| Literature DB >> 22194336 |
Emma R Scaletti1, Sylvia R Luckner, Kurt L Krause.
Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus is an opportunistic Gram-positive bacterium which causes a wide variety of diseases ranging from minor skin infections to potentially fatal conditions such as pneumonia, meningitis and septicaemia. The pathogen is a leading cause of nosocomial acquired infections, a problem that is exacerbated by the existence of methicillin- and glycopeptide antibiotic-resistant strains which can be challenging to treat. Alanine racemase (Alr) is a pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent enzyme which catalyzes reversible racemization between enantiomers of alanine. As D-alanine is an essential component of the bacterial cell-wall peptidoglycan, inhibition of Alr is lethal to prokaryotes. Additionally, while ubiquitous amongst bacteria, this enzyme is absent in humans and most eukaryotes, making it an excellent antibiotic drug target. The crystal structure of S. aureus alanine racemase (Alr(Sas)), the sequence of which corresponds to that from the highly antibiotic-resistant Mu50 strain, has been solved to 2.15 Å resolution. Comparison of the Alr(Sas) structure with those of various alanine racemases demonstrates a conserved overall fold, with the enzyme sharing most similarity to those from other Gram-positive bacteria. Structural examination indicates that the active-site binding pocket, dimer interface and active-site entryway of the enzyme are potential targets for structure-aided inhibitor design. Kinetic constants were calculated in this study and are reported here. The potential for a disulfide bond in this structure is noted. This structural and biochemical information provides a template for future structure-based drug-development efforts targeting Alr(Sas).Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22194336 PMCID: PMC3245724 DOI: 10.1107/S0907444911050682
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ISSN: 0907-4449
Data-collection and refinement statistics
Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell.
| Space group | |
| Unit-cell parameters | |
|
| 65.1 |
|
| 113.9 |
|
| 126.0 |
| α = β = γ (°) | 90 |
| Observations | 187093 (24483) |
| Unique reflections | 49388 (6693) |
| Completeness (%) | 96.1 (91.0) |
| 5.8 (19.4) | |
| 〈 | 15.2 (6.3) |
| Multiplicity | 3.8 (3.7) |
| Resolution range (Å) | 51.91–2.15 (2.27–2.15) |
| 18.9 | |
| 23.7 | |
| Average | |
| Wilson | 26.7 |
| Main chain | 20.3 |
| Side chains | 22.5 |
| Waters | 22.6 |
| R.m.s. deviations | |
| Bond lengths (Å) | 0.014 |
| Bond angles (°) | 1.35 |
| No. of residues | |
| Protein atoms | 5644 |
| PLP atoms | 30 |
| Acetate atoms | 8 |
| Sulfate atoms | 65 |
| Water atoms | 266 |
R merge = .
R = .
Figure 1(a) Structure of the S. aureus alanine racemase monomer. Ribbon representation with α-helices coloured orange and β-sheets shown in green. The PLP cofactor covalently bound to Lys39 is shown as a black stick model. (b) Ribbon representation of the S. aureus alanine racemase dimer. Monomers are coloured blue and green, with the surface representation of one monomer also shown in green. The PLP cofactors are depicted as black stick models. Sulfate and acetate molecules are shown as ball-and-stick models; C atoms are coloured black, O atoms red, S atoms yellow and phosphates orange.
Figure 2Structure-based sequence alignment of alanine racemases from S. aureus (Alr_Sas), G. stearothermophilus (Alr_Gst), B. anthracis (Alr_Bax), M. tuberculosis (Alr_Mtb) and P. aeuruginosa (DadX_Pao). Identical residues are shaded black, while grey shading indicates amino acids with conserved physicochemical properties. The purple box encloses the conserved PLP-binding motif and the red boxes correspond to missing density in the Alr structure. I and M represent residues that form the inner and middle layers of the active-site entryway. The asterisk marks the highly conserved PLP-bound lysine, the diamond marks the location of the catalytic tyrosine and the bullet point indicates the location of a residue which is often carbamylated in alanine racemases which have a lysine at this position. The secondary structure corresponding to the amino-acid sequence of Alr is shown, with α-helices coloured orange and β-strands coloured green. Residues involved in the dimer interface are shown as blue letters.
