3 resultados para TERMINAL DOMAIN
em Duke University
Resumo:
Trehalose is a non-reducing disaccharide essential for pathogenic fungal survival and virulence. The biosynthesis of trehalose requires the trehalose-6-phosphate synthase, Tps1, and trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase, Tps2. More importantly, the trehalose biosynthetic pathway is absent in mammals, conferring this pathway as an ideal target for antifungal drug design. However, lack of germane biochemical and structural information hinders antifungal drug design against these targets.
In this dissertation, macromolecular X-ray crystallography and biochemical assays were employed to understand the structures and functions of proteins involved in the trehalose biosynthetic pathway. I report here the first eukaryotic Tps1 structures from Candida albicans (C. albicans) and Aspergillus fumigatus (A. fumigatus) with substrates or substrate analogs. These structures reveal the key residues involved in substrate binding and catalysis. Subsequent enzymatic assays and cellular assays highlight the significance of these key Tps1 residues in enzyme function and fungal stress response. The Tps1 structure captured in its transition-state with a non-hydrolysable inhibitor demonstrates that Tps1 adopts an “internal return like” mechanism for catalysis. Furthermore, disruption of the trehalose biosynthetic complex formation through abolishing Tps1 dimerization reveals that complex formation has regulatory function in addition to trehalose production, providing additional targets for antifungal drug intervention.
I also present here the structure of the Tps2 N-terminal domain (Tps2NTD) from C. albicans, which may be involved in the proper formation of the trehalose biosynthetic complex. Deletion of the Tps2NTD results in a temperature sensitive phenotype. Further, I describe in this dissertation the structures of the Tps2 phosphatase domain (Tps2PD) from C. albicans, A. fumigatus and Cryptococcus neoformans (C. neoformans) in multiple conformational states. The structures of the C. albicans Tps2PD -BeF3-trehalose complex and C. neoformans Tps2PD(D24N)-T6P complex reveal extensive interactions between both glucose moieties of the trehalose involving all eight hydroxyl groups and multiple residues of both the cap and core domains of Tps2PD. These structures also reveal that steric hindrance is a key underlying factor for the exquisite substrate specificity of Tps2PD. In addition, the structures of Tps2PD in the open conformation provide direct visualization of the conformational changes of this domain that are effected by substrate binding and product release.
Last, I present the structure of the C. albicans trehalose synthase regulatory protein (Tps3) pseudo-phosphatase domain (Tps3PPD) structure. Tps3PPD adopts a haloacid dehydrogenase superfamily (HADSF) phosphatase fold with a core Rossmann-fold domain and a α/β fold cap domain. Despite lack of phosphatase activity, the cleft between the Tps3PPD core domain and cap domain presents a binding pocket for a yet uncharacterized ligand. Identification of this ligand could reveal the cellular function of Tps3 and any interconnection of the trehalose biosynthetic pathway with other cellular metabolic pathways.
Combined, these structures together with significant biochemical analyses advance our understanding of the proteins responsible for trehalose biosynthesis. These structures are ready to be exploited to rationally design or optimize inhibitors of the trehalose biosynthetic pathway enzymes. Hence, the work described in this thesis has laid the groundwork for the design of Tps1 and Tps2 specific inhibitors, which ultimately could lead to novel therapeutics to treat fungal infections.
Resumo:
Biological macromolecules can rearrange interdomain orientations when binding to various partners. Interdomain dynamics serve as a molecular mechanism to guide the transitions between orientations. However, our understanding of interdomain dynamics is limited because a useful description of interdomain motions requires an estimate of the probabilities of interdomain conformations, increasing complexity of the problem.
Staphylococcal protein A (SpA) has five tandem protein-binding domains and four interdomain linkers. The domains enable Staphylococcus aureus to evade the host immune system by binding to multiple host proteins including antibodies. Here, I present a study of the interdomain motions of two adjacent domains in SpA. NMR spin relaxation experiments identified a 6-residue flexible interdomain linker and interdomain motions. To quantify the anisotropy of the distribution of interdomain orientations, we measured residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) from the two domains with multiple alignments. The N-terminal domain was directly aligned by a lanthanide ion and not influenced by interdomain motions, so it acted as a reference frame to achieve motional decoupling. We also applied {\it de novo} methods to extract spatial dynamic information from RDCs and represent interdomain motions as a continuous distribution on the 3D rotational space. Significant anisotropy was observed in the distribution, indicating the motion populates some interdomain orientations more than others. Statistical thermodynamic analysis of the observed orientational distribution suggests that it is among the energetically most favorable orientational distributions for binding to antibodies. Thus, the affinity is enhanced by a pre-posed distribution of interdomain orientations while maintaining the flexibility required for function.
The protocol described above can be applied to other biological systems in general. Protein molecule calmodulin and RNA molecule trans-activation response element (TAR) also have intensive interdomain motions with relative small intradomain dynamics. Their interdomain motions were studied using our method based on published RDC data. Our results were consistent with literature results in general. The differences could be due to previous studies' use of physical models, which contain assumptions about potential energy and thus introduced non-experimental information into the interpretations.
Resumo:
A small portion of cellular glycogen is transported to and degraded in lysosomes by acid α-glucosidase (GAA) in mammals, but it is unclear why and how glycogen is transported to the lysosomes. Stbd1 has recently been proposed to participate in glycogen trafficking to lysosomes. However, our previous study demonstrated that knockdown of Stbd1 in GAA knock-out mice did not alter lysosomal glycogen storage in skeletal muscles. To further determine whether Stbd1 participates in glycogen transport to lysosomes, we generated GAA/Stbd1 double knock-out mice. In fasted double knock-out mice, glycogen accumulation in skeletal and cardiac muscles was not affected, but glycogen content in liver was reduced by nearly 73% at 3 months of age and by 60% at 13 months as compared with GAA knock-out mice, indicating that the transport of glycogen to lysosomes was suppressed in liver by the loss of Stbd1. Exogenous expression of human Stbd1 in double knock-out mice restored the liver lysosomal glycogen content to the level of GAA knock-out mice, as did a mutant lacking the Atg8 family interacting motif (AIM) and another mutant that contains only the N-terminal 24 hydrophobic segment and the C-terminal starch binding domain (CBM20) interlinked by an HA tag. Our results demonstrate that Stbd1 plays a dominant role in glycogen transport to lysosomes in liver and that the N-terminal transmembrane region and the C-terminal CBM20 domain are critical for this function.