2 research outputs found
RpfC (Rv1884) atomic structure shows high structural conservation within the resuscitation promoting factor catalytic domain
We report the first structure of the catalytic domain of RpfC (Rv1884), one of theresuscitation-promoting factors (RPFs) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The structure was solved using molecular replacement, once the space group had been correctly identified as twinned P21 rather than the apparent C2221 by searching for anomalous scattering sites in P1. The structure displays a very high degree of structural conservation with the structures of the catalytic domains of RpfB (Rv1009) and RpfE (Rv2450) already published. This structural conservation highlights the importance of the versatile domain composition of the RPF family
Structure of the stationary phase survival protein YuiC from B.subtilis
- Background: Stationary phase survival proteins (Sps) were found in Firmicutes as having
analogous domain compositions, and in some cases genome context, as the resuscitation
promoting factors of Actinobacteria, but with a different putative peptidoglycan cleaving
domain.
- Results: The first structure of a Firmicute Sps protein YuiC from B. subtilis, is found to be a
stripped down version of the cell-wall peptidoglycan hydrolase MltA. The YuiC structures are of
a domain swapped dimer, although some monomer is also found in solution. The protein
crystallised in the presence of pentasaccharide shows a 1,6-anhydrodisaccharide sugar product,
indicating that YuiC cleaves the sugar backbone to form an anhydro product at least on lengthy
incubation during crystallisation.
- Conclusions:
The structural simplification of MltA in Sps proteins is analogous to that of the resuscitation
promoting factor domains of Actinobacteria, which are stripped down versions of lysozyme and
soluble lytic transglycosylase proteins