5 research outputs found
Plant, Animal, and Fungal Micronutrient Queuosine Is Salvaged by Members of the DUF2419 Protein Family
Queuosine (Q) is a modification found
at the wobble position of
tRNAs with GUN anticodons. Although Q is present in most eukaryotes
and bacteria, only bacteria can synthesize Q <i>de novo</i>. Eukaryotes acquire queuine (q), the free base of Q, from diet and/or
microflora, making q an important but under-recognized micronutrient
for plants, animals, and fungi. Eukaryotic type tRNA-guanine transglycosylases
(eTGTs) are composed of a catalytic subunit (QTRT1) and a homologous
accessory subunit (QTRTD1) forming a complex that catalyzes q insertion
into target tRNAs. Phylogenetic analysis of eTGT subunits revealed
a patchy distribution pattern in which gene losses occurred independently
in different clades. Searches for genes co-distributing with eTGT
family members identified DUF2419 as a potential Q salvage protein
family. This prediction was experimentally validated in <i>Schizosaccharomyces
pombe</i> by confirming that Q was present by analyzing tRNA<sup>Asp</sup> with anticodon GUC purified from wild-type cells and by
showing that Q was absent from strains carrying deletions in the QTRT1
or DUF2419 encoding genes. DUF2419 proteins occur in most Eukarya
with a few possible cases of horizontal gene transfer to bacteria.
The universality of the DUF2419 function was confirmed by complementing
the <i>S. pombe</i> mutant with the <i>Zea mays</i> (maize), human, and <i>Sphaerobacter thermophilus</i> homologues.
The enzymatic function of this family is yet to be determined, but
structural similarity with DNA glycosidases suggests a ribonucleoside
hydrolase activity
Members of a Novel Kinase Family (DUF1537) Can Recycle Toxic Intermediates into an Essential Metabolite
DUF1537
is a novel family of kinases identified by comparative
genomic approaches. The family is widespread and found in all sequenced
plant genomes and 16% of sequenced bacterial genomes. DUF1537 is not
a monofunctional family and contains subgroups that can be separated
by phylogenetic and genome neighborhood context analyses. A subset
of the DUF1537 proteins is strongly associated by physical clustering
and gene fusion with the PdxA2 family, demonstrated here to be a functional
paralog of the 4-phosphohydroxy-l-threonine dehydrogenase
enzyme (PdxA), a central enzyme in the synthesis of pyridoxal-5′-phosphate
(PLP) in proteobacteria. Some members of this DUF1537 subgroup phosphorylate l-4-hydroxythreonine (4HT) into 4-phosphohydroxy-l-threonine
(4PHT), the substrate of PdxA, <i>in vitro</i> and <i>in vivo</i>. This provides an alternative route to PLP from
the toxic antimetabolite 4HT that can be directly generated from the
toxic intermediate glycolaldehyde. Although the kinetic and physical
clustering data indicate that these functions in PLP synthesis are
not the main roles of the DUF1537-PdxA2 enzymes, genetic and physiological
data suggest these side activities function has been maintained in
diverse sets of organisms
Additional file 1: Figure S1. of A case study of an integrative genomic and experimental therapeutic approach for rare tumors: identification of vulnerabilities in a pediatric poorly differentiated carcinoma
Activation of mTOR pathway in patient tumor sample. Figure S2 A. Levels of in vitro translated MAX, MAXR60Q, C-MYC, and MXD1 in samples used for EMSA. B Modeling BRAF kinase domain complexed with ATP and Mg2+. Figure S3. Validation of PDX tumor model by Sanger sequencing. Figure S4. Tumor response to selumetinib. (PDF 7254Â kb
Structural and Biochemical Characterization of the Bilin Lyase CpcS from Thermosynechococcus elongatus
Cyanobacterial phycobiliproteins
have evolved to capture light
energy over most of the visible spectrum due to their bilin chromophores,
which are linear tetrapyrroles that have been covalently attached
by enzymes called bilin lyases. We report here the crystal structure
of a bilin lyase of the CpcS family from Thermosynechococcus
elongatus (<i>Te</i>CpcS-III). <i>Te</i>CpcS-III is a 10-stranded β barrel with two alpha helices and
belongs to the lipocalin structural family. <i>Te</i>CpcS-III
catalyzes both cognate as well as noncognate bilin attachment to a
variety of phycobiliprotein subunits. <i>Te</i>CpcS-III
ligates phycocyanobilin, phycoerythrobilin, and phytochromobilin to
the alpha and beta subunits of allophycocyanin and to the beta subunit
of phycocyanin at the Cys82-equivalent position in all cases. The
active form of <i>Te</i>CpcS-III is a dimer, which is consistent
with the structure observed in the crystal. With the use of the UnaG
protein and its association with bilirubin as a guide, a model for
the association between the native substrate, phycocyanobilin, and <i>Te</i>CpcS was produced
Computational Design of Catalytic Dyads and Oxyanion Holes for Ester Hydrolysis
Nucleophilic catalysis is a general strategy for accelerating
ester
and amide hydrolysis. In natural active sites, nucleophilic elements
such as catalytic dyads and triads are usually paired with oxyanion
holes for substrate activation, but it is difficult to parse out the
independent contributions of these elements or to understand how they
emerged in the course of evolution. Here we explore the minimal requirements
for esterase activity by computationally designing artificial catalysts
using catalytic dyads and oxyanion holes. We found much higher success
rates using designed oxyanion holes formed by backbone NH groups rather
than by side chains or bridging water molecules and obtained four
active designs in different scaffolds by combining this motif with
a Cys-His dyad. Following active site optimization, the most active
of the variants exhibited a catalytic efficiency (<i>k</i><sub>cat</sub>/<i>K</i><sub>M</sub>) of 400 M<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup> for the cleavage of a <i>p</i>-nitrophenyl
ester. Kinetic experiments indicate that the active site cysteines
are rapidly acylated as programmed by design, but the subsequent slow
hydrolysis of the acyl-enzyme intermediate limits overall catalytic
efficiency. Moreover, the Cys-His dyads are not properly formed in
crystal structures of the designed enzymes. These results highlight
the challenges that computational design must overcome to achieve
high levels of activity