revealed that the active site of colicin DNases encompasses the HNH motif found in homing endonucleases, and bound within this motif a single transition metal ion (either Zn(2+) or Ni(2+)) the role of which is unknown. In the present work we find that neither Zn(2+) nor Ni(2+) is required for DNase activity, which instead requires Mg(2+) ions, but binding transition metals to the E9 DNase causes subtle changes to both secondary and tertiary structure. Spectroscopic, proteolytic, and calorimetric data show that, accompanying the binding of 1 eq of Zn(2+), Ni(2+), or Co(2+), the thermodynamic stability of the domain increased substantially, and that the equilibrium dissociation constant for Zn(2+) was less than or equal to nanomolar, while that for Co(2+) and Ni (2+) was micromolar. Our data demonstrate that the transition metal is not essential for colicin DNase activity but rather serves a structural role. We speculate that the HNH motif has been adapted for use by endonuclease colicins because of its involvement in DNA recognition and because removal of the bound metal ion destabilizes the DNase domain, a likely prerequisite for its translocation across bacterial membranes.  相似文献   

8.
We report the overproduction of the immunity protein for the DNase colicin E9 and its characterization both in vivo and in vitro. The genes for colicin immunity proteins are normally co-expressed from Col plasmids with their corresponding colicins. In the context of the enzymatic colicins, the two proteins form a complex, thereby protecting the host bacterium from the antibiotic activity of the colicin. This complex is then released into the medium, whereupon the colicin alone translocates (through the appropriate receptor) into sensitive bacterial strains, resulting in bacterial cell death. The immunity protein for colicin E9 (Im9) has been overproduced in a bacterial host in the absence of its colicin, to enable sufficient material to be isolated for structural studies. As a prelude to such studies, the in-vivo and in-vitro properties of overproduced Im9 were analysed. Electrospray mass spectrometry verified the molecular mass of the purified protein and analytical ultracentrifugation indicated that the native protein approximates a symmetric monomer. Fluorescence-enhancement and gel-filtration experiments show that purified Im9 binds to colicin E9 in a 1:1 molar ratio and that this binding neutralizes the DNase activity of the colicin. These results lay the foundations for a full biophysical and structural characterization of the colicin E9 DNase inhibitor protein, Im9.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Colicins are protein antibiotics synthesised by Escherichia coli strains to target and kill related bacteria. To prevent host suicide, colicins are inactivated by binding to immunity proteins. Despite their high avidity (Kd≈fM, lifetime ≈4 days), immunity protein release is a pre-requisite of colicin intoxication, which occurs on a timescale of minutes. Here, by measuring the dynamic force spectrum of the dissociation of the DNase domain of colicin E9 (E9) and immunity protein 9 (Im9) complex using an atomic force microscope we show that application of low forces (<20 pN) increases the rate of complex dissociation 106-fold, to a timescale (lifetime ≈10 ms) compatible with intoxication. We term this catastrophic force-triggered increase in off-rate a trip bond. Using mutational analysis, we elucidate the mechanism of this switch in affinity. We show that the N-terminal region of E9, which has sparse contacts with the hydrophobic core, is linked to an allosteric activator region in E9 (residues 21–30) whose remodelling triggers immunity protein release. Diversion of the force transduction pathway by the introduction of appropriately positioned disulfide bridges yields a force resistant complex with a lifetime identical to that measured by ensemble techniques. A trip switch within E9 is ideal for its function as it allows bipartite complex affinity, whereby the stable colicin:immunity protein complex required for host protection can be readily converted to a kinetically unstable complex whose dissociation is necessary for cellular invasion and competitor death. More generally, the observation of two force phenotypes for the E9:Im9 complex demonstrates that force can re-sculpt the underlying energy landscape, providing new opportunities to modulate biological reactions in vivo; this rationalises the commonly observed discrepancy between off-rates measured by dynamic force spectroscopy and ensemble methods.  相似文献   

