| Literature DB >> 33847559 |
Subu Subramanian1, Kent Gorday1, Kendra Marcus1, Matthew R Orellana1, Peter Ren1, Xiao Ran Luo1, Michael E O'Donnell2, John Kuriyan1.
Abstract
Clamp loaders are <span class="Gene">AAA+ ATPases that load sliding clamps onto DNA. We mapped the mutational sensitivity of the T4 bacteriophage sliding clamp and clamp loader by deep mutagenesis, and found that residues not involved in catalysis or binding display remarkable tolerance to mutation. An exception is a glutamine residue in the AAA+ module (Gln 118) that is not located at a catalytic or interfacial site. Gln 118 forms a hydrogen-bonded junction in a helical unit that we term the central coupler, because it connects the catalytic centers to DNA and the sliding clamp. A suppressor mutation indicates that hydrogen bonding in the junction is important, and molecular dynamics simulations reveal that it maintains rigidity in the central coupler. The glutamine-mediated junction is preserved in diverse AAA+ ATPases, suggesting that a connected network of hydrogen bonds that links ATP molecules is an essential aspect of allosteric communication in these proteins.Entities:
Keywords: molecular biophysics; structural biology; viruses
Year: 2021 PMID: 33847559 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.66181
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140