4.8 Article

Crystal structure of FabZ-ACP complex reveals a dynamic seesaw-like catalytic mechanism of dehydratase in fatty acid biosynthesis

Journal

CELL RESEARCH
Volume 26, Issue 12, Pages 1330-1344

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/cr.2016.136

Keywords

fatty acid biosynthesis; dehydratase; ACP; complex structure

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21572133, 21210003, 91413102]
  2. Program for Professors of Special Appointment (Eastern Scholar) at the Shanghai Institutions of Higher Learning
  3. National Great Basic Science Project of China [2010CB529806]
  4. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2015CB910304]

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Fatty acid biosynthesis (FAS) is a vital process in cells. Fatty acids are essential for cell assembly and cellular metabolism. Abnormal FAS directly correlates with cell growth delay and human diseases, such as metabolic syndromes and various cancers. The FAS system utilizes an acyl carrier protein (ACP) as a transporter to stabilize and shuttle the growing fatty acid chain throughout enzymatic modules for stepwise catalysis. Studying the interactions between enzymatic modules and ACP is, therefore, critical for understanding the biological function of the FAS system. However, the information remains unclear due to the high flexibility of ACP and its weak interaction with enzymatic modules. We present here a 2.55 angstrom crystal structure of type II FAS dehydratase FabZ in complex with holo-ACP, which exhibits a highly symmetrical FabZ hexamer-ACP3 stoichiometry with each ACP binding to a FabZ dimer subunit. Further structural analysis, together with biophysical and computational results, reveals a novel dynamic seesaw-like ACP binding and catalysis mechanism for the dehydratase module in the FAS system, which is regulated by a critical gatekeeper residue (Tyr100 in FabZ) that manipulates the movements of the beta-sheet layer. These findings improve the general understanding of the dehydration process in the FAS system and will potentially facilitate drug and therapeutic design for diseases associated with abnormalities in FAS.

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