| Literature DB >> 20944207 |
Mitchell D Miller1, L Aravind, Constantina Bakolitsa, Christopher L Rife, Dennis Carlton, Polat Abdubek, Tamara Astakhova, Herbert L Axelrod, Hsiu Ju Chiu, Thomas Clayton, Marc C Deller, Lian Duan, Julie Feuerhelm, Joanna C Grant, Gye Won Han, Lukasz Jaroszewski, Kevin K Jin, Heath E Klock, Mark W Knuth, Piotr Kozbial, S Sri Krishna, Abhinav Kumar, David Marciano, Daniel McMullan, Andrew T Morse, Edward Nigoghossian, Linda Okach, Ron Reyes, Henry van den Bedem, Dana Weekes, Qingping Xu, Keith O Hodgson, John Wooley, Marc André Elsliger, Ashley M Deacon, Adam Godzik, Scott A Lesley, Ian A Wilson.
Abstract
The crystal structure of Dhaf4260 from Desulfitobacterium hafniense DCB-2 was determined by single-wavelength anomalous diffraction (SAD) to a resolution of 2.01 Å using the semi-automated high-throughput pipeline of the Joint Center for Structural Genomics (JCSG) as part of the NIGMS Protein Structure Initiative (PSI). This protein structure is the first representative of the PF04016 (DUF364) Pfam family and reveals a novel combination of two well known domains (an enolase N-terminal-like fold followed by a Rossmann-like domain). Structural and bioinformatic analyses reveal partial similarities to Rossmann-like methyltransferases, with residues from the enolase-like fold combining to form a unique active site that is likely to be involved in the condensation or hydrolysis of molecules implicated in the synthesis of flavins, pterins or other siderophores. The genome context of Dhaf4260 and homologs additionally supports a role in heavy-metal chelation.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20944207 PMCID: PMC2954201 DOI: 10.1107/S1744309110007517
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr Sect F Struct Biol Cryst Commun ISSN: 1744-3091
Summary of crystal parameters, data-collection and refinement statistics for Dhaf4260 (PDB code 3l5o)
Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell.
| Space group | |
| Unit-cell parameters (Å) | |
| Data collection | |
| Wavelength (Å) | 0.9791 (λ1 Se-SAD) |
| Resolution range (Å) | 29.0–2.01 (2.06–2.01) |
| No. of observations | 311344 |
| No. of unique reflections | 41624 |
| Completeness (%) | 99.9 (99.9) |
| Mean | 17.2 (2.5) |
|
| 6.9 (73.0) |
|
| 7.3 (81.2) |
| Model and refinement statistics | |
| Resolution range (Å) | 29.0–2.01 |
| No. of reflections (total) | 41583 |
| No. of reflections (test) | 2092 |
| Completeness (%) | 100.0 |
| Data set used in refinement | λ1 |
| Cutoff criterion | | |
|
| 0.171 |
|
| 0.214 |
| Stereochemical parameters | |
| Restraints (r.m.s.d. observed) | |
| Bond angles (°) | 1.43 |
| Bond lengths (Å) | 0.014 |
| Average isotropic | 49.4 |
| ESU | 0.14 |
| Protein residues/atoms | 491/3715 |
| Water/other solvent molecules | 238/12 |
R merge = .
R meas = (Diederichs & Karplus, 1997 ▶).
The number of unique reflections used in refinement is typically slightly less than the total number that were integrated and scaled. Reflections were excluded owing to systematic absences, negative intensities and rounding errors in the resolution limits and unit-cell parameters.
R cryst = , where F calc and F obs are the calculated and observed structure-factor amplitudes, respectively.
R free is the same as R cryst but for 5.0% of the total reflections that were chosen at random and omitted from refinement.
This value represents the total B that includes TLS and residual B components.
Estimated overall coordinate error (Collaborative Computational Project, Number 4, 1994 ▶; Cruickshank, 1999 ▶).
Figure 1Crystal structure of Dhaf4260 from D. hafniense. (a) Stereo ribbon diagram of the Dhaf4260 monomer. The N-terminal domain is colored cyan and the C-terminal domain is colored salmon. Helices H1–H13 and β-strands β1–β10 are indicated. (b) Diagram showing the secondary-structure elements of Dhaf4260 superimposed on its primary sequence. The designation of secondary-structure elements is in accord with PDBsum (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/pdbsum). For Dhaf4260, helices are labeled sequentially (H1, H2, H3 etc.) with α-helices H1–H6, H8–H10 and H12 and 310-helices H7, H11 and H13, β-strands are numbered sequentially (strands β1–β3 form the first sheet and strands β4–β10 form the second sheet), β-turns are labeled β, γ-turns are labeled γ and β-hairpins are indicated as red loops. The unmodeled sequence, which is disordered in the electron-density map, is indicated by a dashed line. Residues from the N-terminal domain are highlighted in cyan and residues from the C-terminal domain are in salmon.
Figure 2Stereo ribbon diagram showing the structural superposition of (a) the C-terminal domain of Dhaf4260 (PDB code 3l5o; residues 110–251; salmon) and precorrin-8w methyltransferase from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (MT0146; PDB code 1f38; residues 1–186; gold) and (b) the N-terminal domain of Dhaf4260 (PDB code 3l5o; residues 1–102; blue) and the enolase N-terminal domain from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (PDB code 4enl; residues 1–139; gray). The precorrin methyltransferase and enolase regions implicated in oligomerization and substrate binding are indicated.
Figure 3The interdomain pocket forms a unique catalytic site. (a) Surface representation of the Dhaf4260 domain interface colored by sequence conservation according to ConSurf (Landau et al., 2005 ▶). High conservation among DUF364 homologs is indicated in maroon and low conservation is indicated in turquoise. A docked S-adenosyl-l-homocysteine (SAH) molecule is shown in ball-and-stick representation. Docking was based on its superposition with MT0146 (PDB code 1l3i; Keller et al., 2002 ▶). (b) Ribbon representation of Dhaf4260 in the same orientation as in (a). Highly conserved Dhaf4260 residues are shown in ball-and-stick representation and are labeled.