| Literature DB >> 30646888 |
Weijie Zhou1, Andrew Tsai2, Devon A Dattmore3, Devin P Stives3, Iva Chitrakar2, Alexis M D'alessandro4, Shiv Patil4, Katherine A Hicks3, Jarrod B French5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ribose-phosphate pyrophosphokinase (EC 2.7.6.1) is an enzyme that catalyzes the ATP-dependent conversion of ribose-5-phosphate to phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate. The reaction product is a key precursor for the biosynthesis of purine and pyrimidine nucleotides.Entities:
Keywords: KPRS; Nucleotide biosynthesis; Phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate; Purines; Pyrimidines; Ribose-5-phosphate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30646888 PMCID: PMC6332680 DOI: 10.1186/s12900-019-0100-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Struct Biol ISSN: 1472-6807
Data collection and processing statistics
| Data Collection | |
| PDB ID | 6ASV |
| Beamline | NE-CAT 24-ID-C |
| Resolution range (Å)a | 2.22–83.54 (2.22–2.26) |
| Wavelength (Å) | 0.97910 |
| Space Group | |
| Unit Cell Dimensions | |
| a, b, c (Å) | 104.8, 138.4, 137.4 |
| α, β, γ | 90, 90, 90 |
| Measured reflections | 233,926 |
| Unique reflections | 49,727 |
| Mean I/σ | 20.5 (1.8) |
| Completeness (%) | 99.3 (95.1) |
| Redundancy | 4.7 (4.4) |
| Rmerge (%) | 4.7 (42.3) |
| Data Refinement | |
| Resolution Range (Å) | 2.22–50.0 (2.22–2.26) |
| Total reflections | 47,214 |
| Test set | 2485 |
| | 17.89 |
| | 21.22 |
| No. of protein atoms | 6895 |
| No. of phosphate atoms | 32 |
| No. of water atoms | 298 |
| RMSD from ideal | |
| Bonds (Å) | 0.005 |
| Angles (°) | 1.013 |
| Mean B factor (Å2) | 52.15 |
| Ramachandran | |
| Favored (%) | 96.04 |
| Outliers (%) | 0.33 |
| Clashscoreb | 2.66 (100) |
aNumbers in parentheses correspond to values for the highest resolution shell
bValue calculated by MolProbity – value in parentheses corresponds to percentile (100% is best) when compared to a representative set of structures of comparable resolution [30]
Fig. 1Structure of EcKPRS. The overall fold of the protein (a) is shown and the N- and C-termini are labeled (shown is chain A from 6ASV). α-helices are colored blue, β-strands are colored green, and loops are colored yellow. As seen in the structure and in the topology diagram (b), EcKPRS has two α/β/α-sandwich domains related by two-fold pseudo-symmetry. Both domains have a type I phosphoribosyltransferase fold
Fig. 2Biological assembly and comparison to other PRPP synthetases. EcKPRS forms a propeller-shaped hexamer with 32 point symmetry (a). The location of the active sites is marked by an AMP molecule (shown in space-filling representation; the AMP is from superposition of the EcKPRS structure with that of 3DAH). Note that the protomer colored with blue helices and green strands is in the same orientation as that shown in Fig. 1. b The PRPP synthetase from B. subtilis (1DKR, green; 0.92 Å RMSD from EcKPRS) and human (2H06, yellow; 0.94 Å RMSD from EcKPRS) superimpose well with the EcKPRS protomer (blue). Comparison of some of the conserved residues (c) shows only subtle differences in side chain positions in the active site (EcKPRS shown with green carbon atoms, human PRPP synthetase shown with purple carbon atoms, B. subtilis PRPP synthetase shown with orange carbon atoms and the B. pseudomallei PRPP synthetase is shown with yellow carbon atoms). For reference, the AMP molecule from the B. pseudomallei structure (3DAH) is shown in grey
Fig. 3Active site of EcKPRS. The active site of EcKPRS (a) is composed of residues from two chains of the protein (one colored with green carbon atoms and the other colored with yellow carbon atoms; oxygen atoms are colored red and nitrogen atoms are colored blue). Interactions with the AMP substrate (AMP has been modeled in from a superposition of EcKPRS to the Burkholderia pseudomallei PRPP synthetase (3DAH); the AMP is colored with grey carbon atoms) are made with both chains. In the structure of EcKPRS, two globular regions of density, modeled as phosphates are observed bound in the R5P binding site (b). The AMP is shown in the same position as in (a) as a point of reference. The electron density shown is from a difference map, generated prior to adding the phosphates, and is contoured at 2.5 σ
Fig. 4Allosteric site. The allosteric regulatory site of EcKPRS is made up of residues from three different chains of the protein (one chain is colored with green carbon atoms, the second is colored with yellow carbon atoms and numbered with the * symbol, while the third is colored with pink carbon atoms and numbered with the # symbol; oxygen atoms are colored red and nitrogen atoms are colored blue). Binding of the allosteric regulator, ADP (shown here in stick notation with cyan carbon atoms; the position of ADP is modeled from a superposition of EcKPRS with the B. subtilis PRPP synthetase structure, 1DKU), is blocked in EcKPRS by the flexible loop containing residues 101 through 105 (yellow carbon atoms)