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The Paradigm of Self-compartmentalized M42 Aminopeptidases: Insight into Their Oligomerization, Substrate Specificities, and Physiological Function

Authors :
Droogmans, Louis
Roovers, Martine
Vanhamme, Luc
Marini, Anna Maria
Van Melderen, Laurence
Garcia-Pino, Abel
Feller, Georges
Franzetti, Bruno
Dutoit, Raphaël
Droogmans, Louis
Roovers, Martine
Vanhamme, Luc
Marini, Anna Maria
Van Melderen, Laurence
Garcia-Pino, Abel
Feller, Georges
Franzetti, Bruno
Dutoit, Raphaël
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

M42 aminopeptidases are dinuclear enzymes widely found in prokaryotes but completely absent from eukaryotes. They have been proposed to hydrolyze peptides downstream the proteasome or other related proteolytic complexes. Their description relies mainly on the pioneering work on four M42 aminopeptidases from Pyrococcus horikoshii. Their quaternary structure consists of twelve subunits adopting a tetrahedral-shaped structure. Such a spatial organization allows the compartmentalization of the active sites which are only accessible to unfolded peptides. The dodecamer assembly results from the self-association of dimers under the control of the metal ion cofactors. Both oligomers have been shown to co-exist in vivo and heterododecamers with broadened substrate specificity may even occur. Yet, the molecular determinants behind the dodecamer assembly remain unknown due the lack of a high-resolution structure of a stable dimer. In addition, the bacterial M42 aminopeptidases are still ill-described due to the paucity of structural studies. This work focuses mainly on the characterization of TmPep1050, an M42 aminopeptidase from Thermotoga maritima. As expected, TmPep1050 adopts the genuine tetrahedral-shaped structure with twelve subunits. It also displays a leucyl-aminopeptidase activity requiring Co2+ as a cofactor. In addition to its catalytic function, Co2+ has a role in the enzyme thermostability and oligomerization. The absence of Co2+ provokes the disassembly of active TmPep1050 dodecamers into inactive dimers. The process, however, is reversible since Co2+ triggers the self-association of dimers into dodecamers, as shown by native MS. The main achievement of this work is the determination of the first high-resolution structure of a dimer, allowing to better understand the dimer-dodecamer transition. Several structural motifs involved in oligomerization are displaced or highly flexible in the TmPep1050 dimer structure. Furthermore, a loop bringing two catalytic releva<br />Option Biologie moléculaire du Doctorat en Sciences<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
1 v. (139 p.), 3 full-text file(s): application/pdf | application/pdf | application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1258101294
Document Type :
Electronic Resource