Studying GGDEF Domain in the Act: Minimize Conformational Frustration to Prevent Artefacts.
Federico MantoniChiara Scribani RossiAlessandro PaiardiniAdele Di MatteoLoredana CappellacciRiccardo PetrelliMassimo RicciutelliAlessio PaoneFrancesca CutruzzolàGiorgio GiardinaSerena RinaldoPublished in: Life (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
GGDEF-containing proteins respond to different environmental cues to finely modulate cyclic diguanylate (c-di-GMP) levels in time and space, making the allosteric control a distinctive trait of the corresponding proteins. The diguanylate cyclase mechanism is emblematic of this control: two GGDEF domains, each binding one GTP molecule, must dimerize to enter catalysis and yield c-di-GMP. The need for dimerization makes the GGDEF domain an ideal conformational switch in multidomain proteins. A re-evaluation of the kinetic profile of previously characterized GGDEF domains indicated that they are also able to convert GTP to GMP: this unexpected reactivity occurs when conformational issues hamper the cyclase activity. These results create new questions regarding the characterization and engineering of these proteins for in solution or structural studies.