| Literature DB >> 20944225 |
Qingping Xu1, Polat Abdubek, Tamara Astakhova, Herbert L Axelrod, Constantina Bakolitsa, Xiaohui Cai, Dennis Carlton, Connie Chen, Hsiu Ju Chiu, Thomas Clayton, Debanu Das, Marc C Deller, Lian Duan, Kyle Ellrott, Carol L Farr, Julie Feuerhelm, Joanna C Grant, Anna Grzechnik, Gye Won Han, Lukasz Jaroszewski, Kevin K Jin, Heath E Klock, Mark W Knuth, Piotr Kozbial, S Sri Krishna, Abhinav Kumar, Winnie W Lam, David Marciano, Mitchell D Miller, Andrew T Morse, Edward Nigoghossian, Amanda Nopakun, Linda Okach, Christina Puckett, Ron Reyes, Henry J Tien, Christine B Trame, Henry van den Bedem, Dana Weekes, Tiffany Wooten, Andrew Yeh, Jiadong Zhou, Keith O Hodgson, John Wooley, Marc André Elsliger, Ashley M Deacon, Adam Godzik, Scott A Lesley, Ian A Wilson.
Abstract
Membrane-attack complex/perforin (MACPF) proteins are transmembrane pore-forming proteins that are important in both human immunity and the virulence of pathogens. Bacterial MACPFs are found in diverse bacterial species, including most human gut-associated Bacteroides species. The crystal structure of a bacterial MACPF-domain-containing protein BT_3439 (Bth-MACPF) from B. thetaiotaomicron, a predominant member of the mammalian intestinal microbiota, has been determined. Bth-MACPF contains a membrane-attack complex/perforin (MACPF) domain and two novel C-terminal domains that resemble ribonuclease H and interleukin 8, respectively. The entire protein adopts a flat crescent shape, characteristic of other MACPF proteins, that may be important for oligomerization. This Bth-MACPF structure provides new features and insights not observed in two previous MACPF structures. Genomic context analysis infers that Bth-MACPF may be involved in a novel protein-transport or nutrient-uptake system, suggesting an important role for these MACPF proteins, which were likely to have been inherited from eukaryotes via horizontal gene transfer, in the adaptation of commensal bacteria to the host environment.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20944225 PMCID: PMC2954219 DOI: 10.1107/S1744309110023055
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 Bth-MACPF (PDB code 3kk7)
Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell.
| λ1 MADSe | λ2 MADSe | λ3 MADSe | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Space group | |||
| Unit-cell parameters (Å) | |||
| Data collection | |||
| Wavelength (Å) | 0.9791 | 0.9184 | 0.9792 |
| Resolution range (Å) | 49.4–2.46 (2.59–2.46) | 48.0–2.80 (2.95–2.80) | 48.0–2.80 (2.95–2.80) |
| No. of observations | 342564 | 122453 | 121355 |
| No. of reflections | 49779 | 34098 | 33698 |
| Completeness (%) | 97.3 (94.2) | 98.2 (98.2) | 97.0 (99.7) |
| Mean | 10.6 (2.3) | 7.3 (2.0) | 8.6 (2.6) |
|
| 0.123 (0.75) | 0.153 (0.69) | 0.125 (0.52) |
| Model and refinement statistics | |||
| Resolution range (Å) | 49.4–2.46 | ||
| No. of reflections (total) | 49764 | ||
| No. of reflections (test) | 2514 | ||
| Completeness (%) | 97.3 | ||
| Data set used in refinement | λ1 MADSe | ||
| Cutoff criterion | | | ||
|
| 0.209 | ||
|
| 0.252 | ||
| Stereochemical parameters | |||
| Restraints (r.m.s.d. observed) | |||
| Bond lengths (Å) | 0.014 | ||
| Bond angles (°) | 1.47 | ||
| Average isotropic | 40.2 | ||
| ESU | 0.27 | ||
| Protein residues/atoms | 1001/8046 | ||
| Solvent molecules | 244 | ||
R merge = .
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% of the total reflections chosen at random and omitted from refinement.
This value represents the total B that includes TLS and residual B components.
Estimated standard uncertainty in coordinates (Collaborative Computational Project, Number 4, 1994 ▶; Cruickshank, 1999 ▶).
Figure 1Multiple sequence alignment of Bth-MACPF homologs (sequence identity <90%) with the same domain architecture. The sequence numbering and secondary-structure elements of Bth-MACPF are shown at the top and domain boundaries (¶) and sequence motifs are shown at the bottom. Charged residues are highlighted in red (negative) and blue (positive), hydrophobic residues in green and hydrophilic residues in yellow. The following sequences are shown: b.th1, B. thetaiotaomicron BT_3439 (Bth-MACPF); b.sp, Bacteroides sp. 2_2_4 (UniProt accession C3QVE5); b.th2, B. thetaiotaomicron BT_3437; b.pl, B. plebeius DSM 17135 (UniProt accession B5CX96); p.en, P. endodontalis ATCC 35406 (UniProt accession C3J7W9).
Figure 2Genomic context of MACPF proteins in two completed genomes of Bacteroides: B. thetaiotaomicron (Bth) and B. fragilis YCH46 (Bfr). Predicted lipoproteins are shown as red boxes. Proteins containing other signal peptides are colored cyan. The locus number of each gene is shown at the top. IM, inner membrane protein; OM, outer membrane protein; DUF, domain of unknown function; TPR, protein containing tetratricopeptide repeats.
Figure 3Crystal structure of Bth-MACPF. (a and b) Ribbon representations of Bth-MACPF in orthogonal views. The color scheme is as follows: the extended N-terminal region is shown in blue, the MACPF domain in shown in green with TMHs in red and the MACPF motif in magenta, domain D2 is shown in cyan and domain D3 is shown in orange. The β-sheets (A–E) and helices (A–N) are labeled alphabetically as in Fig. 1 ▶; 310-helices are not labeled. (c) Surface representation of Bth-MACPF color coded by domain as in (a and b).
Figure 4Structural comparisons of the D2 and D3 domains. (a) Structural comparison between D2 and the connector domain of HIV reverse transcriptase (PDB code 1mu2). (b) Structural comparison between D3 and a viral chemokine (PDB code 1zxt). Equivalent Cα atoms are shown in red.
Figure 5Structural comparison of the MACPF domains in Bth-MACPF, Plu-MACPF and C8α. Top: comparison of the secondary-structure topology diagrams of MACPF domains (sheet A, yellow; sheet B, cyan; TMHs, red). Bottom: ribbon representation of MACPF proteins in the same orientation and color coded as in the topology diagrams.