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Crystal Structure of a PCP/Sfp Complex Reveals the Structural Basis for Carrier Protein Posttranslational Modification

Authors :
Femke I. Kraas
Donata K. Kirchner
Erik Henrich
Ivan Dikic
Mohamed A. Marahiel
Peter Güntert
Frank Löhr
Simin Rahighi
Jürgen Köpke
Peter Tufar
Volker Dötsch
Source :
Chemistry & Biology. (4):552-562
Publisher :
Elsevier Ltd.

Abstract

Summary Phosphopantetheine transferases represent a class of enzymes found throughout all forms of life. From a structural point of view, they are subdivided into three groups, with transferases from group II being the most widespread. They are required for the posttranslational modification of carrier proteins involved in diverse metabolic pathways. We determined the crystal structure of the group II phosphopantetheine transferase Sfp from Bacillus in complex with a substrate carrier protein in the presence of coenzyme A and magnesium, and observed two protein-protein interaction sites. Mutational analysis showed that only the hydrophobic contacts between the carrier protein's second helix and the C-terminal domain of Sfp are essential for their productive interaction. Comparison with a similar structure of a complex of human proteins suggests that the mode of interaction is highly conserved in all domains of life.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10745521
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chemistry & Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d665448e2f70c483b6bd0c26e5662d1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chembiol.2014.02.014