| Literature DB >> 22949187 |
Antonella Fioravanti1, Bernard Clantin, Frédérique Dewitte, Zoé Lens, Alexis Verger, Emanuele G Biondi, Vincent Villeret.
Abstract
Two-component and phosphorelay signal-transduction proteins are crucial for bacterial cell-cycle regulation in Caulobacter crescentus. ChpT is an essential histidine phosphotransferase that controls the activity of the master cell-cycle regulator CtrA by phosphorylation. Here, the 2.2 Å resolution crystal structure of ChpT is reported. ChpT is a homodimer and adopts the domain architecture of the intracellular part of class I histidine kinases. Each subunit consists of two distinct domains: an N-terminal helical hairpin domain and a C-terminal α/β domain. The two N-terminal domains are adjacent within the dimer, forming a four-helix bundle. The ChpT C-terminal domain adopts an atypical Bergerat ATP-binding fold.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22949187 PMCID: PMC3433190 DOI: 10.1107/S1744309112033064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr Sect F Struct Biol Cryst Commun ISSN: 1744-3091
Figure 1(a) SDS–PAGE gel of purified His6-ChpT (25.3 kDa) after nickel-affinity purification (Ni–NTA) and gel filtration as described in §2. (b) His6-ChpT crystal.
Data-collection and refinement statistics
Values in parentheses are for the last shell.
| His6-ChpT-Eu-DO3A | His6-ChpT-Native | |
|---|---|---|
| Data collection | ||
| Unit-cell parameters (Å) |
|
|
| Space group |
|
|
| Beamline | BM30, ESRF | PROXIMA1, SOLEIL |
| Wavelength (Å) | 1.776075 | 0.980110 |
| Temperature (K) | 100 | 100 |
| Detector | ADSC Quantum 315r | PILATUS 6M |
| Crystal-to-detector distance (mm) | 177 | 320 |
| Rotation range per image (°) | 1 | 0.2 |
| Exposure time per image (s) | 60 | 0.2 |
| Images collected | 180 | 1200 |
| Resolution (Å) | 47–2.5 (2.6–2.5) | 49–2.2 (2.3–2.2) |
| Unique reflections | 70189 (7765) | 52206 (6430) |
| Crystal mosaicity (°) | 0.146 | 0.085 |
| Completeness (%) | 99.6 (98.9) | 100 (100) |
| Redundancy | 3.7 (3.6) | 8.7 (9.2) |
| 〈 | 9.8 (2.7) | 12.5 (2.9) |
|
| 10.1 (52.0) | 10.7 (81.8) |
|
| 11.8 (60.9) | 11.4 (86.9) |
| Overall CCanom | 0.35 | — |
| CCanom (3.0 Å cutoff) | 0.45 | — |
| Refinement data | ||
|
| 22.79 | |
|
| 26.38 | |
| Mean | 61.9 | |
| No. of non-H atoms | ||
| Protein | 4549 | |
| Ion | 1 | |
| Water | 159 | |
| R.m.s. deviations | ||
| Bond lengths (Å) | 0.024 | |
| Bond angles (°) | 2.034 | |
| Ramachandran statistics | ||
| Favoured (%) | 97.1 | |
| Allowed (%) | 2.7 | |
| Disallowed (%) | 0.2 | |
R merge = , where I (hkl) is the observed intensity and 〈I(hkl)〉 is the average intensity for multiple measurements.
R meas = 100 × , where N is the number of times a given reflection has been observed.
R work = , where F obs is the observed structure factor and F calc is the calculated structure factor.
R free is the same as R work except calculated using 5% of the data that were not included in any refinement calculations.
Figure 2(a) Definition of secondary-structure elements in the His6-ChpT sequence. (b) Ribbon representation of the overall ChpT structure viewed perpendicular to the twofold symmetry axis. The two ChpT subunits are displayed in green and blue, respectively. This view shows the formation of the four-helix bundle of the DHp domain flanked by the two C-terminal domains. The catalytic His33 residues are shown in ball-and-stick representation on opposite faces of the DHp domain. The two N-termini are also indicated. (c) Representation of one ChpT subunit, with all secondary-structure elements labelled.
Figure 3Ribbon representation of the C-terminal domains of (a) ChpT and (b) DesK (Trajtenberg et al., 2010 ▶). DesK binds ATP in the ATP-binding pocket defined by the ATP lid (a loop between strand β3 and helix α5) and the central helix α4, while the γ-phosphate is exposed and can be attacked by the catalytic histidine of the DHp domain. In ChpT the ATP lid is substituted by two additional turns in the N-terminal part of helix α5. There is an additional short α-helix (α4′) between strand β5 and helix α5, which together with helix α5 closes the ATP-binding pocket.