structural communications
Structure of PatF from Prochloron didemni
aBiomedical Sciences Research Complex, University of St Andrews, North Haugh, St Andrews, Fife KY16 9ST, Scotland, bMarine Biodiscovery Centre, Department of Chemistry, University of Aberdeen, Meston Walk, Aberdeen AB24 3UE, Scotland, cInstitute of Medical Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Ashgrove Road West, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, Scotland, and dDepartment of Biology, University of York, Wentworth Way, York YO10 5DD, England
*Correspondence e-mail: naismith@st-andrews.ac.uk
Patellamides are macrocyclic Prochloron didemni contains a gene, patF, with homology to prenylases, but patellamides are not themselves prenylated. The structure of the protein PatF was cloned, expressed, purified and determined. Prenylase activity could not be demonstrated for the protein, and examination of the structure revealed changes in side-chain identity at the active site. It is suggested that these changes have inactivated the protein. Attempts to mutate these residues led to unfolded protein.
with potent biological effects and are a subset of the cyanobactins. Cyanobactins are natural products that are produced by a series of enzymatic transformations and a common modification is the addition of a prenyl group. Puzzlingly, the pathway for patellamides inKeywords: patellamide; cyanobactins; natural products; prenyltransferases.
PDB reference: PatF, 4bg2
1. Introduction
Medicinal chemists have for many decades looked towards natural products as a scaffold for the design of new drug molecules; however, their synthesis can often be challenging. The exploration of natural product biosynthetic pathways allows the potential exploitation of these pathways to produce new chemical entities. In order to achieve this, study of the individual enzymes involved can give great insight into both their function and the potential to manipulate them for novel purposes.
The cyanobactins, which are a natural product superfamily, are cyclic et al., 2010). The most widely studied members of the cyanobactins are the patellamides produced by Prochloron didemni, an obligate symbiont of the sea squirt Lissoclinum patella. The patellamides are eight-residue cyclic containing oxazolines, thiazoles and D-amino acids and are derived from a ribosomally produced precursor peptide. This peptide is chemically modified by a series of enzymes that includes heterocyclases and macrocyclases (Fig. 1a; Houssen & Jaspars, 2010). The patellamide gene cluster has been identified (seven genes; patA–patG) and the majority of the proteins or their contributing domains have been assigned specific functions (Schmidt et al., 2005). The crystal structures of the protease domain of PatA and the macrocyclase domain of PatG have previously been reported and their mechanisms have been elucidated (Koehnke et al., 2012; Houssen et al., 2012; Agarwal et al., 2012).
containing a range of post-translational modifications including heterocyclization, and prenylation, and have a wide range of biological activities (SivonenPatF has been shown to be essential for patellamide production in vivo; however, to date its function has not been confirmed (Donia et al., 2006). Cyanobactin family members related to PatF have been shown to possess prenyltransferase activity. LynF from Lyngbya aestuarii prenylates tyrosine residues on the aestuaramide family of cyanobactins via a Claisen rearrangement (Fig. 1b; McIntosh et al., 2011; McIntosh et al., 2013), while TruF1 from Prochloron spp. prenylates threonine and serine residues on the trunkamides (Fig. 1c; Tianero et al., 2012). These enzymes have sequence homologies to PatF of 44 and 41%, respectively.
Protein prenylation is a common post-translational modification that plays a role in protein–protein interactions and membrane tethering (Novelli & D'Apice, 2012). In cyanobactins, prenylation of hydroxyl groups occurs via a 3-methyl-but-2-en-1-yl group derived from dimethylallyl pyrophosphate (DMAPP) and is catalyzed by the cyanobactin-specific family of prenyltransferases (McIntosh et al., 2011).
To date, no prenylation of isolated natural patellamides is evident. No tyrosine residues are found in natural patellamides and therefore if PatF is mechanistically similar to LynF then there is no substrate to prenylate. Secondly, threonines and serines are heterocyclized at an early stage in the patellamide-biosynthetic pathway, eliminating them as substrates. In the closely related trunkamide pathway these residues are not heterocyclized and are prenylated by TruF1.
Here, we report the
of PatF, the first from this cyanobactin enzyme family, to a resolution of 2.1 Å and provide evidence to suggest that it is likely to be an inactive prenyltransferase.2. Methods
2.1. Expression and purification
The full-length patF gene from P. didemni was synthesized and cloned in pJexpress 411 plasmid (DNA 2.0) with an N-terminal His6 tag and a Tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease site. The resulting protein was expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) cells grown on auto-induction medium using the method of Studier (2005). Cultures were grown for 48 h at 293 K.
