8Q6U
Crystal structure of a double mutant acetyltransferase from Bacillus cereus species.
Summary for 8Q6U
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb8q6u/pdb |
Related | 6ERD |
Descriptor | Aminoglycoside N6'-acetyltransferase, 1,2-ETHANEDIOL, ZINC ION, ... (4 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | acetyltransferase, transferase |
Biological source | Bacillus cereus ATCC 14579 |
Total number of polymer chains | 2 |
Total formula weight | 39838.45 |
Authors | |
Primary citation | Leonardo Silvestre, H.,Asensio, J.L.,Blundell, T.L.,Bastida, A.,Bolanos-Garcia, V.M. Functional and structural characterisation of RimL from Bacillus cereus, a new N alpha-acetyltransferase of ribosomal proteins that was wrongly assigned as an aminoglycosyltransferase. Int.J.Biol.Macromol., 263:130348-130348, 2024 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Enzymes of the GNAT (GCN5-relate N-acetyltransferases) superfamily are important regulators of cell growth and development. They are functionally diverse and share low amino acid sequence identity, making functional annotation difficult. In this study, we report the function and structure of a new ribosomal enzyme, N-acetyl transferase from Bacillus cereus (RimL), a protein that was previously wrongly annotated as an aminoglycosyltransferase. Firstly, extensive comparative amino acid sequence analyses suggested RimL belongs to a cluster of proteins mediating acetylation of the ribosomal protein L7/L12. To assess if this was the case, several well established substrates of aminoglycosyltransferases were screened. The results of these studies did not support an aminoglycoside acetylating function for RimL. To gain further insight into RimL biological role, a series of studies that included MALDI-TOF, isothermal titration calorimetry, NMR, X-ray protein crystallography, and site-directed mutagenesis confirmed RimL affinity for Acetyl-CoA and that the ribosomal protein L7/L12 is a substrate of RimL. Last, we advance a mechanistic model of RimL mode of recognition of its protein substrates. Taken together, our studies confirmed RimL as a new ribosomal N-acetyltransferase and provide structural and functional insights into substrate recognition by N-acetyltransferases and protein acetylation in bacteria. PubMed: 38395274DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.130348 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.516 Å) |
Structure validation
Download full validation report