Crystal structure of the N-terminal domain of MinC dimerized via domain swapping

The crystal structure of EcoMinCNTD dimerized via domain swapping was solved at 2.3 Å resolution. The present study suggests that EcoMinC dimerizes through both EcoMinCNTD and EcoMinCCTD.


Introduction
Cytokinesis in bacteria is carried out by the cytokinetic ring (FtsZ ring or Z ring), which acts in part by recruiting other cell-division proteins (Lutkenhaus, 1998(Lutkenhaus, , 2007Dajkovic & Lutkenhaus, 2006). The Z ring, which is a polymer composed of FtsZ subunits, is normally situated at the mid-site of cells undergoing division, but it associates with the membrane through ZipA and FtsA, and in the absence of the min system (MinC, MinD and MinE) can be moved from the mid-site to the polar regions of cells (Yu & Margolin, 1999). For successful cell division in Escherichia coli, cooperative behavior among the Min proteins is required (de Boer et al., 1989;Rothfield et al., 1999). MinC is a critical regulator of FtsZ polymerization that is bound to MinD and oscillates from one polar region within the cell to the other. By destabilizing FtsZ polymers in the polar regions, MinC acts to inhibit the division process in those regions Raskin & de Boer, 1999a). MinD, which attaches to the membrane through a C-terminal amphipathic helix that embeds into membrane bilayer following ATP-dependent dimerization, recruits MinC to the membrane (Szeto et al., 2003;Zhou & Lutkenhaus, 2003;Lackner et al., 2003). In that way, MinD can increase the MinC concentration at the membrane by up to 50-fold (de Boer et al., 1992;Raskin & de Boer, 1999b). The MinC/D complex is regulated by MinE, which restricts localization of the complex to the polar regions, thereby limiting assembly of FtsZ polymers to the mid-site (de Boer et al., 1989). MinE accomplishes this regulation by stimulating the ATPase activity of MinD and dissociating MinD from the membrane Raskin & de Boer, 1999a,b;Fu et al., 2001;Hale et al., 2001;Hu et al., 2002;Shih et al., 2003). Through this cooperative behavior among Min proteins, the Z ring is stably located at the mid-site, enabling division of a cell into two daughter cells to occur normally.
MinC is composed of two domains. Its N-terminal domain (MinC NTD ) interacts with 10 of FtsZ, weakening the longitudinal bonds between FtsZ subunits within filaments, which leads to a loss of polymer rigidity and polymer shortening (Dajkovic et al., 2008). On the other hand, the C-terminal domain (MinC CTD ) interacts with MinD and the C-terminus of FtsZ to inhibit the bundling of FtsZ filaments. (Hu & Lutkenhaus, 2000;Dajkovic et al., 2008;Shen & Lutkenhaus, 2009). It has been proposed, however, that at physiological levels the most likely function of the interaction between MinC CTD and the C-terminal tail of FtsZ is to target MinC NTD to FtsZ polymers. Thus, the mechanism of Z-ring inhibition PDB Reference: 4l1c by MinC may involve two simultaneous interactions of MinC with FtsZ: MinC NTD binding to 10 of FtsZ that is important for polymer assembly, and MinC CTD -mediated targeting of MinC to FtsZ (Blasios et al., 2013).
The structure of MinC has been reported for the hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermotoga maritima (TmaMinC) [Cordell et al., 2001; Protein Data Bank (PDB) ID 1hf2]. Dimerization of TmaMinC is mediated solely by the MinC CTD domain; MinC NTD is not involved in dimerization in this species. By contrast, the crystal structure of MinC NTD from Salmonella typhimurium (StyMinC NTD ) was found to be dimeric (PDB ID 3ghf,unpublished). Thus the mode of MinC dimerization and the mechanism by which the dimer inhibits FtsZ assembly is not yet fully understood. We targeted E. coli MinC (EcoMinC) for a structural study and determined the crystal structure of the dimeric EcoMinC NTD at 2.3 Å resolution. EcoMinC NTD forms a dimer via domain swapping between the first strands in each subunit, as observed in the StyMinC NTD structure. Moreover, we found that dimerization of full-length EcoMinC is mediated not only by MinC CTD but also by MinC NTD . We suggest that dimerized EcoMinC NTD plays a key role in the inhibition of aberrant FtsZ polymerization.

