| Literature DB >> 35897955 |
Shanru He1,2, Yuanyuan Chen1,2, Lulu Wang1,2,3, Xue Bai1,2, Tingting Bu1,2, Jie Zhang1,2, Ming Lu4, Nam-Chul Ha5, Chunshan Quan1,2, Ki Hyun Nam6,7, Yongbin Xu1,2.
Abstract
Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) is the active form of vitamin B6, but it is highly reactive and poisonous in its free form. YggS is a PLP-binding protein found in bacteria and humans that mediates PLP homeostasis by delivering PLP to target enzymes or by performing a protective function. Several biochemical and structural studies of YggS have been reported, but the mechanism by which YggS recognizes PLP has not been fully elucidated. Here, we report a functional and structural analysis of YggS from Fusobacterium nucleatum (FnYggS). The PLP molecule could bind to native FnYggS, but no PLP binding was observed for selenomethionine (SeMet)-derivatized FnYggS. The crystal structure of FnYggS showed a type III TIM barrel fold, exhibiting structural homology with several other PLP-dependent enzymes. Although FnYggS exhibited low (<35%) amino acid sequence similarity with previously studied YggS proteins, its overall structure and PLP-binding site were highly conserved. In the PLP-binding site of FnYggS, the sulfate ion was coordinated by the conserved residues Ser201, Gly218, and Thr219, which were positioned to provide the binding moiety for the phosphate group of PLP. The mutagenesis study showed that the conserved Ser201 residue in FnYggS was the key residue for PLP binding. These results will expand the knowledge of the molecular properties and function of the YggS family.Entities:
Keywords: Fusobacterium nucleatum; PLP; YggS; crystal structure; pyridoxal 5′-phosphate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35897955 PMCID: PMC9332261 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27154781
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Figure 1Characterization of PLP binding to FnYggS. (A) The FnYggS and FnYggS-SeMet solutions were yellow and colorless, respectively. (B) Native FnYggS exhibited an absorption peak at 425 nm due to PLP binding, whereas FnYggS-SeMet did not exhibit an absorption peak, indicating the absence of PLP binding. The absorption peak of PLP was seen at 380 nm. (C) Purified native and SeMet-derivatized FnYggS solutions and size exclusion chromatography results. Both proteins existed as monomers in solution.
Data collection and refinement statistics for DendFP.
| Data Collection | FnYggS |
|---|---|
| Diffraction source | Beamline 5A, PLS-II |
| Wavelength | 0.9793 |
| Detector | ADSC Q315r CCD |
| Rotation range per image (°) | 1 |
| Total rotation range (°) | 360 |
| Exposure time per image (s) | 0.5 |
| Space group | P21 |
| Cell dimensions | |
| a, b, c (Å) | 37.929, 146.375, 74.128 |
| Resolution (Å) | 36.59–2.08 |
| Completeness | 96.03 (86.73) |
| Redundancy | 4.2 (2.7) |
| I/σ(I) | 27.1304 (4.33) |
| Rsym (%) | 27.1 (60.7) |
| Refinement statistics | |
| Rwork (%) | 18.39 (19.59) |
| Rfree (%) | 21.77 (22.86) |
| B-factor (Averaged) | |
| Protein | 28.83 |
| R.m.s. deviations | |
| Bond lengths (Å) | 0.009 |
| Bond angles (°) | 1.23 |
| Ramachandran plot (%) | |
| favored | 97.59 |
| allowed | 2.26 |
| disallowed regions | 0.15 |
| PDB code | 7YGF |
Values in parentheses are for the outermost shell.
Figure 2Crystal structure of FnYggS. (A) Cartoon representation of the FnYggS monomer consisting of a typical TIM barrel fold. (B) Superimposition of FnYggS (purple, PDB ID: 7YGF) onto ScP007 (green, PDB ID: 1B54), EcYggS (blue, 1W8G), BaPipY (pink, 3CPG), and SePipY (brown, 5NM8). (C) Surface conservation of PipY proteins. The PLP-binding site showed high conservation, whereas other regions were not conserved. The PLP-binding site is indicated by the yellow arrow. (D) Sequence alignment of FnYggS (UniProt accession no. Q8RFW9) with BaPipY (A1A3G9), EcYggS (P67080), SePipY (Q31LH9), and ScP007 (P38197). The residues forming the PLP-binding site are indicated by the green asterisks.
Figure 3PLP-binding site and mutagenesis of FnYggS. (A) Electrostatic surface of the PLP-binding site of FnYggS. (B) The sulfate ion in the PLP-binding pocket of FnYggS is coordinated by Ser201, Gly218, and Thr219. (C) Superimposition of the PLP-binding site of FnYggS (purple) onto PLP-bound EcYggS (cyan, PDB ID: 1W8G).
Figure 4(A) Purification and (B) spectroscopic analysis of FnYggS (blue) and FnYggS-S201A (green), indicating that Ser201 is critical for PLP binding. (C) The binding affinity of FnYggS or FnYggS-S201A and PLP was measured by MST.
Figure 5Electrostatic surface of the PLP-binding pocket of (A) ScP007 (PDB ID: 1B54), (B) EcYggS (1W8G), (C) BaPipY (3CPG), and (D) SePipY (5NM8).