A recurring packing contact in crystals of InlB pinpoints functional binding sites in the internalin domain and the B repeat

Abstract

Geerds C, Bleymüller WM, Meyer T, Widmann C, Niemann H. A recurring packing contact in crystals of InlB pinpoints functional binding sites in the internalin domain and the B repeat. Acta Crystallographica Section D : Structural Biology . 2022;78( 3):310-320.InlB, a bacterial agonist of the human receptor tyrosine kinase MET, consists of an N-terminal internalin domain, a central B repeat and three C-terminal GW domains. In all previous structures of full-length InlB or an InlB construct lacking the GW domains (InlB392), there was no interpretable electron density for the B repeat. Here, three InlB392 crystal structures in which the B repeat is resolved are described. These are the first structures to reveal the relative orientation of the internalin domain and the B repeat. A wild-type structure and two structures of the T332E variant together contain five crystallographically independent molecules. Surprisingly, the threonine-to-glutamate substitution in the B repeat substantially improved the crystallization propensity and crystal quality of the T332E variant. The internalin domain and B repeat are quite rigid internally, but are flexibly linked to each other. The new structures show that inter-domain flexibility is the most likely cause of the missing electron density for the B repeat in previous InlB structures. A potential binding groove between B-repeat strand beta2 and an adjacent loop forms an important crystal contact in all five crystallographically independent chains. This region may represent a hydrophobic `sticky patch' that supports protein-protein interactions. This assumption agrees with the previous finding that all known inactivating point mutations in the B repeat lie within strand beta2. The groove formed by strand beta2 and the adjacent loop may thus represent a functionally important protein-protein interaction site in the B repeat. open access

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