4.6 Article

Essential Role of Loop Dynamics in Typ e II NRPS Biomolecular Recognition br

Journal

ACS CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 10, Pages 2890-2898

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.2c00523

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH
  2. [R01 GM095970]
  3. [R01 GM031749]
  4. [F31 GM13761601]
  5. [T32 GM008326]

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This study reveals the binding specificities between peptidyl carrier proteins (PCPs) and adenylation (A) domains in non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) using chemical biology approaches. The research also demonstrates the possibility of controlling PCP binding specificity through modifying interfacial interactions.
Non-ribosomal peptides play a critical role in the clinic as therapeutic agents. To access more chemically diverse therapeutics, non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) have been targeted for engineering through combinatorial biosynthesis; however, this has been met with limited success in part due to the lack of proper protein-protein interactions between non-cognate proteins. Herein, we report our use of chemical biology to enable X-ray crystallography, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, and biochemical studies to elucidate binding specificities between peptidyl carrier proteins (PCPs) and adenylation (A) domains. Specifically, we determined X-ray crystal structures of a type II PCP crosslinked to its cognate A domain, PigG and PigI, and of PigG crosslinked to a non-cognate PigI homologue, PltF. The crosslinked PCP-A domain structures possess large protein-protein interfaces that predominantly feature hydrophobic interactions, with specific electrostatic interactions that orient the substrate for active site delivery. MD simulations of the PCP-A domain complexes and unbound PCP structures provide a dynamical evaluation of the transient interactions formed at PCP-A domain interfaces, which confirm the previously hypothesized role of a PCP loop as a crucial recognition element. Finally, we demonstrate that the interfacial interactions at the PCP loop 1 region can be modified to control PCP binding specificity through gain-of-function mutations. This work suggests that loop conformational preferences and dynamism account for improved shape complementary in the PCP-A domain interactions. Ultimately, these studies show how crystallographic, biochemical, and computational methods can be used to rationally re-engineer NRPSs for non-cognate interactions.

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