Interaction of a Model Peptide on Gram Negative and Gram Positive Bacterial Sliding Clamps.
Christophe AndréIsabelle MartielPhilippe WolffMarie LandolfoBernard LorberCyrielle Silva da VeigaAnnick DejaegerePhilippe DumasGilles GuichardVincent OliéricJérôme WagnerDominique Y BurnoufPublished in: ACS infectious diseases (2019)
Bacterial sliding clamps control the access of DNA polymerases to the replication fork and are appealing targets for antibacterial drug development. It is therefore essential to decipher the polymerase-clamp binding mode across various bacterial species. Here, two residues of the E. coli clamp binding pocket, EcS346 and EcM362, and their cognate residues in M. tuberculosis and B. subtilis clamps, were mutated. The effects of these mutations on the interaction of a model peptide with these variant clamps were evaluated by thermodynamic, molecular dynamics, X-rays crystallography, and biochemical analyses. EcM362 and corresponding residues in Gram positive clamps occupy a strategic position where a mobile residue is essential for an efficient peptide interaction. EcS346 has a more subtle function that modulates the pocket folding dynamics, while the equivalent residue in B. subtilis is essential for polymerase activity and might therefore be a Gram positive-specific molecular marker. Finally, the peptide binds through an induced-fit process to Gram negative and positive pockets, but the complex stability varies according to a pocket-specific network of interactions.
Keyphrases
- gram negative
- multidrug resistant
- molecular dynamics
- single molecule
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- density functional theory
- high glucose
- oxidative stress
- hepatitis c virus
- circulating tumor
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- hiv aids
- endothelial cells
- electronic health record
- heat shock protein
- heat stress
- antiretroviral therapy