| Literature DB >> 27601326 |
Jingsi Yang1, Ke Zhou2, Peng Liu2, Yuhui Dong2, Zengqiang Gao2, Jianjun Zhang1, Quansheng Liu3.
Abstract
The toxin-antitoxin system is ubiquitously existed in bacteria and archaea, performing a wide variety of functions modulating cell fitness in response to environmental cues. In this report, we solved the crystal structure of the toxin-antitoxin HigBA complex from E. coli K-12 to 2.7 Å resolution. The crystal structure of the HigBA complex displays a hetero-tetramer (HigBA)2 form comprised by two HigB and two HigA subunits. Each toxin HigB resumes a microbial RNase T1 fold, characteristic of a three antiparallel β-sheet core shielded by a few α-helices at either side. Each antitoxin HigA composed of all α-helices resembles a "C"-shaped clamp nicely encompassing a HigB in the (HigBA)2 complex. Two HigA monomers dimerize at their N-terminal domain. We showed that HigA helix α1 was essential for HigA dimerization and the hetero-tetramer (HigBA)2 formation, but not for a hetero-dimeric HigBA formation. HigA dimerization mediated by helix α1 was dispensable for DNA-binding, as a heterodimeric HigBA complex still bound to the higBA operator in vitro. The HigA C-terminal domain with a helix-turn-helix fold was essential for DNA binding. We also defined two palindromes in higBA operator specifically recognized by HigA and HigBA in vitro.Entities:
Keywords: HigBA; Toxin-antitoxin
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27601326 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2016.08.131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Biophys Res Commun ISSN: 0006-291X Impact factor: 3.575