| Literature DB >> 23519420 |
Karolina Michalska1, Kemin Tan, Hui Li, Catherine Hatzos-Skintges, Jessica Bearden, Gyorgy Babnigg, Andrzej Joachimiak.
Abstract
In lactic acid bacteria and other bacteria, carbohydrate uptake is mostly governed by phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase systems (PTSs). PTS-dependent translocation through the cell membrane is coupled with phosphorylation of the incoming sugar. After translocation through the bacterial membrane, the β-glycosidic bond in 6'-P-β-glucoside is cleaved, releasing 6-P-β-glucose and the respective aglycon. This reaction is catalyzed by 6-P-β-glucosidases, which belong to two glycoside hydrolase (GH) families: GH1 and GH4. Here, the high-resolution crystal structures of GH1 6-P-β-glucosidases from Lactobacillus plantarum (LpPbg1) and Streptococcus mutans (SmBgl) and their complexes with ligands are reported. Both enzymes show hydrolytic activity towards 6'-P-β-glucosides. The LpPbg1 structure has been determined in an apo form as well as in a complex with phosphate and a glucose molecule corresponding to the aglycon molecule. The S. mutans homolog contains a sulfate ion in the phosphate-dedicated subcavity. SmBgl was also crystallized in the presence of the reaction product 6-P-β-glucose. For a mutated variant of the S. mutans enzyme (E375Q), the structure of a 6'-P-salicin complex has also been determined. The presence of natural ligands enabled the definition of the structural elements that are responsible for substrate recognition during catalysis.Entities:
Keywords: 6-P-β-glucosidases; GH1; cellobiose; gentiobiose; glycoside hydrolases; salicin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23519420 PMCID: PMC3605045 DOI: 10.1107/S0907444912049608
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.
| LpPgb1 | Apo LpPgb1 | SmBgl | SmBglBG6 | E375Q SmBglPSC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Data collection | |||||
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| Unit-cell parameters (, ) |
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| Temperature (K) | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
| Radiation source | APS ID-19 | APS BM-19 | APS ID-19 | APS ID-19 | APS ID-19 |
| Wavelength () | 0.9792 | 0.9790 | 0.9794 | 0.9792 | 0.9793 |
| Resolution () | 50.001.50 (1.531.50) | 50.002.31 (2.352.31) | 36.001.70 (1.731.70) | 25.101.48 (1.511.48) | 39.002.54 (2.592.54) |
| Unique reflections | 102382 | 130353 | 112307 | 163713 | 25874 |
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| 0.112 (0.650) | 0.079 (0.285) | 0.115 (0.710) | 0.067 (0.589) | 0.087 (0.636) |
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| 33.2 (3.7) | 21.8 (2.75) | 26.8 (1.9) | 27.1 (1.9) | 25.8 (2.3) |
| Completeness (%) | 99.9 (100) | 99.6 (96.7) | 98.6 (97.2) | 99.7 (96.5) | 99.4 (100) |
| Multiplicity | 11.7 (11.4) | 4.4 (2.8) | 4.1 (4.0) | 4.6 (3.1) | 6.7 (6.8) |
| Refinement | |||||
| Resolution () | 31.001.50 | 30.02.31 | 35.901.69 | 25.101.48 | 39.002.54 |
| Reflections (work/test set) | 101314/1031 | 129000/1248 | 100643/5294 | 155447/8214 | 24479/1312 |
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| 0.118/0.134 | 0.174/0.213 | 0.163/0.193 | 0.162/0.185 | 0.180/0.229 |
| No. of atoms | |||||
| Protein | 3993 | 23032 | 7846 | 7925 | 3902 |
| Ligands | 36 | 12 | 164 | 58 | 36 |
| Water | 589 | 547 | 565 | 1145 | 34 |
| Average | |||||
| Protein | 12.7 | 42.1 | 37.3 | 18.5 | 69.4 |
| Ligands | 28.2 | 52.7 | 60.4 | 23.8 | 79.0 |
| Water | 25.9 | 38.9 | 39.5 | 30.8 | 57.6 |
| R.m.s. deviations from ideal | |||||
| Bond lengths () | 0.015 | 0.013 | 0.006 | 0.006 | 0.007 |
| Bond angles () | 1.455 | 1.302 | 0.939 | 1.060 | 1.058 |
| Clashscore [percentile] | 1.84 [99th] | 8.13 [97th] | 9.25 [73rd] | 5.36 [91st] | 13.08 [91st] |
| Poor rotamers | 0.75 | 1.85 | 1.99 | 1.74 | 4.98 |
| Ramachandran statistics of / angles | |||||
| Most favored | 99.2 | 97.5 | 97.7 | 98.3 | 97.5 |
| Outliers | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| PDB entry |
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R merge = , where I (hkl) is the intensity of observation i of reflection hkl.
R work = for all reflections, where F obs and F calc are observed and calculated structure factors, respectively. R free is calculated analogously for the test reflections, which were randomly selected and excluded from the refinement.
According to Engh and Huber parameters (Engh Huber, 1991 ▶).
According to MolProbity (Chen et al., 2010 ▶).
Figure 1Overall structure of 6-P-β-glucosidase and its comparision with 6-P-β-galactosidase. (a) Superposition of the LpPbg1 dimer (grey) and SmBgl (purple and blue). A 6′-P-salicin molecule from the E375Q SmBgl–PSC complex structure is shown in one monomer in ball-and-stick representation. (b, c) Electrostatic surface potential (calculated using APBS; Baker et al., 2001 ▶) of LpPbg1 (b) and SmBgl (c). The ligands from the LpPbg1 structure are shown for reference. (d) Superposition of LpPbg1 (green) with apo LpPbg1 chains A (gray) and C (pink). Tryptophan residues from the labile loop are shown as line representations. (e) 6-P-β-Galactosidase in a surface representation (PDB entry 4pbg). (f–g) Superposition of LpPbg1 (green) with apo LpPbg1 chain A (gray), with either LpPbg1 or apo LpPbg1 shown in a surface representation.
Figure 2Active site of 6-P-β-glucosidase (stereoview). (a) LpPgb1 in complex with a phosphate anion and an aglycon β-glucose moiety. Hydrogen bonds are shown as broken lines. (b) E375Q SmBgl in complex with 6′-P-salicin. For comparison, the aglycon glucose molecule from the LpPgb1 structure is shown in green. (c) SmBgl in complex with 6-P-β-glucose. All ligands are shown as 2F o − F c electron-density maps contoured at the 1σ level.
Figure 3Superposition of the phosphate- and glycon binding sites. The active sites of SmBgl–BG6 (purple) with (a) 6-P-β-galactosidase from L. lactis in complex with 6-P-β-galactose (gray; PDB entry 4pbg), (b) β-glucosidase from an uncultured bacterium in complex with β-glucose (pink; PDB entry 3fj0) and (c) 6-P-β-glucosidase A from E. coli in complex with a sulfate ion (PDB entry 2xhy) are shown.
Figure 4Superposition of the aglycon binding sites. The active sites of LpPgb1 (green) with (a) β-glucosidase from P. polymyxa in complex with thiocellobiose (blue; PDB entry 2o9r) and β-glucosidase from rice (b) in complex with laminaribiose (cyan; PDB entry 3aht; Chuenchor et al., 2011 ▶) and (c) in complex with cellotetraose (cyan; PDB entry 3f5j; Chuenchor et al., 2011 ▶) are shown. Hydrogen bonds involving laminaribiose are shown as broken lines.