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Characterization of Ejl, the cell-wall amidase coded by the pneumococcal bacteriophage Ej-1

Authors :
José Luis R. Arrondo
Begoña Monterroso
José L. Saiz
Ibon Iloro
Julio Varea
José Luis García
Consuelo López-Zumel
Margarita Menéndez
José Laynez
Dirección General de Investigación Científica y Técnica, DGICT (España)
Comunidad de Madrid
Monterroso, Begoña [0000-0003-2538-084X]
Iloro, Ibon [0000-0002-9537-1714]
García, José Luis [0000-0002-9238-2485]
Menéndez, Margarita [0000-0002-3267-4443]
Monterroso, Begoña
Iloro, Ibon
García, José Luis
Menéndez, Margarita
Source :
Digital.CSIC: Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Wiley, 2009.

Abstract

12 p.-6 fig.-4 tab.<br />The Ejl amidase is coded by Ej-1, a temperate phage isolated from the atypical pneumococcus strain 101/87. Like all the pneumococcal cell-wall lysins, Ejl has a bimodular organization; the catalytic region is located in the N-terminal module, and the C-terminal module attaches the enzyme to the choline residues of the pneumococcal cell wall. The structural features of the Ejl amidase, its interaction with choline, and the structural changes accompanying the ligand binding have been characterized by CD and IR spectroscopies, differential scanning calorimetry, analytical ultracentrifugation, and FPLC. According to prediction and spectroscopic (CD and IR) results, Ejl would be composed of short beta-strands (ca. 36%) connected by long loops (ca. 17%), presenting only two well-predicted alpha-helices (ca. 12%) in the catalytic module. Its polypeptide chain folds into two cooperative domains, corresponding to the N- and C-terminal modules, and exhibits a monomer dimer self-association equilibrium. Choline binding induces small rearrangements in Ejl secondary structure but enhances the amidase self-association by preferential binding to Ejl dimers and tetramers. Comparison of LytA, the major pneumococcal amidase, with Ejl shows that the sequence differences (15% divergence) strongly influence the amidase stability, the organization of the catalytic module in cooperative domains, and the self-association state induced by choline. Moreover, the ligand affinity for the choline-binding locus involved in regulation of the amidase dimerization is reduced by a factor of 10 in Ejl. Present results evidence that sequence differences resulting from the natural variability found in the cell wall amidases coded by pneumococcus and its bacteriophages may significantly alter the protein structure and its attachment to the cell wall.<br />This work was supported by DGICYT Grants PB96-0850, PB96-0809, BIO2000-1307,and BMC2000-1002, and by CAM Grant of the Program for Strategic Groups.

Details

ISSN :
09618368
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Protein Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....86ff3a6258ebc21efae061200483f62e