| Literature DB >> 25592227 |
Padmaja Natarajan1,2, Marco Punta3, Abhinav Kumar4,5, Andrew P Yeh6,7, Adam Godzik8,9, L Aravind10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: N-terminal domains of BVU_4064 and BF1687 proteins from Bacteroides vulgatus and Bacteroides fragilis respectively are members of the Pfam family PF12985 (DUF3869). Proteins containing a domain from this family can be found in most Bacteroides species and, in large numbers, in all human gut microbiome samples. Both BVU_4064 and BF1687 proteins have a consensus lipobox motif implying they are anchored to the membrane, but their functions are otherwise unknown. The C-terminal half of BVU_4064 is assigned to protein family PF12986 (DUF3870); the equivalent part of BF1687 was unclassified.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25592227 PMCID: PMC4387736 DOI: 10.1186/s12859-014-0434-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1Structures of the N-terminally truncated proteins BVU_4064 and BF1687 (PDB codes 3kog and 3g3l, respectively). The N-terminal domain (in slate blue color) and the C-terminal domain (in orange color) of the 3kog structure show significant similarities with the corresponding domains of 3g3l structure (N and C terminal domains shown in pale cyan and wheat colors respectively). In contrast, the region connecting the domains (in green) is clearly different in the two structures: a short linker in 3kog, an extended 4-helix insertion and one extra strand that is added to the C-terminal domain in 3g3l. A histidine-rich region present at the C-terminus in both of our proteins is found ordered only in the 3kog structure (see box with text in the Figure).
Figure 2Superposition of 3kog and 3g3l structures. (A) Corresponding domains (colored in slate blue and pale cyan for N-terminal domains; orange and wheat for C-terminal domains; linker region in green) in the two structures superimpose fairly well with an overall RMSD of 3.7 Å for the 166 equivalent positions in the rigid-body alignment [15]. (B) Stereo view of N and C terminal domains shown separately with linker regions removed to highlight the structural similarity.
Figure 3Structural similarities of the N-terminal domains. (A-F) Pre-albumin-like fold of the N-terminal domains in 3kog and 3g3l structures that is also present as a cell adhesion modules in several proteins belonging to the Transthyretin superfamily. (G) Alignment between the lipoprotein signal sequences present at the N-terminus of BVU_4064 and BF1687. The arrow points to the conserved CYS residue in the consensus sequence for the protein family PF12985.
Figure 4Structural similarities of the C-terminal domain of 3kog and 3g3l with bacterial pore-forming toxins. The region shown in red is implicated in membrane insertion in the pore-forming toxins [epsilon toxin (PDB code: 1uyj) and aerolysin (PDB code: 1z52)] and in the hemolytic lectin (PDB code 1w3g). In both 3kog and 3g3l this region corresponds to a helical insertion.