Lanmodulin
(LanM) is a high-affinity lanthanide (Ln)-binding protein
recently identified in Methylobacterium extorquens, a bacterium that requires Lns for the function of at least two
enzymes. LanM possesses four EF-hands, metal coordination motifs generally
associated with CaII binding, but it undergoes a metal-dependent
conformational change with a 100 million-fold selectivity for LnIIIs and YIII over CaII. Here we present
the nuclear magnetic resonance solution structure of LanM complexed
with YIII. This structure reveals that LanM features an
unusual fusion of adjacent EF-hands, resulting in a compact fold to
the best of our knowledge unique among EF-hand-containing proteins.
It also supports the importance of an additional carboxylate ligand
in contributing to the protein’s picomolar affinity for LnIIIs, and it suggests a role of unusual Ni+1–H···Ni hydrogen bonds, in which LanM’s unique EF-hand proline residues
are engaged, in selective LnIII recognition. This work
sets the stage for a detailed mechanistic understanding of LanM’s
Ln selectivity, which may inspire new strategies for binding, detecting,
and sequestering these technologically important metals