L-Selenomethionine-labelled (SeMet) PatF was expressed in E. coli BL21 (DE3) cells, cultures of which were grown in minimal medium supplemented with glucose-free nutrient mix (Molecular Dimensions) and 5% glycerol. The medium was inoculated with an overnight culture grown in Luria–Bertani (LB) medium and washed three times with minimal medium. After 15 min of growth at 310 K, 60 mg l−1 L-selenomethionine was added to the cultures. An amino-acid mix (100 mg l−1 lysine, phenylalanine and threonine, 50 mg l−1 isoleucine and valine) was added to the cultures when they reached an OD600 nm of 0.6. After 15 min of further growth at 310 K the cultures were induced with 1 mM isopropyl β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) and grown for 30 h at 293 K.
For native and SeMet PatF, cells were harvested by centrifugation (4000g, 277 K, 20 min) and resuspended in lysis buffer [150 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris–HCl pH 8.0, 20 mM imidazole pH 8.0, 0.1%(v/v) Triton X-100, 3 mM β-mercaptoethanol (BME)] with the addition of Complete EDTA-free protease-inhibitor tablets (Roche) and 0.4 mg DNAse I (Sigma) per gram of wet cells. They were then lysed by passage through a cell disrupter at 207 MPa (Constant Systems). The lysate was cleared by centrifugation (40 000g, 277 K, 20 min) and loaded onto an Ni-Sepharose 6 FF column (GE Healthcare) equilibrated in lysis buffer. The column was washed with lysis buffer and PatF was eluted with 250 mM imidazole in the same buffer. The elution peak was passed over a desalting column pre-equilibrated in 150 mM NaCl, 10 mM HEPES pH 7.4, 1 mM TCEP, 10% glycerol. TEV protease was added at a mass ratio of 1:5 and the protein was digested for 2 h at 293 K to remove the His6 tag. The cleaved protein was loaded onto a second nickel column and PatF was found in the flowthrough. The protein was concentrated (Vivaspin concentrators, 10K molecular-weight cutoff) and applied onto a Superdex 75 gel-filtration column (GE Healthcare) equilibrated in the desalting column buffer. The protein eluted as a monomer and was confirmed by SDS–PAGE and (MS). SeMet PatF was additionally confirmed to contain the expected three selenomethionine residues by The protein was of full length with the exception of the N-terminal methionine, which was removed during TEV protease cleavage, and the addition of an Arg and a Ser residue at the C-terminus, which were artifacts from cloning.
2.2. Crystallization, structure solution and refinement
Crystals of SeMet PatF were grown in a condition consisting of 0.1 M sodium/potassium tartrate, 26% PEG 2K MME at 293 K using the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method. The quality of the crystals was found to be improved following iterative rounds of seeding. Crystals of native PatF were grown under the same conditions, but were of poorer diffraction quality.
A single crystal was cryoprotected in a solution of mother liquor supplemented with 30% glycerol and was flash-cooled in a stream of nitrogen at 100 K. A single-wavelength K (0.979 Å wavelength) at 100 K on beamline I04 at DLS. The data were processed and scaled in xia2 (Winter, 2010) using XDS (Kabsch, 2010) and SCALA (Evans, 2006) to a resolution of 2.13 Å. The structure was solved using AutoSol in PHENIX and automated model building of the chains was carried out using AutoBuild in PHENIX (Adams et al., 2010). The model was refined by iterative cycles of manual rebuilding using Coot (Emsley et al., 2010) and using REFMAC5 (Murshudov et al., 2011) in the CCP4 suite (Winn et al., 2011). TLS restraints were calculated using the TLSMD server (Painter & Merritt, 2006) and were used in (Winn et al., 2001). PISA was used to assess the oligomeric state of the protein (Krissinel & Henrick, 2007). The structure was validated using MolProbity (Chen et al., 2010) and the coordinates were deposited in the Protein Data Bank (PDB entry 4bg2).
(SAD) data set was collected at the SeHomology models of LynF and TruF1 were created using the `one 2 one threading' module of Phyre2 (Kelley & Sternberg, 2009) by inputting the sequence of interest and the SeMet PatF structural coordinates.
Structure alignments were carried out using the SSM Superpose feature of Coot and all structures were presented using PyMOL (DeLano, 2002), with the exception of the electrostatic potential maps, which were presented using CCP4mg (McNicholas et al., 2011).
Sequence alignments were carried out using ClustalW (Larkin et al., 2007) and were presented using ALINE (Bond & Schüttelkopf, 2009).
2.3. Biological assays
Assays were set up to assess potential prenylation by PatF under conditions adapted from McIntosh et al. (2011). PatF at a concentration of 4–10 µM was incubated with 0.1–1 mM Boc amino-acid derivative (Boc-Ser, Boc-Tyr or Boc-Trp), 10 mM HEPES pH 7.5, 10–100 mM MgCl2, 3 mM tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP) and 0.5–1 mM DMAPP. All reactions were incubated at 310 K for either 24 h or 7 d. Reactions were analysed by MS.
3. Results
3.1. Overall protein structure
The protein crystals belonged to P21, with two biological monomers in the (Fig. 2a). Four Se sites, corresponding to two selenomethionines per monomer, were identified. The third selenomethionine residue in each monomer is positioned in a disordered loop.
