Novel Clostridium thermocellum Type I Cohesin-Dockerin Complexes Reveal a Single Binding Mode

Protein-protein interactions play a pivotal role in a large number of biological processes exemplified by the assembly of the cellulosome. Integration of cellulosomal components occurs through the binding of type I cohesin modules located in a non-catalytic molecular scaffold to type I dockerin modu...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2012-12, Vol.287 (53), p.44394-44405
Hauptverfasser: Brás, Joana L.A., Alves, Victor D., Carvalho, Ana Luísa, Najmudin, Shabir, Prates, José A.M., Ferreira, Luís M.A., Bolam, David N., Romão, Maria João, Gilbert, Harry J., Fontes, Carlos M.G.A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Protein-protein interactions play a pivotal role in a large number of biological processes exemplified by the assembly of the cellulosome. Integration of cellulosomal components occurs through the binding of type I cohesin modules located in a non-catalytic molecular scaffold to type I dockerin modules located at the C terminus of cellulosomal enzymes. The majority of type I dockerins display internal symmetry reflected by the presence of two essentially identical cohesin-binding surfaces. Here we report the crystal structures of two novel Clostridium thermocellum type I cohesin-dockerin complexes (CohOlpC-Doc124A and CohOlpA-Doc918). The data revealed that the two dockerins, Doc918 and Doc124A, are unusual because they lack the structural symmetry required to support a dual binding mode. Thus, in both cases, cohesin recognition is dominated by residues located at positions 11, 12, and 19 of one of the dockerin binding surfaces. The alternative binding mode is not possible (Doc918) or highly limited (Doc124A) because residues that assume the critical interacting positions, when dockerins are reoriented by 180°, make steric clashes with the cohesin. In common with a third dockerin (Doc258) that also presents a single binding mode, Doc124A directs the appended cellulase, Cel124A, to the surface of C. thermocellum and not to cellulosomes because it binds preferentially to type I cohesins located at the cell envelope. Although there are a few exceptions, such as Doc918 described here, these data suggest that there is considerable selective pressure for the evolution of a dual binding mode in type I dockerins that direct enzymes into cellulosomes. In general, dockerins present two homologous cohesin-binding interfaces, which confer increased flexibility into cellulosomes. The structure of two novel Coh-Doc complexes reveals a dockerin single-binding mode. Single-binding mode dockerins bind, preferentially, to cell surface cohesins. The dual binding mode is a property of cellulosomal dockerins.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M112.407700