4.6 Article

Structural and functional characterization of CFE88: Evidence that a conserved and essential bacterial protein is a methyltransferase

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue 6, Pages 1472-1484

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1110/ps.051389605

Keywords

bioinformatics; biophysical methods; conserved essential bacterial gene; methyltransferase; mutagenesis; nuclear magnetic resonance; protein modeling; Streptococcus pneumoniae

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CFE88 is a conserved essential gene product from Streptococcus pneumoniae. This 227-residue protein has minimal sequence similarity to proteins of known 3D structure. Sequence alignment models and computational protein threading studies suggest that CFE88 is a methyltransferase. Characterization of the conformation and function of CFE88 has been performed by using several techniques. Backbone atom and limited side-chain atom NMR resonance assignments have been obtained. The data indicate that CFE88 has two domains: an N-terminal domain with 163 residues and a C-terminal domain with 64 residues. The C-terminal domain is primarily helical, while the N-terminal domain has a mixed helical/extended (Rossmann) fold. By aligning the experimentally observed elements of secondary structure, an initial unrefined model of CFE88 has been constructed based on the X-ray structure of ErmC' methyltransferase (Protein Data Bank entry IQAN). NMR and biophysical studies demonstrate binding of S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (SA H) to CFE88; these interactions have been localized by NMR to the predicted active site in the N-terminal domain. Mutants that target this predicted active site (H26W, E46R, and E46W) have been constructed and characterized. Overall, our results both indicate that CFE88 is a methyltransferase and further suggest that the methyltransferase activity is essential for bacterial survival.

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