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Structural and Computational Studies of the Staphylococcus aureus Sortase B-Substrate Complex Reveal a Substrate-stabilized Oxyanion Hole
Authors:Alex W Jacobitz  Jeff Wereszczynski  Sung Wook Yi  Brendan R Amer  Grace L Huang  Angelyn V Nguyen  Michael R Sawaya  Michael E Jung  J Andrew McCammon  Robert T Clubb
Institution:From the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.;UCLA-DOE Institute of Genomics and Proteomics, and ;Molecular Biology Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90095, and ;the §Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093
Abstract:Sortase cysteine transpeptidases covalently attach proteins to the bacterial cell wall or assemble fiber-like pili that promote bacterial adhesion. Members of this enzyme superfamily are widely distributed in Gram-positive bacteria that frequently utilize multiple sortases to elaborate their peptidoglycan. Sortases catalyze transpeptidation using a conserved active site His-Cys-Arg triad that joins a sorting signal located at the C terminus of their protein substrate to an amino nucleophile located on the cell surface. However, despite extensive study, the catalytic mechanism and molecular basis of substrate recognition remains poorly understood. Here we report the crystal structure of the Staphylococcus aureus sortase B enzyme in a covalent complex with an analog of its NPQTN sorting signal substrate, revealing the structural basis through which it displays the IsdC protein involved in heme-iron scavenging from human hemoglobin. The results of computational modeling, molecular dynamics simulations, and targeted amino acid mutagenesis indicate that the backbone amide of Glu224 and the side chain of Arg233 form an oxyanion hole in sortase B that stabilizes high energy tetrahedral catalytic intermediates. Surprisingly, a highly conserved threonine residue within the bound sorting signal substrate facilitates construction of the oxyanion hole by stabilizing the position of the active site arginine residue via hydrogen bonding. Molecular dynamics simulations and primary sequence conservation suggest that the sorting signal-stabilized oxyanion hole is a universal feature of enzymes within the sortase superfamily.
Keywords:Cell Surface Enzymes  Crystal Structure  Enzyme Mechanisms  Molecular Dynamics  Staphylococcus aureus
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