4.8 Article

How the MccB bacterial ancestor of ubiquitin E1 initiates biosynthesis of the microcin C7 antibiotic

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 28, Issue 13, Pages 1953-1964

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1038/emboj.2009.146

Keywords

antibiotic; MccB; MccC7; microcin; ubiquitin activating enzyme

Funding

  1. ALSAC (American Syrian Lebanese Associated Charities)
  2. NIH [RO1GM49338, R01GM069530, F32CA136121, P30CA021765]
  3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  4. US Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  5. Advanced Photon Source [W-31-109-Eng-38]

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The 39-kDa Escherichia coli enzyme MccB catalyses a remarkable posttranslational modification of the MccA heptapeptide during the biosynthesis of microcin C7 (MccC7), a 'Trojan horse' antibiotic. The approximately 260-residue C-terminal region of MccB is homologous to ubiquitin-like protein (UBL) activating enzyme (E1) adenylation domains. Accordingly, MccB-catalysed C-terminal MccA-acyl-adenylation is reminiscent of the E1-catalysed activation reaction. However, unlike E1 substrates, which are UBLs with a C-terminal di-glycine sequence, MccB's substrate, MccA, is a short peptide with an essential C-terminal Asn. Furthermore, after an intramolecular rearrangement of MccA-acyl-adenylate, MccB catalyses a second, unique reaction, producing a stable phosphoramidate-linked analogue of acyl-adenylated aspartic acid. We report six-crystal structures of MccB in apo, substrate-, intermediate-, and inhibitor-bound forms. Structural and kinetic analyses reveal a novel-peptide clamping mechanism for MccB binding to heptapeptide substrates and a dynamic-active site for catalysing dual adenosine triphosphate-consuming reactions. The results provide insight into how a distinctive member of the E1 superfamily carries out two-step activation for generating the peptidyl-antibiotic MccC7. The EMBO Journal (2009) 28, 1953-1964. doi: 10.1038/emboj.2009.146; Published online 4 June 2009

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