4.3 Article

Molecular landscape of the interaction between the urease accessory proteins UreE and UreG

Journal

BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-PROTEINS AND PROTEOMICS
Volume 1844, Issue 9, Pages 1662-1674

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbapap.2014.06.016

Keywords

Urease; UreE; UreG; Nuclear magnetic resonance; Calorimetry; Protein-protein docking

Funding

  1. University of Bologna
  2. Specialty Fertilizer Products (Leawood, KS, USA)
  3. CIRMMP (Consorzio Interuniversitario di Risonanze Magnetiche di Metallo-Proteine)

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Urease, the most efficient enzyme so far discovered, depends on the presence of nickel ions in the catalytic site for its activity. The transformation of inactive apo-urease into active holo-urease requires the insertion of two Ni(II) ions in the substrate binding site, a process that involves the interaction of four accessory proteins named UreD, UreF, UreG and UreE. This study, carried out using calorimetric and NMR-based structural analysis, is focused on the interaction between UreE and UreG from Sporosarcina pasteurii, a highly ureolytic bacterium. Isothermal calorimetric protein-protein titrations revealed the occurrence of a binding event between SpUreE and SpUreG, entailing two independent steps with positive cooperativity (K-d1 = 42 +/- 9 mu M; K-d2 = 1.7 +/- 03 mu M). This was interpreted as indicating the formation of the (UreE)(2)(UreG)(2) hetero-oligomer upon binding of two UreG monomers onto the pre-formed UreE dimer. The molecular details of this interaction were elucidated using high-resolution NMR spectroscopy. The occurrence of SpUreE chemical shift perturbations upon addition of SpUreG was investigated and analyzed to establish the protein-protein interaction site. The latter appears to involve the Ni(II) binding site as well as mobile portions on the C-terminal and the N-terminal domains. Docking calculations based on the information obtained from NMR provided a structural basis for the protein-protein contact site. The high sequence and structural similarity within these protein classes suggests a generality of the interaction mode among homologous proteins. The implications of these results on the molecular details of the urease activation process are considered and analyzed. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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