4.6 Article

Crystal Structure of BamB Bound to a Periplasmic Domain Fragment of BamA, the Central Component of the β-Barrel Assembly Machine

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 290, Issue 4, Pages 2126-2136

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.584524

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 AI080709, T32 GM065103]

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The beta-barrel assembly machinery (BAM) mediates folding and insertion of beta-barrel outer membrane proteins (OMPs) into the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. BAM is a five-protein complex consisting of the beta-barrel OMP BamA and lipoproteins BamB, -C, -D, and -E. High resolution structures of all the individual BAM subunits and a BamD-BamC complex have been determined. However, the overall complex architecture remains elusive. BamA is the central component of BAM and consists of a membrane-embedded beta-barrel and a periplasmic domain with five polypeptide translocation-associated (POTRA) motifs thought to interact with the accessory lipoproteins. Here we report the crystal structure of a fusion between BamB and a POTRA3-5 fragment of BamA. Extended loops 13 and 17 protruding from one end of the BamB beta-propeller contact the face of the POTRA3 beta-sheet in BamA. The interface is stabilized by several hydrophobic contacts, a network of hydrogen bonds, and a cation-pi interaction between BamA Tyr-255 and BamB Arg-195. Disruption of BamA-BamB binding by BamA Y255A and probing of the interface by disulfide bond cross-linking validate the physiological relevance of the observed interface. Furthermore, the structure is consistent with previously published mutagenesis studies. The periplasmic five-POTRA domain of BamA is flexible in solution due to hinge motions in the POTRA2-3 linker. Modeling BamB in complex with full-length BamA shows BamB binding at the POTRA2-3 hinge, suggesting a role in modulation of BamA flexibility and the conformational changes associated with OMP folding and insertion.

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