Cloning, expression and purification
The recombinant EcoMinC NTD gene (residues 1-105) was amplified from E. coli (ATCC No. 700926D-5) genomic DNA using PCR, and restriction enzyme sites were added using gene-specific primer pairs. The PCR product was recombined into the modified pET-28a vector using the BamHI/XhoI site, after which the recombinant plasmid was transformed into E. coli strain BL21 (DE3) for overexpression of protein. The transformants were grown in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium containing 50 mg ml À1 kanamycin at 310 K to an OD 600 of approximately 0.7, at which time 0.5 mM isopropyl -d-1thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) was added to induce expression of the recombinant protein, and the cells were incubated for an additional 9 h at the same temperature. The cells were harvested by centrifugation at 4500 Â g for 15 min at 277 K, resuspended with buffer A (50 mM sodium phosphate [pH 8.0], 300 mM NaCl and 5 mM imidazole), and lysed by sonication. The crude lysate was centrifuged at 16000 Â g for 50 min at 277 K, and the supernatant was loaded onto a Ni-NTA column (Peptron) previously equilibrated with buffer A. The protein was eluted with buffer B (50 mM sodium phosphate [pH 8.0], 300 mM NaCl and 300 mM imidazole). The eluate was concentrated using a Centriprep YM-3 (Millipore) and incubated with TEV protease at 277 K overnight to remove the hexahistidine tag. The protein was then further purified by size-exclusion chromatography using a Superdex 200 16/60 column (GE Healthcare, USA) equilibrated with buffer C (20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 150 mM NaCl and 1 mM DTT). Finally, the eluate was concentrated to 14 mg ml À1 using a Centriprep YM-3 (Millipore) for crystallization. The protein concentration was determined spectrophotometrically using an extinction coefficient of 5504 M À1 cm À1 (molecular weight = 11863 Da) at a wavelength of 280 nm.

Crystallization and X-ray analysis
Initial crystallization conditions were found in a Crystal Screen I and II reagent kit (Hampton Research) using Intelliplate crystallization trays with 80 ml of well solution and 1.0 ml drop (equal volume of protein and well solutions) in a sittingdrop 96-well format at 294 K. The crystallization conditions were then further refined using the hanging-drop vapordiffusion method with a 2 ml drop. The best crystals were observed after three days in well solution consisting of 1.4 M sodium citrate (pH 6.5). For X-ray diffraction experiments, the crystals were flash frozen in liquid nitrogen using Paraton-N as a cryoprotectant. The diffraction dataset was collected on beamline 4A (MXW) at the Pohang Accelerator Laboratory (Pohang, South Korea) at a wavelength of 1.0000 Å using an ADSC Quantum 315 CCD detector. The data set was processed and scaled using HKL2000 (Otwinowski & Minor, 1997).

Structure determination and refinement
The structure was determined at 2.3 Å resolution by molecular replacement using PHENIX (Adams et al., 2010). Monomeric StyMinC NTD (PDB ID 3ghf) was used as a search model, and two molecules in an asymmetric unit were identified. The structures of EcoMinC NTD were subjected to many cycles of manual rebuilding using the program COOT is the intensity of the ith observation of reflection hkl and hI(hkl)i is the average intensity of reflection hkl. ‡ R work = AE||F o | À |F c ||/AE|F o |. § R free calculated with 10% of all reflections excluded from refinement stages using high-resolution data.
TLS refinements using the program PHENIX. The final structure was obtained with R work = 0.229 and R free = 0.263. The statistics for the data collection and structure refinement are summarized in Table 1.

Structure of EcoMinC NTD
The crystal structure of EcoMinC NTD was solved at 2.3 Å resolution using the molecular replacement method. The search model was StyMinC NTD (PDB ID 3ghf), which has 84% sequence identity with the E. coli molecule. Like that of StyMinC NTD , the architecture of monomeric EcoMinC NTD includes three strands and four helixes (Fig. 1a), and the two MinC NTD structures superimposed with a root-meansquare deviation (RMSD) of 1.49 Å for the 97 C atoms (residues 5-101). By contrast, superimposition of the structures of EcoMinC NTD and TmaMinC NTD shows that whereas the first strand of EcoMinC NTD is unexpectedly long (residues 6-20), TmaMinC NTD has two strands forming an antiparallel sheet in this region (1 and 2 region; residues 3-6 and 11-15) (Fig. 1a). In addition, residues in the central region of EcoMinC NTD are mainly hydrophobic, while they are mainly polar in TmaMinC NTD (Fig. 1b).
We observed EcoMinC NTD as a dimer within the asymmetric unit. The dimer is formed via domain swapping; that is, an antiparallel 1-1 interaction between subunits [Figs. 2(a) and 2(b)], as observed in the StyMinC NTD structure. Within the 1 strand, Gly10, Ser11 and Ser16 are important for mediating the long twisted antiparallel 1-1 interaction (Fig. 2b). In addition, the dimer is further stabilized by hydrogen bonds (Glu91-His45, Arg74-Gly94 and Ser12-Gly101) and hydrophobic interactions (among Phe13, Leu15, Pro47, Val49, Ile76, Pro96 and L98) at the central interface (Fig. 2c). By contrast, TmaMinC lacks the corresponding Gly and Ser residues and hydrophobic residues that stabilize the domain swapped 1-1 interaction. Instead, TmaMinC has an 8-KEG-10 sequence between two short strands, which prevents formation of a long strand (Fig. 3). Structural analysis of full-length TmaMinC has shown that it dimerizes through interaction of only TmaMinC CTD domains (Cordell , 2001). There is no interaction between TmaMinC NTD domains. To generate monomeric EcoMinC NTD , this antiparallel 1-1 interaction should be broken and the hydrophobic residues will become exposed, because the long 1 strand cannot fold back to make the -hairpin structure, as observed in the structure of TmaMinC NTD . Consequently, the shift from monomer to dimer is probably energetically stable in EcoMinC NTD . Thus we see dimeric EcoMinC NTD in the result of sizeexclusion chromatography, in a broad range of protein concentrations, as well as in the EcoMinC NTD crystal structure.
Reportedly, unfused EcoMinC fulllength and EcoMinC CTD form dimers at a concentration of !10 mM, which is consistent with our results (Szeto et al., 2001). In the case of EcoMinC NTD , the MalE fusion protein (MalE-EcoMinC NTD ) was reported to form oligomers (a higher order than the dimer) (Hu & Lutkenhaus, 2000). As we observed in the crystal structure, the swapping of the N-terminal strands are critical for the dimer formation. Thus the N-terminal fusion in MalE-EcoMinC NTD probably interferes with proper dimer formation. By using unfused-EcoMinC NTD , we observed that EcoMinC NTD forms a stable dimer in solution and in the crystal, enabling us to conclude that EcoMinC dimerizes through both EcoMinC CTD and Eco-MinC NTD . It is noteworthy that between EcoMinC CTD and EcoMinC NTD is a long linker ($ 25 residues) that is not present in TmaMinC (Fig. 3). This long linker makes possible independent dimerization of EcoMinC NTD and EcoMinC CTD . Consistent with that idea, we observed in a chemical crosslinking experiment that at a high EcoMinC concentration there was greater oligomer formation than could be explained through alternative dimer formation by EcoMinC NTD and EcoMinC CTD (data not shown).

