| Literature DB >> 23275160 |
Armin Ruf1, Martine Stihle, Jörg Benz, Manfred Schmidt, Harald Sobek.
Abstract
Gentlyase is a bacterial extracellular metalloprotease that is widely applied in cell culture and for tissue dissociation and that belongs to the family of thermolysin-like proteases. The structure of thermolysin has been known since 1972 and that of Bacillus cereus neutral protease since 1992. However, the structure determination of other Bacillus neutral proteases has been hindered by their tendency to cannibalistic autolysis. High calcium conditions that allow the concentration and crystallization of the active Gentlyase metalloprotease without autoproteolysis were identified using thermal fluorescent shift assays. X-ray structures of the protease were solved in the absence and in the presence of the inhibitor phosphoramidon at 1.59 and 1.76 Å resolution, respectively. No domain movement was observed upon inhibitor binding, although such movement is thought to be a general feature of the thermolysin-like protease family. Further analysis of the structure shows that the observed calcium dependency of Gentlyase stability may arise from a partly degenerated calcium site Ca1-2 and a deletion near site Ca3.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23275160 PMCID: PMC3532130 DOI: 10.1107/S0907444912041169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ISSN: 0907-4449
Data-collection and refinement statistics
Each data set was collected from one single crystal. Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell.
| Peptide complex (PDB entry | Phosphoramidon complex (PDB entry | |
|---|---|---|
| Data collection | ||
| Space group |
|
|
| Unit-cell parameters | ||
|
| 61.0 | 61.1 |
|
| 77.1 | 77.0 |
|
| 64.1 | 64.4 |
| α = γ (°) | 90.0 | 90.0 |
| β (°) | 103.2 | 103.6 |
| Resolution (Å) | 48.9–1.59 (1.69–1.59) | 48.6–1.76 (1.86–1.76) |
|
| 0.141 (0.661) | 0.149 (0.629) |
| 〈 | 7.4 (1.3) | 7.9 (1.6) |
| Completeness (%) | 97.6 (96.2) | 97.8 (97.7) |
| Multiplicity | 3.4 (3.3) | 3.3 (3.3) |
| Refinement | ||
| Resolution (Å) | 48.9–1.59 (1.63–1.59) | 48.6–1.76 (1.81–1.76) |
| No. of reflections | 68487 (4527) | 53023 (3542) |
|
| 20.2/24.3 (25.7/41.1) | 19.8/24.8 (31.0/35.8) |
| No. of atoms | ||
| Total | 5275 | 5295 |
| Protein | 4588 | 4622 |
| Ligand/ion | 76 | 83 |
| Water | 611 | 590 |
|
| 14.6 | 16.5 |
| R.m.s. deviations | ||
| Bond lengths (Å) | 0.022 | 0.024 |
| Bond angles (°) | 2.052 | 2.136 |
Figure 1(a) Sequence alignment between the neutral proteases from Paenibacillus polymyxa (Gentlyase), Bacillus thermoproteolyticus (thermolysin), B. cereus (UniProt ID Q63G45_BACCZ) and B. stearothermophilus (NPRT_GEOSE). The numbering shown corresponds to the mature proteases. Residues liganding Ca2+ in Ca1–2, Ca3 and Ca4 are boxed in red, blue and black, respectively. Acidic, basic, polar and nonpolar residues are coloured red, blue, magenta and black, respectively. (b) Superposition of the overall structure of P. polymyxa neutral protease (N-terminal domain in cyan and C-terminal domain in blue) with that of thermolysin from B. thermoproteolyticus (green; PDB entry 3fvp). Calcium-binding sites Ca1–2, Ca3 and Ca4 are discernible by the yellow Ca2+ ions and are labelled 1, 3 and 4, respectively. The active site is marked by the grey Zn2+ ion. There is overall high structural similarity, except for the two helices close to the calcium-binding sites Ca1–2 and Ca3, which are shortened by one turn in P. polymyxa neutral protease (black arrows) owing to the two sequence deletions.
Figure 2(a) Close-up stereoview of the active site with the inhibitor phosphoramidon (magenta) that was soaked into the crystals. It displays the typical binding mode of phosphoramidates to TLP. (b) Superposition of phosphoramidon bound to the neutral proteases Gentlyase (pink) and thermolysin (green) shows the overall good agreement of the Trp, Leu and phosphoramidate moieties of the inhibitors. In the Gentlyase crystal a different conformation of the rhamnose moiety is observed that forms a hydrogen bond across a crystal lattice contact to Asn215 of another protein chain (cyan) and displaces the Tyr150 side chain.
Figure 3The Ca2+-binding site Ca1–2 is degenerated in the C-terminal domain of the P. polymyxa neutral protease Gentlyase. (a) The double calcium site Ca1–2 is occupied by only one Ca2+ in both structures of P. polymyxa neutral protease. Water molecules coordinating the Ca2+ ion (yellow) are shown as red spheres. (b) Ca1–2 in the prototypic neutral protease thermolysin from B. thermoproteolyticus (PDB entry 3fvp). (c) Superimposition of Ca1–2 in P. polymyxa neutral protease (yellow) with that of thermolysin from B. thermoproteolyticus (green) shows that the Asp185 coordinating the first Ca2+ in thermolysin is substituted by two water molecules and that Lys172 provides the missing positive charge of the second Ca2+ in P. polymyxa neutral protease. Waters were omitted for clarity.
Figure 4(a) The Ca2+-binding site Ca3 in the N-terminal domain of the P. polymyxa neutral protease Gentlyase. Water molecules coordinating the Ca2+ ion (yellow) are shown as red spheres. (b) The Ca3 site in the prototypic neutral protease thermolysin from B. thermoproteolyticus (PDB entry 3fvp). (c, d) Superimposition of the neutral protease Gentlyase (yellow) with thermolysin (green) shows that the deletion in Gentlyase does not affect the Ca3 site. However, the backbone conformation and side-chain orientation of Asn59 adjacent to the deletion is affected. The corresponding Phe63 is reported to confer thermostability on thermolysin or B. stearothermophilus neutral protease by stabilizing the N-terminal β-sheet through hydrophobic interactions with the side chain (Van den Burg et al., 1994 ▶). Owing to the three-residue deletion after Asn59 these stabilizing hydrophobic contacts cannot be formed in Gentlyase, even if the thermolysin Phe63 were not changed to Asn59 in Gentlyase.