Literature DB >> 25951081

What Glues a Homodimer Together: Systematic Analysis of the Stabilizing Effect of an Aromatic Hot Spot in the Protein-Protein Interface of the tRNA-Modifying Enzyme Tgt.

Stephan Jakobi1, Phong T X Nguyen1, François Debaene2,3, Sarah Cianférani2,3, Klaus Reuter1, Gerhard Klebe1.   

Abstract

Shigella bacteria constitute the causative agent of bacillary dysentery, an acute inflammatory disease causing the death of more than one million humans per year. A null mutation in the tgt gene encoding the tRNA-modifying enzyme tRNA-guanine transglycosylase (Tgt) was found to drastically decrease the pathogenicity of Shigella bacteria, suggesting the use of Tgt as putative target for selective antibiotics. The enzyme is only functionally active as a homodimer; thus, interference with the formation of its protein-protein interface is an attractive opportunity for therapeutic intervention. To better understand the driving forces responsible for the assembly, stability, and formation of the homodimer, we studied the properties of the residues that establish the dimer interface in detail. We performed site-directed mutagenesis and controlled shifts in the monomer/dimer equilibrium ratio in solution in a concentration-dependent manner by native mass spectrometry and used crystal structure analysis to elucidate the geometrical modulations resulting from mutational variations. The wild-type enzyme exhibits nearly exclusive dimer geometry. A patch of four aromatic amino acids, embedded into a ring of hydrophobic residues and further stabilized by a network of H-bonds, is essential for the stability of the dimer's contact. Accordingly, any perturbance in the constitution of this aromatic patch by nonaromatic residues reduces dimer stability significantly, with some of these exchanges resulting in a nearly exclusively monomeric state. Apart from the aromatic hot spot, the interface comprises an extended loop-helix motif that exhibits remarkable flexibility. In the destabilized mutated variants, the loop-helix motif adopts deviating conformations in the interface region, and a number of water molecules, penetrating into the interface, are observed.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25951081     DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.5b00028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Chem Biol        ISSN: 1554-8929            Impact factor:   5.100


  4 in total

1.  Soaking suggests "alternative facts": Only co-crystallization discloses major ligand-induced interface rearrangements of a homodimeric tRNA-binding protein indicating a novel mode-of-inhibition.

Authors:  Frederik Rainer Ehrmann; Johann Stojko; Alexander Metz; François Debaene; Luzi Jakob Barandun; Andreas Heine; François Diederich; Sarah Cianférani; Klaus Reuter; Gerhard Klebe
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-04-18       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Disrupting the Constitutive, Homodimeric Protein-Protein Interface in CK2β Using a Biophysical Fragment-Based Approach.

Authors:  Wei-Guang Seetoh; Chris Abell
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2016-10-20       Impact factor: 15.419

3.  Fragments as Novel Starting Points for tRNA-Guanine Transglycosylase Inhibitors Found by Alternative Screening Strategies.

Authors:  Engi Hassaan; Per-Olof Eriksson; Stefan Geschwindner; Andreas Heine; Gerhard Klebe
Journal:  ChemMedChem       Date:  2020-01-29       Impact factor: 3.466

4.  Structural and functional insights into human tRNA guanine transgylcosylase.

Authors:  Katharina Sievers; Luisa Welp; Henning Urlaub; Ralf Ficner
Journal:  RNA Biol       Date:  2021-07-31       Impact factor: 4.766

  4 in total

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