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9HMZ

Structure of Corynebacterium glutamicum SteA, a cell division regulator

Summary for 9HMZ
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb9hmz/pdb
Related9HLE
DescriptorSteA-like C-terminal domain-containing protein (2 entities in total)
Functional Keywordscell division regulator, cell cycle
Biological sourceCorynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13032
Total number of polymer chains8
Total formula weight280540.78
Authors
Gaday, Q.,Carloni, G.,Wehenkel, A.M.,Alzari, P.M. (deposition date: 2024-12-09, release date: 2025-07-30)
Primary citationCarloni, G.,Gaday, Q.,Petit, J.,Martinez, M.,Megrian, D.,Sogues, A.,Ben Assaya, M.,Kakonyi, M.,Haouz, A.,Alzari, P.M.,Wehenkel, A.M.
Mechanistic insights into the allosteric regulation of cell wall hydrolase RipA in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Biorxiv, 2025
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: D,L-endopeptidase RipA is the major PG hydrolase required for daughter cell separation in ( ), as RipA defects severely hinder cell division and increase antibiotic vulnerability. Despite extensive studies, the mechanisms governing RipA regulation remain controversial and poorly understood. Here, we report an integrative structural and functional analysis of the SteAB system, a regulatory complex that has been shown to modulate cell separation in the model organism ( ) and is conserved across . Although SteB was previously proposed to act as a mycobacterial outer membrane copper transporter, the crystal structures of the homodimeric protein, alone and in complex with the RipA coiled-coil (CC) domain, rule out this hypothesis. Instead, the high-affinity SteB-RipA interaction, together with computational and biophysical data, strongly supports the role of SteB as a direct RipA activator that releases enzyme autoinhibition upon complex formation. In addition, crystallographic characterization of the cytoplasmic core of SteA revealed a homodimeric organization harboring a conserved functional pocket similar to the phosphonucleotide-binding site of thiamine pyrophosphokinase. These data, coupled with the phenotypic analysis of a knockout mutant of , support a model in which the transmembrane SteAB heterotetramer, driven by cytoplasmic ligand binding, orchestrates the productive periplasmic positioning of RipA, leading to PG hydrolysis activation. These findings shed new light on the regulation of mycobacterial cell wall remodeling, with implications for understanding pathogenesis and identifying novel antimicrobial targets.
PubMed: 40667032
DOI: 10.1101/2025.06.28.662095
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.05 Å)
Structure validation

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