4.8 Article

Alternative dimerization is required for activity and inhibition of the HEPN ribonuclease RnlA

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue 12, Pages 7164-7178

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab513

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Onderzoeksraad of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel [SRP13]
  2. FWO-Vaanderen [G.0B25.15N]
  3. VIB

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The toxin RnlA is tightly regulated by the antitoxin RnlB through structural transitions, highlighting the crucial role of conformational heterogeneity in protein function.
The rnlAB toxin-antitoxin operon from Escherichia co/ifunctions as an anti-phage defense system. RnlA was identified as a member of the HEPN (Higher Eukaryotes and Prokaryotes Nucleotide-binding domain) superfamily of ribonucleases. The activity of the toxin RnlA requires tight regulation by the antitoxin RnlB, the mechanism of which remains unknown. Here we show that RnlA exists in an equilibrium between two different homodimer states: an inactive resting state and an active canonical HEPN dimer. Mutants interfering with the transition between states show that canonical HEPN dimerization via the highly conserved RX4-6 H motif is required for activity. The antitoxin RnlB binds the canonical HEPN dimer conformation, inhibiting RnlA by blocking access to its active site. Single-alanine substitutions mutants of the highly conserved R255, E258, R318 and H323 show that these residues are involved in catalysis and substrate binding and locate the catalytic site near the dimer interface of the canonical HEPN dimer rather than in a groove located between the HEPN domain and the preceding TBP-like domain. Overall, these findings elucidate the structural basis of the activity and inhibition of RnlA and highlight the crucial role of conformational heterogeneity in protein function.

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