11.
Kinetics of nucleotide and metal ion interaction with G-actin   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The kinetics of interaction of Ca2+ ions and nucleotides with G-actin have been investigated by making use of the enhancement of 1,N6-ethenoadenosine 5'-triphosphate (epsilon ATP) fluorescence on binding to actin, the enhancement of 2-[[2-[bis(carboxymethyl)amino]-5-methylphenoxy] methyl]-6-methoxy-8-[bis(carboxymethyl)amino]quinoline (Quin-2) fluorescence on binding to Ca2+, and the sensitivity of the fluorescence of an N-(iodoacetyl)-N'-(5-sulfo-1-naphthyl)ethylenediamine (1,5-AEDANS) group on Cys-374 to metal ion binding. It is concluded that metal ion dissociation is the rate-limiting step in nucleotide dissociation (0.016 s-1 for Ca2+ at pH 7.2 and 21 degrees C) and that earlier conclusions that metal ion release is relatively fast and subsequent nucleotide release slow are incorrect. Results presented here and obtained by others on the metal ion concentration dependence of the effective rate of nucleotide exchange can be interpreted in the light of this conclusion in terms of a limiting rate which corresponds to that of metal ion release and an "apparent" dissociation constant for Ca2+ which is without direct physical significance. This apparent dissociation constant is more than 2 orders of magnitude greater than the real dissociation constant of Ca2+ from the Ca-actin-ATP complex, which was estimated to be 2 X 10(-9) M from a titration with Quin-2. Confirmation that the rate of Ca2+ release is rate limiting both in nucleotide dissociation reactions and in replacement of Ca2+ by Mg2+ was obtained with 1,5-AEDANS-actin, since both the replacement of Ca2+ by Mg2+ and the removal of Ca2+ to give the actin-ATP complex occurred at the same (slow) rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Bacteria producing endonuclease colicins are protected against the cytotoxic activity by a small immunity protein that binds with high affinity and specificity to inactivate the endonuclease. This complex is released into the extracellular medium, and the immunity protein is jettisoned upon binding of the complex to susceptible cells. However, it is not known how and at what stage during infection the immunity protein release occurs. Here, we constructed a hybrid immunity protein composed of the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) fused to the colicin E2 immunity protein (Im2) to enhance its detection. The EGFP-Im2 protein binds the free colicin E2 with a 1:1 stoichiometry and specifically inhibits its DNase activity. The addition of this hybrid complex to susceptible cells reveals that the release of the hybrid immunity protein is a time-dependent process. This process is achieved 20 min after the addition of the complex to the cells. We showed that complex dissociation requires a functional translocon formed by the BtuB protein and one porin (either OmpF or OmpC) and a functional import machinery formed by the Tol proteins. Cell fractionation and protease susceptibility experiments indicate that the immunity protein does not cross the cell envelope during colicin import. These observations suggest that dissociation of the immunity protein occurs at the outer membrane surface and requires full translocation of the colicin E2 N-terminal domain.  相似文献   

13.
The thermal denaturation of yeast enolase 1 was studied by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) under conditions of subunit association/dissociation, enzymatic activity or substrate binding without turnover and substrate analogue binding. Subunit association stabilizes the enzyme, that is, the enzyme dissociates before denaturing. The conformational change produced by conformational metal ion binding increases thermal stability by reducing subunit dissociation. 'Substrate' or analogue binding additionally stabilizes the enzyme, irrespective of whether turnover is occurring, perhaps in part by the same mechanism. More strongly bound metal ions also stabilize the enzyme more, which we interpret as consistent with metal ion loss before denaturation, though possibly the denaturation pathway is different in the absence of metal ion. We suggest that some of the stabilization by 'substrate' and analogue binding is owing to the closure of moveable polypeptide loops about the active site, producing a more 'closed' and hence thermostable conformation.  相似文献   

14.
We explore the thermodynamic basis for high affinity binding and specificity in conserved protein complexes using colicin endonuclease-immunity protein complexes as our model system. We investigated the ability of each colicin-specific immunity protein (Im2, Im7, Im8 and Im9) to bind the endonuclease (DNase) domains of colicins E2, E7 and E8 in vitro and compared these to the previously studied colicin E9. We find that high affinity binding (Kd < or = 10(-14) M) is a common feature of cognate colicin DNase-Im protein complexes as are non-cognate protein-protein associations, which are generally 10(6)-10(8)-fold weaker. Comparative alanine scanning of Im2 and Im9 residues involved in binding the E2 DNase revealed similar behaviour to that of the two proteins binding the E9 DNase; helix III forms a conserved binding energy hotspot with specificity residues from helix II only contributing favourably in a cognate interaction, a combination we have termed as "dual recognition". Significant differences are seen, however, in the number and side-chain chemistries of specificity sites that contribute to cognate binding. In Im2, Asp33 from helix II dominates colicin E2 specificity, whereas in Im9 several hydrophobic residues, including position 33 (leucine), help define its colicin specificity. A similar distribution of specificity sites was seen using phage display where, with Im2 as the template, a library of randomised sequences was generated in helix II and the library panned against either the E2 or E9 DNase. Position 33 was the dominant specificity site recovered in all E2 DNase-selected clones, whereas a number of Im9 specificity sites were recovered in E9 DNase-selected clones, including position 33. In order to probe the relationship between biological specificity and in vitro binding affinity we compared the degree of protection afforded to bacteria against colicin E9 toxicity by a set of immunity proteins whose affinities for the E9 DNase differed by up to ten orders of magnitude. This analysis indicated that the Kd required for complete biological protection is <10(-10)M and that the "affinity window" over which the selection of novel immunity protein specificities likely evolves is 10(-6)-10(-10)M. This comprehensive survey of colicin DNase-immunity protein complexes illustrates how high affinity protein-protein interactions can be very discriminating even though binding is dominated by a conserved hotspot, with single or multiple specificity sites modulating the overall binding free energy. We discuss these results in the context of other conserved protein complexes and suggest that they point to a generic specificity mechanism in divergently evolved protein-protein interactions.  相似文献   

