Title of article :
Conformational Changes and Reaction of Clostridial Glycosylating Toxins
Author/Authors :
Mathias O.P. Ziegler، نويسنده , , Thomas Jank، نويسنده , , Klaus Aktories، نويسنده , , Georg E. Schulz، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
11
From page :
1346
To page :
1356
Abstract :
The crystal structures of the catalytic fragments of ‘lethal toxin’ from Clostridium sordellii and of ‘α-toxin’ from Clostridium novyi have been established. Almost half of the residues follow the chain fold of the glycosyl-transferase type A family of enzymes; the other half forms large α-helical protrusions that are likely to confer specificity for the respective targeted subgroup of Rho proteins in the cell. In the crystal, the active center of α-toxin contained no substrates and was disassembled, whereas that of lethal toxin, which was ligated with the donor substrate UDP-glucose and cofactor Mn2 +, was catalytically competent. Surprisingly, the structure of lethal toxin with Ca2 + (instead of Mn2 +) at the cofactor position showed a bound donor substrate with a disassembled active center, indicating that the strictly octahedral coordination sphere of Mn2 + is indispensable to the integrity of the enzyme. The homologous structures of α-toxin without substrate, distorted lethal toxin with Ca2 + plus donor, active lethal toxin with Mn2 + plus donor and the homologous Clostridium difficile toxin B with a hydrolyzed donor have been lined up to show the geometry of several reaction steps. Interestingly, the structural refinement of one of the three crystallographically independent molecules of Ca2 +-ligated lethal toxin resulted in the glucosyl half-chair conformation expected for glycosyl-transferases that retain the anomeric configuration at the C1″ atom. A superposition of six acceptor substrates bound to homologous enzymes yielded the position of the nucleophilic acceptor atom with a deviation of < 1 Å. The resulting donor–acceptor geometry suggests that the reaction runs as a circular electron transfer in a six-membered ring, which involves the deprotonation of the nucleophile by the β-phosphoryl group of the donor substrate UDP-glucose.
Keywords :
Rho proteins , anomer-retaining glycosyl-transferases , Phillips mechanism , phosphoryl base , Protein Crystallography
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number :
1256471
Link To Document :
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