4.7 Article

Characterization of dual substrate binding sites in the homodimeric structure of Escherichia coli mRNA interferase MazF

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 357, Issue 1, Pages 139-150

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2005.12.035

Keywords

addiction module; mRNA interferase; MazF; MazE; NMR spectroscopy

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MazF and MazE constitute a so-called addiction module that is critical for bacterial growth arrest and eventual cell death in response to stress. The MazF toxin was recently shown to possess mRNA interferase (MIase) activity, and acts as a protein synthesis inhibitor by cleaving cellular mRNA. As a cognate regulator, the short-lived antitoxin, MazE, inhibits MazF MIase activity and hence maintains the delicate homeostasis between these two components. In the present study, we have shown that the MazF homodimer contains two symmetric binding sites, each of which is capable exchange phenomenon between free and peptide-bound MazF on the NMR timescale indicates relatively high affinities for MazEp(54-77) at both sites (K-d,K'(d) < 10(-7) M). However, the observed sequential binding behavior suggests a negative cooperativity between the two sites (K-d < K'(d)). A 13 base single-stranded DNA, employed as an uncleavable RNA substrate analog, can also bind to both sites or the MazF homodimer with moderate affinity (K-d similar to 10(-5)-10(-6)M). Chemical shift perturbation data deduced from NMR experiments indicates that the two binding sites 11116 for the MazEp peptide coincided with those for the single-stranded DNA competitive inhibitor. These dual substrate-binding sites are located on the concave interface of the MazF homodimer, consisting of a highly basic region underneath the S1-S2 loop and two hydrophobic regions containing the HI helix of one subunit and the S3-S4 loop of the opposing subunit. We show that the MazF homodimer is a bidentate endoribonuclease equipped with two identical binding sites for mRNA processing and that a single MazE molecule occupying one of the binding sites can affect the conformation of both sites, hence efficiently hindering the activity of MazF. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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