15.
A general procedure for site-specific and reversible labeling of proteins with transition metal ions is described. The method is based on the use of the novel ligand 1-(2-thioethyl)-1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane (TETAC), which specifically and readily reacts with thiol groups. Synthesis of TETAC from 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane (cyclen) and ethylene disulfide yielded a mixture of products, including TETAC and its oxidized disulfide in 56.4% yield. The procedure for labeling proteins with TETAC is straightforward and led to separation of the TETAC-containing product mixture through gel-filtration chromatography. The resulting protein-TETAC adducts were shown to contain a single TETAC group which bound transition metal ions. Protein-TETACCu2+ had a UV-Vis spectrum similar to that of Cu2+(cyclen) while the protein-TETACCo2+ complex had a different spectrum to that of the cobalt-containing cyclen. This is because attachment to the protein prevented the Co2+-containing TETAC from dimerising and binding O2, which the cobalt-containing cyclen is able to do. The proteins used to develop this labeling procedure were the DNase domain of colicin E9 and its inhibitor protein Im9. Unlike Im9, the DNase does not contain a cysteine residue but the Ser30Cys variant of the DNase was prepared by site-directed mutagenesis. Both Im9 and the Ser30Cys DNase were modified with TETAC and the modifications shown to be structurally and functionally benign through NMR spectroscopy of the modified Im9 and fluorescence spectroscopy binding assays in which DNase-Im9 complexes were formed. The simplicity of the method, and its general application to any protein through the introduction of cysteine by site-directed mutagenesis, suggests it will be of wide use in protein chemistry applications.  相似文献   

16.
Previous work shows that Im9 folds in a two-state transition while its homologue Im7 folds in a three-state transition via an on-pathway kinetic intermediate state (KIS), with this difference being related to frustration in the structure of Im7. We have used NMR spectroscopy to study conformational dynamics connected to the frustration. A combination of equilibrium peptide N1H/N2H exchange, model-free analyses of backbone NH relaxation data and relaxation dispersion (RD)-NMR shows that the native state of Im7 is in equilibrium with an intermediate state that is lowly populated [equilibrium intermediate state (EIS)]. Comparison of kinetic and thermodynamic parameters describing the EIS native-state equilibrium obtained by RD-NMR with previously reported parameters describing the KIS native-state equilibrium obtained from stopped-flow fluorescence studies of refolding His-tagged Im7 shows that the KIS and the EIS are the same species. 15N chemical shifts of the EIS obtained from the RD-NMR analysis show that residues forming helix III in the native state are unstructured in the EIS while other residues experiencing frustration in the native state are in structured regions of the EIS. We show that binding of Im7 and its L53A/I54A variant (which resembles the EIS as shown in previous work) to the cognate partner for Im7, the DNase domain of colicin E7, causes the dynamic processes associated with the frustration to be dampened.  相似文献   

17.
The rapid binding of cytotoxic colicin E3 by its cognate immunity protein Im3 is essential in safeguarding the producing cell. The X-ray structure of the E3/Im3 complex shows that the Im3 molecule interfaces with both the C-terminal ribonuclease (RNase) domain and the N-terminal translocation domain of E3. The association and dissociation rates of the RNase domain and Im3 show drastically different sensitivities to ionic strength, as previously rationalized for electrostatically enhanced diffusion-limited protein-protein associations. Relative to binding to the RNase domain, binding to full-length E3 shows a comparable association rate but a significantly lower dissociation rate. This outcome is just what was anticipated by a theory for the binding of two linked domains to a protein. The E3/Im3 system thus provides a powerful paradigm for the interplay of theory and experiment.  相似文献   

