4.8 Article

X-ray and cryo-EM structures of monomeric and filamentous actin-like protein MamK reveal changes associated with polymerization

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1612034113

Keywords

magnetotactic bacteria; magnetosomes; filamentous proteins; bacterial cytoskeleton; cryo-EM

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council [U105184326, MC_UP_A025_1013]
  2. Wellcome Trust Award [095514/Z/11/Z]
  3. Medical Research Council [MC_U105184322, MC_U105184326, MC_UP_A025_1013] Funding Source: researchfish
  4. MRC [MC_U105184326, MC_UP_A025_1013, MC_U105184322] Funding Source: UKRI
  5. Wellcome Trust [095514/Z/11/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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Magnetotactic bacteria produce iron-rich magnetic nanoparticles that are enclosed by membrane invaginations to form magnetosomes so they are able to sense and act upon Earth's magnetic field. In Magnetospirillum and other magnetotactic bacteria, to combine their magnetic moments, magnetosomes align along filaments formed by a bacterial actin homolog, MamK. Here, we present the crystal structure of a nonpolymerizing mutant of MamK from Magnetospirillum magneticum AMB-1 at 1.8-angstrom resolution, revealing its close similarity to actin and MreB. The crystals contain AMPPNP-bound monomeric MamK in two different conformations. To investigate conformational changes associated with polymerization, we used unmodified MamK protein and cryo-EM with helical 3D reconstruction in RELION to obtain a density map and a fully refined atomic model of MamK in filamentous form at 3.6-angstrom resolution. The filament is parallel (polar) double-helical, with a rise of 52.2 angstrom and a twist of 23.8 degrees. As shown previously and unusually for actin-like filaments, the MamK subunits from each of the two strands are juxtaposed, creating an additional twofold axis along the filament. Compared with monomeric MamK, ADP-bound MamK in the filament undergoes a conformational change, rotating domains I and II against each other to further close the interdomain cleft between subdomains IB and IIB. The domain movement causes several loops to close around the nucleotide-binding pocket. Glu-143, a key residue for catalysis coordinating the magnesium ion, moves closer, presumably switching nucleotide hydrolysis upon polymerization-one of the hallmarks of cytomotive filaments of the actin type.

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