4EPA
The crystal structure of the ferric yersiniabactin uptake receptor FyuA from Yersinia pestis
Summary for 4EPA
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb4epa/pdb |
Related | 4EPF 4EPI |
Descriptor | Pesticin receptor, LAURYL DIMETHYLAMINE-N-OXIDE (2 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | tonb dependent transporter, iron import, metal transport |
Biological source | Yersinia pestis |
Cellular location | Cell outer membrane: P46359 |
Total number of polymer chains | 1 |
Total formula weight | 73108.33 |
Authors | Lukacik, P.,Barnard, T.J.,Buchanan, S.K. (deposition date: 2012-04-17, release date: 2012-06-20, Last modification date: 2012-07-04) |
Primary citation | Lukacik, P.,Barnard, T.J.,Keller, P.W.,Chaturvedi, K.S.,Seddiki, N.,Fairman, J.W.,Noinaj, N.,Kirby, T.L.,Henderson, J.P.,Steven, A.C.,Hinnebusch, B.J.,Buchanan, S.K. Structural engineering of a phage lysin that targets Gram-negative pathogens. Proc.Natl.Acad.Sci.USA, 109:9857-9862, 2012 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Bacterial pathogens are becoming increasingly resistant to antibiotics. As an alternative therapeutic strategy, phage therapy reagents containing purified viral lysins have been developed against gram-positive organisms but not against gram-negative organisms due to the inability of these types of drugs to cross the bacterial outer membrane. We solved the crystal structures of a Yersinia pestis outer membrane transporter called FyuA and a bacterial toxin called pesticin that targets this transporter. FyuA is a β-barrel membrane protein belonging to the family of TonB dependent transporters, whereas pesticin is a soluble protein with two domains, one that binds to FyuA and another that is structurally similar to phage T4 lysozyme. The structure of pesticin allowed us to design a phage therapy reagent comprised of the FyuA binding domain of pesticin fused to the N-terminus of T4 lysozyme. This hybrid toxin kills specific Yersinia and pathogenic E. coli strains and, importantly, can evade the pesticin immunity protein (Pim) giving it a distinct advantage over pesticin. Furthermore, because FyuA is required for virulence and is more common in pathogenic bacteria, the hybrid toxin also has the advantage of targeting primarily disease-causing bacteria rather than indiscriminately eliminating natural gut flora. PubMed: 22679291DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1203472109 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (3.2 Å) |
Structure validation
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