18.
Colicin endonucleases (DNases) are bound and inactivated by immunity (Im) proteins. Im proteins are broadly cross-reactive yet specific inhibitors binding cognate and non-cognate DNases with Kd values that vary between 10− 4 and 10− 14 M, characteristics that are explained by a ‘dual-recognition’ mechanism. In this work, we addressed for the first time the energetics of Im protein recognition by colicin DNases through a combination of E9 DNase alanine scanning and double-mutant cycles (DMCs) coupled with kinetic and calorimetric analyses of cognate Im9 and non-cognate Im2 binding, as well as computational analysis of alanine scanning and DMC data. We show that differential ΔΔGs observed for four E9 DNase residues cumulatively distinguish cognate Im9 association from non-cognate Im2 association. E9 DNase Phe86 is the primary specificity hotspot residue in the centre of the interface, which is coordinated by conserved and variable hotspot residues of the cognate Im protein. Experimental DMC analysis reveals that only modest coupling energies to Im9 residues are observed, in agreement with calculated DMCs using the program ROSETTA and consistent with the largely hydrophobic nature of E9 DNase-Im9 specificity contacts. Computed values for the 12 E9 DNase alanine mutants showed reasonable agreement with experimental ΔΔG data, particularly for interactions not mediated by interfacial water molecules. ΔΔG predictions for residues that contact buried water molecules calculated using solvated rotamer models met with mixed success; however, we were able to predict with a high degree of accuracy the location and energetic contribution of one such contact. Our study highlights how colicin DNases are able to utilise both conserved and variable amino acids to distinguish cognate from non-cognate Im proteins, with the energetic contributions of the conserved residues modulated by neighbouring specificity sites.  相似文献   

19.
A common theme in bacterial pathogenesis is the manipulation of eukaryotic cells by targeting the cytoskeleton. This is in most cases achieved either by modifying actin, or indirectly via activation of key regulators controlling actin dynamics such as Rho-GTPases. A novel group of bacterial virulence factors termed the WXXXE family has emerged as guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) for these GTPases. The precise mechanism of nucleotide exchange, however, has remained unclear. Here we report the structure of the WXXXE-protein IpgB2 from Shigella flexneri and its complex with human RhoA. We unambiguously identify IpgB2 as a bacterial RhoA-GEF and dissect the molecular mechanism of GDP release, an essential prerequisite for GTP binding. Our observations uncover that IpgB2 induces conformational changes on RhoA mimicking DbI- but not DOCK family GEFs. We also show that dissociation of the GDP·Mg2+ complex is preceded by the displacement of the metal ion to the α-phosphate of the nucleotide, diminishing its affinity to the GTPase. These data refine our understanding of the mode of action not only of WXXXE GEFs but also of mammalian GEFs of the DH/PH family.  相似文献   

20.
Enzymatic colicins such as colicin E9 (ColE9) bind to BtuB on the cell surface of Escherichia coli and rapidly recruit a second coreceptor, either OmpF or OmpC, through which the N-terminal natively disordered region (NDR) of their translocation domain gains entry into the cell periplasm and interacts with TolB. Previously, we constructed an inactive disulfide-locked mutant ColE9 (ColE9(s-s)) that binds to BtuB and can be reduced with dithiothreitol (DTT) to synchronize cell killing. By introducing unique enterokinase (EK) cleavage sites in ColE9(s-s), we showed that the first 61 residues of the NDR were inaccessible to cleavage when bound to BtuB, whereas an EK cleavage site inserted at residue 82 of the NDR remained accessible. This suggests that most of the NDR is occluded by OmpF shortly after binding to BtuB, whereas the extreme distal region of the NDR is surface exposed before unfolding of the receptor-binding domain occurs. EK cleavage of unique cleavage sites located in the ordered region of the translocation domain or in the distal region of the receptor-binding domain confirmed that these regions of ColE9 remained accessible at the E. coli cell surface. Lack of EK cleavage of the DNase domain of the cell-bound, oxidized ColE9/Im9 complex, and the rapid detection of Alexa Fluor 594-labeled Im9 (Im9(AF)) in the cell supernatant following treatment of cells with DTT, suggested that immunity release occurred immediately after unfolding of the colicin and was not driven by binding to BtuB.  相似文献   

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