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Neutralization of acidic residues in helix II stabilizes the folded conformation of acyl carrier protein and variably alters its function with different enzymes
- Source :
- The Journal of biological chemistry. 282(7)
- Publication Year :
- 2006
-
Abstract
- Acyl carrier protein (ACP), a small protein essential for bacterial growth and pathogenesis, interacts with diverse enzymes during the biosynthesis of fatty acids, phospholipids, and other specialized products such as lipid A. NMR and hydrodynamic studies have previously shown that divalent cations stabilize native helical ACP conformation by binding to conserved acidic residues at two sites (A and B) at either end of the "recognition" helix II. To examine the roles of these amino acids in ACP structure and function, site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace individual site A (Asp-30, Asp-35, Asp-38) and site B (Glu-47, Glu-53, Asp-56) residues in recombinant Vibrio harveyi ACP with the corresponding amides, along with combined mutations at each site (SA, SB) or both sites (SA/SB). Like native V. harveyi ACP, all individual mutants were unfolded at neutral pH but adopted a helical conformation in the presence of millimolar Mg(2+) or upon fatty acylation. Mg(2+) binding to sites A or B independently stabilized native ACP conformation, whereas mutant SA/SB was folded in the absence of Mg(2+), suggesting that charge neutralization is largely responsible for ACP stabilization by divalent cations. Asp-35 in site A was critical for holo-ACP synthase activity, while acyl-ACP synthetase and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine acyltransferase (LpxA) activities were more affected by mutations in site B. Both sites were required for fatty acid synthase activity. Overall, our results indicate that divalent cation binding site mutations have predicted effects on ACP conformation but unpredicted and variable consequences on ACP function with different enzymes.
- Subjects :
- Protein Folding
Stereochemistry
Cations, Divalent
Transferases (Other Substituted Phosphate Groups)
Biochemistry
Protein Structure, Secondary
Divalent
Structure-Activity Relationship
Protein structure
Bacterial Proteins
Acyl Carrier Protein
Magnesium
Binding site
Molecular Biology
Vibrio
chemistry.chemical_classification
Binding Sites
biology
Cell Biology
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
Amino acid
Acyl carrier protein
chemistry
Acyltransferase
biology.protein
Mutagenesis, Site-Directed
bacteria
lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins)
Protein folding
Fatty acylation
Acyltransferases
Protein Binding
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00219258
- Volume :
- 282
- Issue :
- 7
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of biological chemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b9b0428f7ddce495b56b1a5cd1e38a53