The Mre11-Rad50 complex (MR) from bacteriophage T4 (gp46/47) is involved in the processing of DNA double-strand breaks. Here, we describe the activities of the T4 MR complex and its modulation by proteins involved in homologous recombination. T4 Mre11 is a Rad50-and Mn 2؉ -dependent dsDNA exonuclease and ssDNA endonuclease. ATP hydrolysis is required for the removal of multiple nucleotides via dsDNA exonuclease activity but not for the removal of the first nucleotide or for ssDNA endonuclease activity, indicating ATP hydrolysis is only required for repetitive nucleotide removal. By itself, Rad50 is a relatively inefficient ATPase, but the presence of Mre11 and dsDNA increases ATP hydrolysis by 20-fold. The ATP hydrolysis reaction exhibits positive cooperativity with Hill coefficients ranging from 1.4 for Rad50 alone to 2.4 for the Rad50-Mre11-DNA complex. Kinetic assays suggest that approximately four nucleotides are removed per ATP hydrolyzed. Directionality assays indicate that the prevailing activity is a 3 to 5 dsDNA exonuclease, which is incompatible with the proposed role of MR in the production of 3 ssDNA ends. Interestingly, we found that in the presence of a recombination mediator protein (UvsY) and ssDNA-binding protein (gp32), Mre11 is capable of using Mg 2؉ as a cofactor for its nuclease activity. Additionally, the Mg 2؉ -dependent nuclease activity, activated by UvsY and gp32, results in the formation of endonuclease reaction products. These results suggest that gp32 and UvsY may alter divalent cation preference and facilitate the formation of a 3 ssDNA overhang, which is a necessary intermediate for recombination-mediated double-strand break repair.
The polyisoprenoid compound undecaprenyl phosphate is required for biosynthesis of cell wall peptidoglycans in Grampositive bacteria, including pathogenic Enterococcus, Streptococcus, and Staphylococcus spp. In these organisms, the mevalonate pathway is used to produce the precursor isoprenoid, isopentenyl 5-diphosphate. Mevalonate diphosphate decarboxylase (MDD) catalyzes formation of isopentenyl 5-diphosphate in an ATP-dependent irreversible reaction and is therefore an attractive target for inhibitor development that could lead to new antimicrobial agents. To facilitate exploration of this possibility, we report the crystal structure of Staphylococcus epidermidis MDD (1.85 Å resolution) and, to the best of our knowledge, the first structures of liganded MDD. These structures include MDD bound to the mevalonate 5-diphosphate analogs diphosphoglycolyl proline (2.05 Å resolution) and 6-fluoromevalonate diphosphate (FMVAPP; 2.2 Å resolution). Comparison of these structures provides a physical basis for the significant differences in K i values observed for these inhibitors. Inspection of enzyme/ inhibitor structures identified the side chain of invariant Ser 192 as making potential contributions to catalysis. Significantly, Ser 3 Ala substitution of this side chain decreases k cat by ϳ10 3 -fold, even though binding interactions between FMVAPP and this mutant are similar to those observed with wild type MDD, as judged by the 2.1 Å cocrystal structure of S192A with FMVAPP. Comparison of microbial MDD structures with those of mammalian counterparts reveals potential targets at the active site periphery that may be exploited to selectively target the microbial enzymes. These studies provide a structural basis for previous observations regarding the MDD mechanism and inform future work toward rational inhibitor design.The ever-growing trend among many bacterial pathogens toward antibiotic resistance represents one of the single greatest threats to public health in both developing and modern nations. In particular, a growing body of literature from the last decade has demonstrated that many strains of the widespread Gram-positive organisms Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis are now insensitive toward an array of the -lactam class antibiotics that were once considered frontline therapeutics (1, 2). As recently as a few years ago, the problem of antibiotic resistance was associated primarily with those infections arising from within the healthcare setting. However, recent studies have shown that resistant strains are now spreading rapidly within the community, where they may cause potentially life-threatening illness in persons not recently hospitalized or undergoing invasive medical procedures (1, 3). Given the limited nature of effective therapeutic tools to combat these diseases, all such infections must be carefully managed to prevent further spread throughout the population. As a consequence, there is now renewed interest in novel classes of antimicrobials that are effective against sensitive and...
Bacterial surface motility works by retraction of surface-attached type IV pili. This retraction requires the PilT protein, a member of a large family of putative NTPases from type II and IV secretion systems. In this study, the PilT homologue from the thermophilic eubacterium Aquifex aeolicus was cloned, overexpressed, and purified. A. aeolicus PilT was shown to be a thermostable ATPase with a specific activity of 15.7 nmol of ATP hydrolyzed/min/mg of protein. This activity was abolished when a conserved lysine in the nucleotide-binding motif was altered. The substrate specificity was low; UTP, CTP, ATP, GTP, dATP, and dGTP served as substrates, UTP having the highest activity of these in vitro. Based on sedimentation equilibrium and size exclusion chromatography, PilT was identified as a Ϸ5-to 6-subunit oligomer. Potential implications of the NTPase activity of PilT in pilus retraction are discussed.
