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Structural and biochemical characterizations of the novel autolysin Acd24020 from Clostridioides difficile and its full-function catalytic domain as a lytic enzyme.

Hiroshi SekiyaEiji TamaiJurina KawasakiKaho MurakamiShigehiro Kamitori
Published in: Molecular microbiology (2020)
Autolysin is a lytic enzyme that hydrolyzes peptidoglycans of the bacterial cell wall, with a catalytic domain and cell wall-binding (CWB) domains, to be involved in different physiological functions that require bacterial cell wall remodeling. We identified a novel autolysin, Acd24020, from Clostridioides (Clostridium) difficile (C. difficile), with an endopeptidase catalytic domain belonging to the NlpC/P60 family and three bacterial Src-homology 3 domains as CWB domains. The catalytic domain of Acd24020 (Acd24020-CD) exhibited C. difficile-specific lytic activity equivalent to Acd24020, indicating that Acd24020-CD has full-function as a lytic enzyme by itself. To elucidate the specific peptidoglycan-recognition and catalytic reaction mechanisms of Acd24020-CD, biochemical characterization, X-ray structure determination, a modeling study of the enzyme/substrate complex, and mutagenesis analysis were performed. Acd24020-CD has an hourglass-shaped substrate-binding groove across the molecule, which is responsible for recognizing the direct 3-4 cross-linking structure unique to C. difficile peptidoglycan. Based on the X-ray structure and modeling study, we propose a dynamic Cys/His catalyzing mechanism, in which the catalytic Cys299 and His354 residues dynamically change their conformations to complement each step of the enzyme catalytic reaction.
Keyphrases
  • cell wall
  • clostridium difficile
  • crystal structure
  • high resolution
  • nk cells
  • crispr cas
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • amino acid
  • dual energy
  • electron transfer
  • electron microscopy