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Structural and biochemical characterization of a novel Mn2+-dependent phosphodiesterase encoded by the yfcE gene

Authors :
Elena Evdokimova
Alexander F. Yakunin
Wayne F. Anderson
Ludmilla Shuvalova
Alexei Savchenko
Darcie J. Miller
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2007.

Abstract

Escherichia coli YfcE belongs to a conserved protein family within the calcineurin-like phosphoesterase superfamily (Pfam00149) that is widely distributed in bacteria and archaea. Superfamily members are metallophosphatases that include monoesterases and diesterases involved in a variety of cellular functions. YfcE exhibited catalytic activity against bis-p-nitrophenyl phosphate, a general substrate for phosphodiesterases, and had an absolute requirement for Mn2+. However, no activity was observed with phosphodiesters and over 50 naturally occurring phosphomonoesters. The crystal structure of the YfcE phosphodiesterase has been determined to 2.25 A resolution. YfcE has a beta-sandwich architecture similar to metallophosphatases of common ancestral origin. Unlike its more complex homologs that have added structural elements for regulation and substrate recognition, the relatively small 184-amino-acid protein has retained its ancestral simplicity. The tetrameric protein carries two zinc ions per active site from the E. coli extract that reflect the conserved di-Mn2+ active site geometry. A cocrystallized sulfate inhibitor mimics the binding of phosphate moeities in known ligand/phosphatase complexes. Thus, YfcE has a similar active site and biochemical mechanism as well-characterized superfamily members, while the YfcE phosphodiester-containing substrate is unique.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a74b593ef6d1f25d07a3c95ad9d2b22b