PatF is formed by a 12-stranded antiparallel β-barrel surrounded on the outside by 12 α-helices in a similar manner to the TIM-barrel motif (Banner et al., 1976; Fig. 2b); α-helix 1 protrudes out from the remainder of the structure. There is a single disulfide bridge at the C-terminus linking Cys276 and Cys307. The final refined model contains residues 3–196 and 205–307 of chain A and residues 2–196 and 205–307 of chain B. The missing residues are found on the connecting loop between β8 and α8 and also at the N- and C-termini, all of which are presumed to be disordered. PatF is a globular protein with approximate dimensions of 45 × 43 × 53 Å. Analysis with PISA suggests that PatF exists as a monomer in solution, consistent with gel filtration. Full data-collection and can be found in Table 1.
|
Electrostatic surface-potential representations of PatF highlight a highly electronegative central pore that could disfavour binding of the electronegative DMAPP (Fig. 3). Attempts to solve a of a complex with DMAPP were unsuccessful, with no electron density for the ligand present in any of the structures.
3.2. Biological assays
Prenylation assays were set up using PatF with the Boc amino-acid derivatives Boc-Ser, Boc-Tyr and Boc-Trp. In all reactions only the original starting masses of both the Boc amino acid and the DMAPP molecule were observed by MS, confirming a lack of prenylation.
3.3. Homology-model building
To further clarify potential DMAPP binding, we sought to generate homology models of related cyanobactin family members which have been confirmed to function as prenyltransferases. LynF and TruF1 homology models have electrostatic ).
maps with clear electropositive regions. Neither has the same highly electronegative character as PatF (Fig. 43.4. Structure overlays and sequence alignments
To further characterize the potential binding site of PatF, we performed structural alignments with dimethylallyl tryptophan synthase (DMATS) from Aspergillus fumigatus (Metzger et al., 2009; PDB entry 3i4x). DMATS is a known prenyltransferase and its structure was solved in the presence of both the amino acid and a DMAPP mimic. DMATS is considerably different from PatF in sequence homology (<5%), yet both contain the same characteristic β-barrel pore surrounded by α-helices. Focusing on the DMAPP-binding site allowed us to assess which interactions may be involved in DMAPP binding in PatF and indeed in related cyanobactin family members (Fig. 5). Two key interactions of DMATS were identified to involve Lys187 and Asp178, which both play a role in binding DMAPP. Lys187 forms a strong salt bridge to the phosphate O atom (2.6 Å), while Asp178 forms a stabilizing interaction with Lys187 and also with Arg100, which in turn forms a salt bridge to the DMAPP molecule. In PatF, the structurally equivalent residues to Lys187 and Asp178 are Met136 and His125, respectively. These significant changes mean that Met136 would not form the same salt-bridge interaction as the lysine in DMATS, while His125 would have a repulsive effect on Arg66 (the equivalent of Arg100 in DMATS) rather than a stabilizing interaction.
Upon examination of sequence alignments of the PatF family of enzymes from cyanobactin pathways, Met136 and His125 of PatF are found to correspond to Lys/Arg and Asp, respectively (i.e. they are closely related to those in DMATS; Fig. 6; a full sequence alignment is available in the Supplementary Material1). As LynF and TruF1 are active using DMAPP as a substrate, we suggest that the amino-acid substitutions in PatF lead to its inability to bind DMAPP and lack of prenyltransferase activity. Gly127 in PatF corresponds to an arginine residue in the other cyanobactin family members and the structurally equivalent residue in DMATS is a lysine (Lys180). Lys180 in DMATS and Gly127 in PatF are both sited at the pore opening in their respective structures but do not appear to be directly involved in binding. Attempts to mutate PatF in order to design in an active site based on the other cyanobactin proteins resulted in insoluble protein expression only. The single mutant M136K and the triple mutant H125D/G127R/M136K were insoluble when expressed under the same conditions as native PatF.
4. Discussion
The β-barrel core surrounded by α-helices, which is a known motif for prenyltransferases. We have created electrostatic potential maps, performed structural alignments with a prenyltransferase in complex with DMAPP, examined sequence alignments with related proteins and assessed prenylation in biological assays. Our data, together with the lack of prenylation of any natural patellamide, indicate that PatF is an inactive prenyltransferase.
of PatF has been solved and comprises aDonia et al. (2006) have reported that PatF is essential for patellamide production in vivo and therefore it must be responsible for another function. As the structure does not give any insight into what role this may be, further study will be required.
Supporting information
PDB reference: PatF, 4bg2
Full sequence alignment of PatF and related cyanobactin family members. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S1744309113012931/gx5216sup1.tif
Acknowledgements
We thank the staff of beamline I04 at the Diamond Light Source for their support with data collection. We also thank the St Andrews BSRC
Facility for protein This work was funded by the Leverhulme Trust (RPG-2012-504) and BBSRC (BB/K015508/1); the University of St Andrews infrastructure is supported by a Wellcome Trust Capital Award (086036).References
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