National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)
China
Citation
Journal: J Am Chem Soc / Year: 2024 Title: Dynamic Metabolons Using Stimuli-Responsive Protein Cages. Authors: Wei Kang / Xiao Ma / Huawei Zhang / Juncai Ma / Chunxue Liu / Jiani Li / Hanhan Guo / Daping Wang / Rui Wang / Bo Li / Chuang Xue / Abstract: Naturally evolved metabolons have the ability to assemble and disassemble in response to environmental stimuli, allowing for the rapid reorganization of chemical reactions in living cells to meet ...Naturally evolved metabolons have the ability to assemble and disassemble in response to environmental stimuli, allowing for the rapid reorganization of chemical reactions in living cells to meet changing cellular needs. However, replicating such capability in synthetic metabolons remains a challenge due to our limited understanding of the mechanisms by which the assembly and disassembly of such naturally occurring multienzyme complexes are controlled. Here, we report the synthesis of chemical- and light-responsive protein cages for assembling synthetic metabolons, enabling the dynamic regulation of enzymatic reactions in living cells. Particularly, a chemically responsive domain was fused to a self-assembled protein cage subunit, generating engineered protein cages capable of displaying proteins containing cognate interaction domains on their surfaces in response to small molecular cues. Chemical-induced colocalization of sequential enzymes on protein cages enhances the specificity of the branched deoxyviolacein biosynthetic reactions by 2.6-fold. Further, by replacing the chemical-inducible domain with a light-inducible dimerization domain, we created an optogenetic protein cage capable of reversibly recruiting and releasing targeted proteins onto and from the exterior of the protein cages in tens of seconds by on-off of blue light. Tethering the optogenetic protein cages to membranes enables the formation of light-switchable, membrane-bound metabolons, which can repeatably recruit-release enzymes, leading to the manipulation of substrate utilization across membranes on demand. Our work demonstrates a powerful and versatile strategy for constructing dynamic metabolons in engineered living cells for efficient and controllable biocatalysis.
In the structure databanks used in Yorodumi, some data are registered as the other names, "COVID-19 virus" and "2019-nCoV". Here are the details of the virus and the list of structure data.
Jan 31, 2019. EMDB accession codes are about to change! (news from PDBe EMDB page)
EMDB accession codes are about to change! (news from PDBe EMDB page)
The allocation of 4 digits for EMDB accession codes will soon come to an end. Whilst these codes will remain in use, new EMDB accession codes will include an additional digit and will expand incrementally as the available range of codes is exhausted. The current 4-digit format prefixed with “EMD-” (i.e. EMD-XXXX) will advance to a 5-digit format (i.e. EMD-XXXXX), and so on. It is currently estimated that the 4-digit codes will be depleted around Spring 2019, at which point the 5-digit format will come into force.
The EM Navigator/Yorodumi systems omit the EMD- prefix.
Related info.:Q: What is EMD? / ID/Accession-code notation in Yorodumi/EM Navigator
Yorodumi is a browser for structure data from EMDB, PDB, SASBDB, etc.
This page is also the successor to EM Navigator detail page, and also detail information page/front-end page for Omokage search.
The word "yorodu" (or yorozu) is an old Japanese word meaning "ten thousand". "mi" (miru) is to see.
Related info.:EMDB / PDB / SASBDB / Comparison of 3 databanks / Yorodumi Search / Aug 31, 2016. New EM Navigator & Yorodumi / Yorodumi Papers / Jmol/JSmol / Function and homology information / Changes in new EM Navigator and Yorodumi