Evidence for a dual binding mode of dockerin modules to cohesins
- 27 February 2007
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 104 (9) , 3089-3094
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0611173104
Abstract
The assembly of proteins that display complementary activities into macromolecular complexes is critical to cellular function. One such enzyme complex, of environmental significance, is the plant cell wall degrading apparatus of anaerobic bacteria, termed the cellulosome. The complex assembles through the interaction of enzyme-derived “type I dockerin” modules with the multiple “cohesin” modules of the scaffolding protein. Clostridium thermocellum type I dockerin modules contain a duplicated 22-residue sequence that comprises helix-1 and helix-3, respectively. The crystal structure of a C. thermocellum type I cohesin-dockerin complex showed that cohesin recognition was predominantly through helix-3 of the dockerin. The sequence duplication is reflected in near-perfect 2-fold structural symmetry, suggesting that both repeats could interact with cohesins by a common mechanism in wild-type (WT) proteins. Here, a helix-3 disrupted mutant dockerin is used to visualize the reverse binding in which the dockerin mutant is indeed rotated 180° relative to the WT dockerin such that helix-1 now dominates recognition of its protein partner. The dual binding mode is predicted to impart significant plasticity into the orientation of the catalytic subunits within this supramolecular assembly, which reflects the challenges presented by the degradation of a heterogeneous, recalcitrant, insoluble substrate by a tethered macromolecular complex.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Insights into the Structural Determinants of Cohesin—Dockerin Specificity Revealed by the Crystal Structure of the Type II Cohesin from Clostridium thermocellum SdbAJournal of Molecular Biology, 2005
- Crystal Structure of a Type-II Cohesin Module from the Bacteroides cellulosolvens Cellulosome Reveals Novel and Distinctive Secondary Structural ElementsJournal of Molecular Biology, 2005
- Coot: model-building tools for molecular graphicsActa Crystallographica Section D-Biological Crystallography, 2004
- Cohesin–dockerin interaction in cellulosome assembly: a single Asp‐to‐Asn mutation disrupts high‐affinity cohesin–dockerin bindingFEBS Letters, 2004
- Crystal structure of a cohesin module from Clostridium cellulolyticum: implications for dockerin recognitionJournal of Molecular Biology, 2000
- The atomic structure of protein-protein recognition sites 1 1Edited by A. R. FershtJournal of Molecular Biology, 1999
- The crystal structure of a type I cohesin domain at 1.7 Å resolutionJournal of Molecular Biology, 1997
- Refinement of Macromolecular Structures by the Maximum-Likelihood MethodActa Crystallographica Section D-Biological Crystallography, 1997
- Expression, purification and subunit‐binding properties of cohesins 2 and 3 of the Clostridium thermocellum cellulosomeFEBS Letters, 1995
- The CCP4 suite: programs for protein crystallographyActa Crystallographica Section D-Biological Crystallography, 1994