Expression in E. coli of his-tagged human mevalonate diphosphate decarboxylase (hMDD) has expedited enzyme isolation, characterization, functional investigation of the mevalonate diphosphate binding site, and crystal structure determination (2.4 Å resolution). hMDD exhibits Vmax = 6.1 ± 0.5 U/mg; Km for ATP is 0.69 ± 0.07 mM and Km for (R,S) mevalonate diphosphate is 28.9 ± 3.3 uM. Conserved polar residues predicted to be in the hMDD active site were mutated to test functional importance. R161Q exhibits a ~1000-fold diminution in specific activity, while binding the fluorescent substrate analog, TNP-ATP, like wild-type enzyme. Diphosphoglycolyl proline (Ki = 2.3 ± 0.3 uM) and 6-fluoromevalonate 5-diphosphate (Ki = 62 ± 5 nM) are competitive inhibitors with respect to mevalonate diphosphate. N17A exhibits a Vmax = 0.25 ± 0.02 U/mg and a 15-fold inflation in Km for mevalonate diphosphate. N17A's Ki values for diphosphoglycolyl proline and fluoromevalonate diphosphate are inflated (>70-fold and 40-fold, respectively) in comparison with wild-type enzyme. hMDD structure indicates the proximity (2.8 Å) between R161 and N17, which are located in an interior pocket of the active site cleft. The data suggest the functional importance of R161 and N17 in the binding and orientation of mevalonate diphosphate. Keywordshuman mevalonate diphosphate decarboxylase; isoprenoid biosynthesis; mevalonate pathway; competitive inhibition; active site function; protein structure Corresponding author: Henry M. Miziorko, Univ. of Missouri-Kansas City, 5007 Rockhill Road, Kansas City, MO 64110, phone: 816-235-2246, fax:816-235-5595; E-mail: miziorkoh@umkc.edu. Publisher's Disclaimer: This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final citable form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. NIH Public Access NIH-PA Author ManuscriptNIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author ManuscriptMevalonate diphosphate decarboxyase (MDD 1 ; EC 4.1.1.33) catalyzes the ATP dependent decarboxylation of mevalonate 5-diphosphate (MVAPP) to form isopentenyl 5-diphosphate [1]. The reaction is required for production of polyisoprenoids and sterols from acetyl-CoA. Inhibition of this enzyme effectively diminishes biosynthesis of cholesterol [2,3] and low MDD activity correlates with decreased cholesterol levels in a hypertensive rat strain [4]. Genes encoding this enzyme have been detected in archaebacteria, some eubacteria, protozoa, plants, fungae, and animals. Substantial heterology is predicted between the various proteins encoded by these genes, suggesting that MDD could be targeted for development of antimicrobial agents [5].MDD is a member of the GHMP kinase (galactokinase, homoserine kinas...
Mevalonate kinase (MK), which catalyzes a key reaction in polyisoprenoid and sterol metabolism in many organisms, is subject to feedback regulation by farnesyl diphosphate and related compounds. The structures of human mevalonate kinase and a binary complex of the rat enzyme incubated with farnesyl thiodiphosphate (FSPP) are reported. Significant FSPP hydrolysis occurs under crystallization conditions; this results in detection of farnesyl thiophosphate (FSP) in the structure of the binary complex. Farnesyl thiodiphosphate competes with substrate ATP to produce feedback inhibition of mevalonate kinase. The binding sites for these metabolites overlap, with the phosphate of FSP nearly superimposed on ATP's beta-phosphate and FSP's polyisoprenoid chain overlapping ATP's adenosine moiety. Several hydrophobic amino acid side chains are positioned near the polyisoprenoid chain of FSP and their functional significance has been evaluated in mutagenesis experiments with human MK, which exhibits the highest reported sensitivity to feedback inhibition. Results suggest that single and double mutations at T104 and I196 produce a significant inflation of the K(i) for FSPP (approximately 40-fold for T104A/I196A). Such an effect persists when K(i) values are normalized for effects on the K(m) for ATP, suggesting that it may be possible to engineer MK proteins with altered sensitivity to feedback inhibition. Comparison of animal MK protein alignments and structures with those of a MK protein from Streptococcus pneumoniae indicates that sequence differences between N- and C-terminal domains correlate with differences in interdomain angles. Bacterial MK proteins exhibit more solvent exposure of feedback inhibitor binding sites and, consequently, weaker binding of these inhibitors.
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