| Literature DB >> 24121349 |
Ji Young Yoon1, Doo Ri An, Hye Jin Yoon, Hyoun Sook Kim, Sang Jae Lee, Ha Na Im, Jun Young Jang, Se Won Suh.
Abstract
One of the virulence factors produced by Streptococcus pyogenes is β-NAD(+) glycohydrolase (SPN). S. pyogenes injects SPN into the cytosol of an infected host cell using the cytolysin-mediated translocation pathway. As SPN is toxic to bacterial cells themselves, S. pyogenes possesses the ifs gene that encodes an endogenous inhibitor for SPN (IFS). IFS is localized intracellularly and forms a complex with SPN. This intracellular complex must be dissociated during export through the cell envelope. To provide a structural basis for understanding the interactions between SPN and IFS, the complex was overexpressed between the mature SPN (residues 38-451) and the full-length IFS (residues 1-161), but it could not be crystallized. Therefore, limited proteolysis was used to isolate a crystallizable SPNct-IFS complex, which consists of the SPN C-terminal domain (SPNct; residues 193-451) and the full-length IFS. Its crystal structure has been determined by single anomalous diffraction and the model refined at 1.70 Å resolution. Interestingly, our high-resolution structure of the complex reveals that the interface between SPNct and IFS is highly rich in water molecules and many of the interactions are water-mediated. The wet interface may facilitate the dissociation of the complex for translocation across the cell envelope.Entities:
Keywords: ADP-ribosyltransferase; ARTT loop; IFS; Streptococcus pyogenes; β-NAD+ glycohydrolase
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24121349 PMCID: PMC3795565 DOI: 10.1107/S0909049513020803
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Statistics for data collection, phasing and model refinement
| Data collection | ||
| Protein name | SeMet-labeled SPNct–IFS complex | SPNct–IFS complex |
| Data set | SAD (Se peak) | Native |
| Space group |
|
|
| Unit-cell lengths (Å) |
|
|
| Unit cell angles (°) | α = 72.34, β = 81.65, γ = 79.49 | α = 72.96, β = 90.01, γ = 82.27 |
| X-ray wavelength (Å) | 0.9794 | 1.0395 |
| Resolution range (Å) | 50–1.80 (1.83–1.80) | 20–1.70 (1.73–1.70) |
| Total/unique reflections | 592510/151484 | 308304/82755 |
| Completeness (%) | 96.4 (82.2) | 94.5 (95.1) |
| Redundancy | 3.9 (3.6) | 3.7 (3.8) |
| 〈 | 36.8 (6.1) | 33.0 (3.4) |
|
| 4.6 (22.1) | 11.5 (55.4) |
| Wilson | 34.5 | |
| SAD phasing | ||
| Figure of merit (before/after density modification) | 0.58/0.75 | |
| Model refinement | ||
| Resolution range (Å) | 20–1.70 | |
|
| 19.7/23.5 | |
| Unique reflections used in | 74463/4140 | |
| No. of non-hydrogen atoms/average | ||
| Protein | ||
| SPN (residues 193−446), 2 molecules | 4064/29.3 | |
| IFS (residues 1−161), 2 molecules | 2644/27.1 | |
| Water | 596/35.2 | |
| R.m.s. deviations from ideal geometry | ||
| Bond lengths (Å)/bond angles (°) | 0.010/1.33 | |
| R.m.s. | ||
| Bond lengths/bond angles | 0.499/0.622 | |
| Ramachandran plot (including Gly and Pro) | ||
| Favored/allowed (%) | 98.78/1.22 | |
| Rotamer outliers (%) | 0.97 | |
Values in parentheses refer to the highest-resolution shell.
Values obtained by treating Friedel pairs as separate observations.
R merge = ΣΣ|I(h) − 〈I(h)〉|/ΣΣ I(h), where I(h) is the intensity of reflection h, Σ is the sum over all reflections, and Σ is the sum over i measurements of reflection h.
R = Σ||F obs| − |F calc||/Σ|F obs|, where R free and R work are calculated for a randomly chosen 5% of reflections that were not used for refinement and for the remaining reflections, respectively.
Values obtained using Refmac.
Values obtained using MolProbity.
Figure 1Comparison of the interface waters of two SPNct–IFS complex structures. Left: the 1.70 Å structure reported in this study (PDB entry 4kt6). Right: 2.80 Å structure reported previously by Smith et al. (2011 ▶) (PDB entry 3pnt). The A:B interface of the SPNct–IFS complex is shown, representing the SPN subunits as a molecular surface and the IFS subunits as a ribbon. The interfaces are highlighted in cyan and yellow, respectively. Red spheres are the water molecules present at the interface. The interface waters were assigned using the program AquaProt (Reichmann et al., 2007 ▶). Structural figures were drawn using PyMOL (DeLano, 2002 ▶).
Figure 2Stereoview of water-mediated interactions between Arg40 of IFS (gray surface) and the active site of SPN (green ribbon). Arg40 of IFS is represented as a ball-and-stick model inside the surface in teal color. Residues of SPNct interacting with IFS Arg40 are shown as ball and stick. Purple spheres are water molecules and dotted lines denote hydrogen bonds.
Figure 3Structural comparison of the second Glu of the ARTT motif between SPNct and ADP-ribosyltransferases. (a) Superimposition of the active site residues (Glu389 and Glu391) of SPN with those of ADP-ribosyltransferases such as B. cereus VIP2 complexed with NAD, B. cereus VIP2, C. botulinum C2 at pH 3.0, C. botulinum C2 at pH 6.1, C. perfringens iota toxin, V. cholerae CT and E. coli heat-labile enterotoxin (LT). Other secondary structure elements except for the region containing the ARTT motif were removed for clarity. The regions containing the second Glu of the ARTT motif and β-NAD are marked with a dotted square. (b) A slightly different view of the dotted square in (a) for the superposition of SPNct and VIP2 complexed with NAD is shown in the box. A water molecule present in our SPNct structure is donoted by W (a purple sphere). Secondary structure elements of SPNct are labeled.