Model for interaction between polymeric FtsZ and dimeric EcoMinC
Polymeric FtsZ (Z ring) is located at the mid-site in cells undergoing normal cytokinesis. Underlying this process is the negative regulation of aberrant polymeric FtsZ by the MinC/D complex. MinD recruits MinC near the membrane through interaction with the conserved RSGQ sequence of MinC (Ramirez-Arcos et al., 2004;Zhou & Lutkenhaus, 2005), which leads to the MinC dimer being situated between two dimeric MinD molecules (Wu et al., 2011) (Fig. 4). It has also been reported that, upon formation of the MinC/D complex, MinC NTD binds to 10 of FtsZ, which is located at the interface between FtsZ subunits (Shen & Lutkenhaus, 2010), while MinC CTD binds to the C-terminal tail of FtsZ (Shen & Lutkenhaus, 2009) (Fig. 4). In that context, our present findings make it reasonable to suggest that dimeric EcoMinC NTD binds to 10 of FtsZ, as the surface for FtsZ binding is located in the -helical subdomain, and the C-terminus of EcoMinC NTD is located in the -sheet subdomain (Fig. 2a). In addition, the dimensions of dimeric EcoMinC NTD (40 Â 52 Å ; Fig. 2a) match well with the repetition of 10 of FtsZ polymer (43 Å , Fig. 4).
Recently, Blasios et al. (2013) identified the binding sites for MinC in Bacillus subtilis FtsZ and found that they differ significantly from those in E. coli. They proposed that the mechanism of MinC action differs between these two species, Multiple sequence alignment of MinC. Alignment was performed using the program ClustalX (Thompson et al., 2002) and included MinC from Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhimurium, Klebsiella pneumoniae 342, Cronobacter sakazakii ATCC BAA-894, Erwinia tasmaniensis, Pectobacterium atrosepticum SCRI1043, Baumannia cicadellinicola, Enterobacter sp. 638 and Proteus mirabilis HI4320. A separate box was used for Thermotoga maritima, Thermotoga petrophila RKU-1, Thermotoga neapolitana DSM 4359, Thermotoga lettingae TMO, Bacillus subtilis and Thermosipho melanesiensis BI429. Residues involved in hydrophobic interactions in the central region of MinC NTD are marked with black dots. Residues that are important for maintaining the long twisted antiparallel 1-1 interaction are shown in yellow boxes. Each domain is boxed in a different color. The 1 in EcoMinC NTD and 1-2 strands in TmaMinC NTD are shown. The species from which the MinC structure was determined is shown in bold.
being primarily at the level of inhibiting FtsZ filament bundle formation in B. subtilis. It is noteworthy that the N-terminal sequence of B. subtilis MinC (BsuMinC), corresponding to the first strand, aligns better with TmaMinC than with EcoMinC or StyMinC (Fig. 3). We would therefore expect BsuMinC NTD to contain two short strands forming an antiparallel sheet similar to that in TmaMinC NTD , which would result in monomeric BsuMinC NTD . This could explain why EcoMinC NTD and BsuMinC NTD interact with different regions of FtsZ.
Taken together, the results of our structural study of EcoMinC NTD reveal that domain swapped dimerization is a likely mode of interaction with polymeric FtsZ. To unravel the underlying mechanism of this interaction and physiological function of the domain swapping in the EcoMinC NTD dimer, additional biochemical and cell-based experiments are required, using the wild type and mutants, which stabilize monomeric EcoMinC NTD in the aspect of FtsZ interaction and cell division inhibition. Furthermore, it will be intriguing to compare the differences in functional regulation by the domain-swapped dimers, such as EcoMinC, with other MinCs that do not have domain swapping, such as Thermotoga maritima (and, probably, Bacillus subtilis; Fig. 3).