We report here the discovery and characterization of Ehp, a new secreted Staphylococcus aureus protein that potently inhibits the alternative complement activation pathway. Ehp was identified through a genomic scan as an uncharacterized secreted protein from S. aureus, and immunoblotting of conditioned S. aureus culture medium revealed that the Ehp protein was secreted at the highest levels during log-phase bacterial growth. The mature Ehp polypeptide is composed of 80 residues and is 44% identical to the complement inhibitory domain of S. . Further molecular level details of the Ehp/C3d interaction were revealed by solving the 2.7-Å crystal structure of an Ehp⅐C3d complex in which the low affinity site had been mutationally inactivated. Ehp potently inhibited C3b deposition onto sensitized surfaces by the alternative complement activation pathway. This inhibition was directly related to Ehp/C3d binding and was more potent than that seen for Efb-C. An altered conformation in Ehp-bound C3 was detected by monoclonal antibody C3-9, which is specific for a neoantigen exposed in activated forms of C3. Our results suggest that increased inhibitory potency of Ehp relative to Efb-C is derived from the second C3-binding site in this new protein.
N-Acetylglutamate synthase (NAGS) catalyzes the first committed step in L-arginine biosynthesis in plants and micro-organisms and is subject to feedback inhibition by L-arginine. This study compares the crystal structures of NAGS from Neisseria gonorrhoeae (ngNAGS) in the inactive T-state with L-arginine bound and in the active R-state complexed with CoA and L-glutamate. Under all of the conditions examined, the enzyme consists of two stacked trimers. Each monomer has two domains: an amino acid kinase (AAK) domain with an AAK-like fold but lacking kinase activity and an N-acetyltransferase (NAT) domain homologous to other GCN5-related transferases. Binding of L-arginine to the AAK domain induces a global conformational change that increases the diameter of the hexamer by ϳ10 Å and decreases its height by ϳ20 Å . AAK dimers move 5 Å outward along their 2-fold axes, and their tilt relative to the plane of the hexamer decreases by ϳ4°. The NAT domains rotate ϳ109°relative to AAK domains enabling new interdomain interactions. Interactions between AAK and NAT domains on different subunits also change. Local motions of several loops at the L-arginine-binding site enable the protein to close around the bound ligand, whereas several loops at the NAT active site become disordered, markedly reducing enzymatic specific activity.L-Arginine biosynthesis in most micro-organisms and plants involves the initial acetylation of L-glutamate by N-acetylglutamate synthase (NAGS, EC 2.3.1.1) 2 to produce N-acetylglutamate (NAG). NAG is then converted by NAG kinase (NAGK, EC 2.7.2.8) to NAG-phosphate and subsequently to N-acetylornithine (1, 2). Two alternative reactions are used to remove the acetyl group from acetylornithine. The linear pathway uses N-acetylornithine deacetylase (EC 3.5.1.16) to catalyze the metal-dependent hydrolysis of the acetyl group to form L-ornithine and acetate, whereas the acetyl recycling pathway transfers the acetyl group from N-acetylornithine to L-glutamate, producing L-ornithine and NAG. This reaction is catalyzed by ornithine acetyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.35).In the linear pathway, NAGS is the only target of feedback inhibition by L-arginine. In contrast, in the acetyl cycling pathway L-arginine may inhibit NAGS and NAGK or ornithine acetyltransferase (3). Structure determinations of L-arginineinsensitive (4) and L-arginine-sensitive NAGKs (5) provided insights into the structural basis of L-arginine inhibition of NAGK. L-Arginine-insensitive Escherichia coli (ec) NAGK is a homodimer (4), whereas L-arginine-sensitive NAGKs from Thermotoga maritima (tm) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (pa) are hexamers formed by pair-wise interlacing of the N-terminal helices of three ecNAGK-like dimers, to create a second type of dimer interface. L-Arginine binding to a site close to the C terminus induces global conformational changes that expands the ring by ϳ8 Å and decreases the tilt of the ecNAGK-like dimers relative to the plane of the ring by ϳ6°. The inhibition mechanism was proposed to involve the enlargement of an ...
We report herein the crystal structure of Escherichia coli RimK at a resolution of 2.85 Å, an enzyme that catalyzes the post-translational addition of up to 15 C-terminal glutamate residues to ribosomal protein S6. The structure belongs to the ATP-grasp superfamily and is organized as a tetramer, consistent with gel filtration analysis. Each subunit consists of three distinct structural domains and the active site is located in the cleft between these domains. The catalytic reaction appears to occur at the junction between the three domains as ATP binds between the B and C domains, and other substrates bind nearby.
N-acetylglutamate synthase (NAGS) catalyzes the conversion of AcCoA and L-glutamate to CoA and N-acetyl-L-glutamate (NAG), an obligate cofactor for carbamyl phosphate synthetase I (CPSI) in the urea cycle. NAGS deficiency results in elevated levels of plasma ammonia which is neurotoxic. We report herein the first crystal structure of human NAGS, that of the catalytic N-acetyltransferase (hNAT) domain with N-acetyl-L-glutamate bound at 2.1 Å resolution. Functional studies indicate that the hNAT domain retains catalytic activity in the absence of the amino acid kinase (AAK) domain. Instead, the major functions of the AAK domain appear to be providing a binding site for the allosteric activator, L-arginine, and an N-terminal proline-rich motif that is likely to function in signal transduction to CPS1. Crystalline hNAT forms a dimer similar to the NAT-NAT dimers that form in crystals of bifunctional N-acetylglutamate synthase/kinase (NAGS/K) from Maricaulis maris and also exists as a dimer in solution. The structure of the NAG binding site, in combination with mutagenesis studies, provide insights into the catalytic mechanism. We also show that native NAGS from human and mouse exists in tetrameric form, similar to those of bifunctional NAGS/K.
Novel bifunctional N-acetylglutamate synthase/kinases (NAGS/K) that catalyze the first two steps of arginine biosynthesis and are homologous to vertebrate N-acetylglutamate synthase (NAGS), an essential cofactor-producing enzyme in the urea cycle, were identified in Maricaulis maris and several other bacteria. Arginine is an allosteric inhibitor of NAGS but not NAGK activity. The crystal structure of M. maris NAGS/K (mmNAGS/K) at 2.7 Å resolution indicates that it is a tetramer, in contrast to the hexameric structure of Neisseria gonorrhoeae NAGS. The quaternary structure of crystalline NAGS/K from Xanthomonas campestris (xcNAGS/K) is similar, and cross-linking experiments indicate that both mmNAGS/K and xcNAGS are tetramers in solution. Each subunit has an amino acid kinase (AAK) domain, which is likely responsible for N-acetylglutamate kinase (NAGK) activity and has a putative arginine binding site, and an N-acetyltransferase (NAT) domain that contains the putative NAGS active site. These structures and sequence comparisons suggest that the linker residue 291 may determine whether arginine acts as an allosteric inhibitor or activator in homologous enzymes in microorganisms and vertebrates. In addition, the angle of rotation between AAK and NAT domains varies among crystal forms and subunits within the tetramer. A rotation of 26° is sufficient to close the predicted AcCoA binding site, thus reducing enzymatic activity. Since mmNAGS/K has the highest degree of sequence homology to vertebrate NAGS of NAGS and NAGK enzymes whose structures have been determined, the mmNAGS/K structure was used to develop a structural model of human NAGS that is fully consistent with the functional effects of the 14 missense mutations that were identified in NAGS-deficient patients.
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