Sergio Aguirre-Sampieri , Ana Casañal , Paul Emsley , Georgina Garza-Ramos
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Many enzymes can self-assemble into higher-order structures with helical symmetry. A particularly noteworthy example is that of nitrilases, enzymes in which oligomerization of dimers into spiral homo-oligomers is a requirement for their enzymatic function. Nitrilases are widespread in nature where they catalyze the hydrolysis of nitriles into the corresponding carboxylic acid and ammonia. Here, we present the Cryo-EM structure, at 3 Å resolution, of a C-terminal truncate nitrilase from Rhodococcus sp. V51B that assembles in helical filaments. The model comprises a complete turn of the helical arrangement with a substrate-intermediate bound to the catalytic cysteine. The structure was solved having added the substrate to the protein. The length and stability of filaments was made more substantial in the presence of the aromatic substrate, benzonitrile, but not for aliphatic nitriles or dinitriles. The overall structure maintains the topology of the nitrilase family, and the filament is formed by the association of dimers in a chain-like mechanism that stabilizes the spiral. The active site is completely buried inside each monomer, while the substrate binding pocket was observed within the oligomerization interfaces. The present structure is in a closed configuration, judging by the position of the lid, suggesting that the intermediate is one of the covalent adducts. The proximity of the active site to the dimerization and oligomerization interfaces, allows the dimer to sense structural changes once the benzonitrile was bound, and translated to the rest of the filament, stabilizing the helical structure.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Structural Biology (JSB) has an open access mirror journal, the Journal of Structural Biology: X (JSBX), sharing the same aims and scope, editorial team, submission system and rigorous peer review. Since both journals share the same editorial system, you may submit your manuscript via either journal homepage. You will be prompted during submission (and revision) to choose in which to publish your article. The editors and reviewers are not aware of the choice you made until the article has been published online. JSB and JSBX publish papers dealing with the structural analysis of living material at every level of organization by all methods that lead to an understanding of biological function in terms of molecular and supermolecular structure.
Techniques covered include:
• Light microscopy including confocal microscopy
• All types of electron microscopy
• X-ray diffraction
• Nuclear magnetic resonance
• Scanning force microscopy, scanning probe microscopy, and tunneling microscopy
• Digital image processing
• Computational insights into structure