RESUMO
LytC, one of the major autolysins from the human pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae, has been crystallized as needles by the hanging-drop technique using 10%(w/v) PEG 3350 as precipitant and 10 mM HEPES pH 7.5. LytC crystals were quickly soaked in mother liquor containing 2 mM of the complex Gd-HPDO3A to produce derivatized crystals (LytC(Gd-HPDO3A)). Both native LytC and isomorphous LytC(Gd-HPDO3A) crystals were flash-cooled in a nitrogen flow at 120 K prior to X-ray data collection using an in-house Enraf-Nonius rotating-anode generator (lambda = 1.5418 A) and a MAR345 imaging-plate detector. In both cases, good-quality diffraction patterns were obtained at high resolution. LytC(Gd-HPDO3A) crystals allowed the collection of a SAD X-ray data set to 2.6 A resolution indexed in terms of a P2(1) monoclinic unit cell with parameters a = 59.37, b = 67.16, c = 78.85 A, beta = 105.69 degrees . The anomalous Patterson map allowed the identification of one heavy-atom binding site, which was sufficient for the calculation of an interpretable anomalous map at 2.6 A resolution.
Assuntos
Compostos Heterocíclicos/química , N-Acetil-Muramil-L-Alanina Amidase/química , Compostos Organometálicos/química , Streptococcus pneumoniae/enzimologia , Cristalização , Cristalografia por Raios X , Gadolínio , Estrutura MolecularRESUMO
The first structure of a pneumococcal autolysin, that of the LytC lysozyme, has been solved in ternary complex with choline and a pneumococcal peptidoglycan (PG) fragment. The active site of the hydrolase module is not fully exposed but is oriented toward the choline-binding module, which accounts for its unique in vivo features in PG hydrolysis, its activation and its regulatory mechanisms. Because of the unusual hook-shaped conformation of the multimodular protein, it is only able to hydrolyze non-cross-linked PG chains, an assertion validated by additional experiments. These results explain the activation of LytC by choline-binding protein D (CbpD) in fratricide, a competence-programmed mechanism of predation of noncompetent sister cells. The results provide the first structural insights to our knowledge into the critical and central function that LytC plays in pneumococcal virulence and explain a long-standing puzzle of how murein hydrolases can be controlled to avoid self-lysis during bacterial growth and division.