4.6 Article

Domain architecture and catalysis of the Staphylococcus aureus fatty acid kinase

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 298, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2022.101993

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [OD018090, GM034496, AI166116, GM103622]
  2. Cancer Center (CORE) Support Grant [CA21765]
  3. American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities
  4. Department of Energy Office of Science [DE-AC0206CH11357]

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Fatty acid kinase (Fak) is an enzyme that generates acyl-phosphate for phospholipid synthesis. It consists of FakA and FakB components, with FakA containing three separate domains and FakB having specific binding properties. The study reveals the importance of FakA's structure and function in substrate binding and catalysis.
Fatty acid kinase (Fak) is a two-component enzyme that generates acyl-phosphate for phospholipid synthesis. Fak consists of a kinase domain protein (FakA) that phosphorylates a fatty acid enveloped by a fatty acid binding protein (FakB). The structural basis for FakB function has been established, but little is known about FakA. Here, we used limited proteolysis to define three separate FakA domains: the amino terminal FakA_N, the central FakA_L, and the carboxy terminal FakA_C. The isolated domains lack kinase activity, but activity is restored when FakA_N and FakA_L are present individually or connected as FakA_NL. The X-ray structure of the monomeric FakA_N captures the product complex with ADP and two Mg2+ ions bound at the nucleotide site. The FakA_L domain encodes the dimerization interface along with conserved catalytic residues Cys240, His282, and His284. AlphaFold analysis of FakA_L predicts the catalytic residues are spatially clustered and pointing away from the dimerization surface. Furthermore, the X-ray structure of FakA_C shows that it consists of two subdomains that are structurally related to FakB. Analytical ultracentrifugation demonstrates that FakA_C binds FakB, and site-directed mutagenesis confirms that a positively charged wedge on FakB meshes with a negatively charged groove on FakA_C. Finally, small angle X-ray scattering analysis is consistent with freely rotating FakA_N and FakA_C domains tethered by flexible linkers to FakA_L. These data reveal specific roles for the three independently folded FakA protein domains in substrate binding and catalysis.

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