Co-reporter:Yongfei Cai;Mingyang Su;Ashfaq Ahmad;Xiaojie Hu;Jiayan Sang;Lingyuan Kong;Xingqiang Chen;Chen Wang;Jianwei Shuai
Acta Crystallographica Section D 2017 Volume 73(Issue 10) pp:793-803
Publication Date(Web):2017/10/01
DOI:10.1107/S2059798317013043
Two-component systems (TCSs) are key elements in bacterial signal transduction in response to environmental stresses. TCSs generally consist of sensor histidine kinases (SKs) and their cognate response regulators (RRs). Many SKs exhibit autokinase, phosphoryltransferase and phosphatase activities, which regulate RR activity through a phosphorylation and dephosphorylation cycle. However, how SKs perform different enzymatic activities is poorly understood. Here, several crystal structures of the minimal catalytic region of WalK, an essential SK from Lactobacillus plantarum that shares 60% sequence identity with its homologue VicK from Streptococcus mutans, are presented. WalK adopts an asymmetrical closed structure in the presence of ATP or ADP, in which one of the CA domains is positioned close to the DHp domain, thus leading both the β- and γ-phosphates of ATP/ADP to form hydrogen bonds to the ϵ- but not the δ-nitrogen of the phosphorylatable histidine in the DHp domain. In addition, the DHp domain in the ATP/ADP-bound state has a 25.7° asymmetrical helical bending coordinated with the repositioning of the CA domain; these processes are mutually exclusive and alternate in response to helicity changes that are possibly regulated by upstream signals. In the absence of ATP or ADP, however, WalK adopts a completely symmetric open structure with its DHp domain centred between two outward-reaching CA domains. In summary, these structures of WalK reveal the intrinsic dynamic properties of an SK structure as a molecular basis for multifunctionality.
Co-reporter:Haiyan Hong, Yongfei Cai, Shijun Zhang, Hongyan Ding, ... Aidong Han
Structure 2017 Volume 25, Issue 4(Volume 25, Issue 4) pp:
Publication Date(Web):4 April 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.str.2017.03.003
•Crystal structures of NatB in free and bisubstrate inhibitor binding states•Illustration of substrate specificity of NatB through the first two amino acids•Substrate N terminus is anchored into the NatB catalytic pocket by hydrogen bondsThe NatB N-terminal acetyltransferase specifically acetylates the N-terminal group of substrate protein peptides starting with Met-Asp/Glu/Asn/Gln. How NatB recognizes and acetylates these substrates remains unknown. Here, we report crystal structures of a NatB holoenzyme from Candida albicans in the presence of its co-factor CoA and substrate peptides. The auxiliary subunit Naa25 of NatB forms a horseshoe-like deck to hold specifically its catalytic subunit Naa20. The first two amino acids Met and Asp of a substrate peptide mediate the major interactions with the active site in the Naa20 subunit. The hydrogen bonds between the substrate Asp and pocket residues of Naa20 are essential to determine the NatB substrate specificity. Moreover, a hydrogen bond between the amino group of the substrate Met and a carbonyl group in the Naa20 active site directly anchors the substrate toward acetyl-CoA. Together, these structures define a unique molecular mechanism of specific N-terminal acetylation acted by NatB.Download high-res image (274KB)Download full-size image
Co-reporter:Yanjun Mao, Juanyu Lin, Aibin Zhou, Kunmei Ji, Jennifer S. Downey, Ruichuan Chen, Aidong Han
Analytical Biochemistry 2011 Volume 415(Issue 1) pp:21-26
Publication Date(Web):1 August 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.ab.2011.04.004
Gene synthesis is a convenient tool that is widely used to make genes for a variety of purposes. All current protocols essentially take inside-out approaches to assemble complete genes using DNA oligonucleotides or intermediate fragments. Here we present an efficient method that integrates gene synthesis and cloning into one step. Our method, which is evolved from QuikChange mutagenesis, can modify, extend, or even de novo synthesize relatively large genes. The genes are inserted directly into vectors without ligations or subcloning. We de novo synthesized a 600-bp gene through multiple steps of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) directly into a bacterial expression vector. This outside-in gene synthesis method is called Quikgene. Furthermore, we have defined an overlap region of a minimum of nine nucleotides in insertion primers that is sufficient enough to circularize PCR products for efficient transformation, allowing one to significantly reduce the lengths of primers. Taken together, our protocol greatly extends the current length limit for QuikChange insertion. More importantly, it combines gene synthesis and cloning into one step. It has potential applications for high-throughput structural genomics.
Co-reporter:Huiping Wang, Nan Zhou, Feng Ding, Zhaofang Li, Ruichuan Chen, Aidong Han, Runzhong Liu
Analytical Biochemistry 2011 418(2) pp: 304-306
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.ab.2011.07.008
Co-reporter:Huiping Wang, Nan Zhou, Feng Ding, Zhaofang Li, Ruichuan Chen, Aidong Han, Runzhong Liu
Analytical Biochemistry (15 November 2011) Volume 418(Issue 2) pp:304-306
Publication Date(Web):15 November 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.ab.2011.07.008
QuikChange is a popular method for site-directed mutagenesis in structural and functional studies of proteins and nucleic acids. However, the standard protocol is often inefficient in producing the desired mutations. Here we present a novel strategy for primer design, central overlapping primers (COP), which employs a pair of bipartite primers of different lengths, with the short primer complementary to the middle region of the long primer. The COP method is efficient and robust in generating approximately 90% mutation rate without supercompetent Escherichia coli cells or laborious screening for positive clones.