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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 1310, 2024 Feb 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38346985

RESUMEN

Poly-γ-glutamate tails are a distinctive feature of archaeal, bacterial, and eukaryotic cofactors, including the folates and F420. Despite decades of research, key mechanistic questions remain as to how enzymes successively add glutamates to poly-γ-glutamate chains while maintaining cofactor specificity. Here, we show how poly-γ-glutamylation of folate and F420 by folylpolyglutamate synthases and γ-glutamyl ligases, non-homologous enzymes, occurs via processive addition of L-glutamate onto growing γ-glutamyl chain termini. We further reveal structural snapshots of the archaeal γ-glutamyl ligase (CofE) in action, crucially including a bulged-chain product that shows how the cofactor is retained while successive glutamates are added to the chain terminus. This bulging substrate model of processive poly-γ-glutamylation by terminal extension is arguably ubiquitous in such biopolymerisation reactions, including addition to folates, and demonstrates convergent evolution in diverse species from archaea to humans.


Asunto(s)
Ácido Fólico , Ácido Glutámico , Humanos , Péptido Sintasas/metabolismo , Bacterias/metabolismo , Procesamiento Proteico-Postraduccional
2.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 1558, 2019 04 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30952857

RESUMEN

Cofactor F420 plays critical roles in primary and secondary metabolism in a range of bacteria and archaea as a low-potential hydride transfer agent. It mediates a variety of important redox transformations involved in bacterial persistence, antibiotic biosynthesis, pro-drug activation and methanogenesis. However, the biosynthetic pathway for F420 has not been fully elucidated: neither the enzyme that generates the putative intermediate 2-phospho-L-lactate, nor the function of the FMN-binding C-terminal domain of the γ-glutamyl ligase (FbiB) in bacteria are known. Here we present the structure of the guanylyltransferase FbiD and show that, along with its archaeal homolog CofC, it accepts phosphoenolpyruvate, rather than 2-phospho-L-lactate, as the substrate, leading to the formation of the previously uncharacterized intermediate dehydro-F420-0. The C-terminal domain of FbiB then utilizes FMNH2 to reduce dehydro-F420-0, which produces mature F420 species when combined with the γ-glutamyl ligase activity of the N-terminal domain. These new insights have allowed the heterologous production of F420 from a recombinant F420 biosynthetic pathway in Escherichia coli.


Asunto(s)
Vías Biosintéticas , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Riboflavina/análogos & derivados , Modelos Moleculares , Nucleotidiltransferasas/química , Nucleotidiltransferasas/metabolismo , Fosfoenolpiruvato/química , Fosfoenolpiruvato/metabolismo , Células Procariotas/metabolismo , Riboflavina/biosíntesis
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