Back to Search
Start Over
The 1.1 Å resolution structure of a periplasmic phosphate-binding protein fromStenotrophomonas maltophilia: a crystallization contaminant identified by molecular replacement using the entire Protein Data Bank
- Source :
- Acta Crystallographica Section D Structural Biology. 72:933-943
- Publication Year :
- 2016
- Publisher :
- International Union of Crystallography (IUCr), 2016.
-
Abstract
- During efforts to crystallize the enzyme 2,4-dihydroxyacetophenone dioxygenase (DAD) fromAlcaligenessp. 4HAP, a small number of strongly diffracting protein crystals were obtained after two years of crystal growth in one condition. The crystals diffracted synchrotron radiation to almost 1.0 Å resolution and were, until recently, assumed to be formed by the DAD protein. However, when another crystal form of this enzyme was eventually solved at lower resolution, molecular replacement using this new structure as the search model did not give a convincing solution with the original atomic resolution data set. Hence, it was considered that these crystals might have arisen from a protein impurity, although molecular replacement using the structures of common crystallization contaminants as search models again failed. A script to perform molecular replacement usingMOLREPin which the first chain of every structure in the PDB was used as a search model was run on a multi-core cluster. This identified a number of prokaryotic phosphate-binding proteins as scoring highly in theMOLREPpeak lists. Calculation of an electron-density map at 1.1 Å resolution based on the solution obtained with PDB entry 2q9t allowed most of the amino acids to be identified visually and built into the model. ABLASTsearch then indicated that the molecule was most probably a phosphate-binding protein fromStenotrophomonas maltophilia(UniProt ID B4SL31; gene ID Smal_2208), and fitting of the corresponding sequence to the atomic resolution map fully corroborated this. Proteins in this family have been linked to the virulence of antibiotic-resistant strains of pathogenic bacteria and with biofilm formation. The structure of theS. maltophiliaprotein has been refined to anRfactor of 10.15% and anRfreeof 12.46% at 1.1 Å resolution. The molecule adopts the type II periplasmic binding protein (PBP) fold with a number of extensively elaborated loop regions. A fully dehydrated phosphate anion is bound tightly between the two domains of the protein and interacts with conserved residues and a number of helix dipoles.
- Subjects :
- Models, Molecular
0301 basic medicine
Protein Conformation
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
030106 microbiology
Protein Data Bank (RCSB PDB)
Biology
Crystallography, X-Ray
03 medical and health sciences
Bacterial Proteins
Structural Biology
Humans
Molecular replacement
Amino Acid Sequence
Databases, Protein
Binding Sites
Binding protein
computer.file_format
Periplasmic space
Phosphate-Binding Proteins
Protein Data Bank
Transport protein
Crystallography
Periplasmic Binding Proteins
Crystallization
Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections
Protein crystallization
Sequence Alignment
computer
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20597983
- Volume :
- 72
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Acta Crystallographica Section D Structural Biology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....efb4d531b163f49539756dd88b6afc90
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1107/s2059798316010433