Average r.m.s. differences (Å) between the Cα atoms of Alr and other alanine racemases
The numbers in parentheses denote sequence identity with Alr. Residues from the other structures equivalent to those in Alr were used for the superpositions.
| Alanine racemase | PDB code | Whole monomers | N-terminal domain | C-terminal domain | Active site |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alr | 1.34 (44%) | 1.25 (44%) | 0.71 (48%) | 0.48 (70%) | |
| Alr | 1.54 (43%) | 1.47 (43%) | 0.75 (46%) | 0.53 (68%) | |
| Alr | 1.67 (33%) | 1.62 (32%) | 1.13 (36%) | 0.72 (51%) | |
| DadX | 2.14 (30%) | 1.60 (29%) | 1.36 (32%) | 0.82 (47%) |
Calculated using monomer A.
Calculated using residues 2–241.
Calculated using residues 242–382.
Calculated using residues 37–43, 61–65, 82–86, 101–105, 127–140, 163–171, 198–205, 216–223 and 351–358 from monomer A and residues 263–266, 309–314 and 283–287 from monomer B.
Figure 3Cα-atom superpositions of Alr and other alanine racemases. S. aureus, green; G. stearothermophilus, blue; B. anthracis, red; M. tuberculosis, orange; P. aeruginosa, purple. Cα-atom traces showing superpositions between the (a) N-terminal and (b) C-terminal domains. Regions corresponding to significant structural deviations and their location in the Alr structure are labelled. (c) Superposition of the N-terminal α/β-barrel domain of whole alanine racemase monomers visualized as a ribbon representation. The PLP cofactor of Alr is depicted as a black stick model.
Kinetic parameters for the racemization between L-alanine and D-alanine by alanine racemases
NR: value not reported.
| Alanine racemase | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alr | 2.77 | 250 | 0.89 | 91 | 0.89 |
| Alr | 4.25 | 2550 | 2.67 | 1400 | 1.14 |
| Alr | 2.8 | 101 | NR | NR | NR |
| Alr | 1.2 | 0.51 | 1.1 | 0.46 | 1.02 |
| DadX | 1.40 | 155 | 1.40 | 134 | 1.16 |
One unit is defined as the amount of enzyme which catalyzes the racemization of 1 µmol of substrate per minute.
K eq = V max( × K m(/V max( × K m(.
Current work; assay performed at 303 K.
Inagaki et al. (1986 ▶); assay performed at 310 K.
Couñago et al. (2009 ▶); assay performed at 296 K.
Strych et al. (2001 ▶); assay performed at 296 K.
Strych et al. (2000 ▶); assay performed at 296 K.
Figure 4Active site of S. aureus alanine racemase. (a) Superposition of the active-site residues of alanine racemases from S. aureus (green), G. stearothermophilus (blue), B. anthracis (red), M. tuberculosis (orange) and P. aeruginosa (purple). The chloride present in the Alr structure is shown as a pale green sphere. Residues labelled in red boxes lack density in the Alr structure. (b) 2F o − F c electron-density map of the active site contoured at 1.0σ. The side chains of the Alr active site are depicted as sticks; C atoms are coloured green, O atoms red, N atoms blue, S atoms yellow and phosphate orange. The PLP cofactors from each structure are depicted as ball-and-stick models. Important water molecules that are alluded to in the text are shown as grey spheres. In both panels the acetate and sulfate from the Alr structure are represented as ball-and-stick models; C atoms are coloured black, O atoms red and S atoms yellow. Primed numbers denote residues that are contributed by the second monomer.