I03-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[24948]
Open Access
Abstract: In Leishmania parasites, as for their hosts, the ubiquitin proteasome system is important for cell viability. As part of a systematic gene deletion study, it was discovered that four cysteine protease type deubiquitinases (DUBs) are essential for parasite survival in the promastigote stage, including DUB16. Here we have purified and characterised recombinant DUB16 from Leishmania donovani, which belongs to the ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase (UCH) family. DUB16 efficiently hydrolyses C-terminal aminocoumarin and rhodamine conjugates of ubiquitin consistent with proposed cellular roles of UCH-type DUBs in regenerating free monomeric ubiquitin from small molecule ubiquitin adducts arising from adventitious metabolic processes. The crystal structure of DUB16 reveals a typical UCH-type deubiquitinase fold, and a relatively short and disordered crossover loop that appears to restrict access to the catalytic cysteine. At close to stoichiometric enzyme to substrate ratios, DUB16 exhibits deubiquitinase activity towards diubiquitins linked through isopeptide bonds between Lys11, Lys48 or Lys63 residues of the proximal ubiquitin and the C-terminus of the distal ubiquitin. With 100-1000-fold higher turnover rates, DUB16 cleaves the ubiquitin-ribosomal L40 fusion protein to give the mature products. A DUB-targeting cysteine-reactive cyanopyrrolidine compound, IMP-1710, inhibits DUB16 activity. IMP-1710 was shown in promastigote cell viability assays to have parasite killing activity with EC50 values of 1-2 M, comparable to the anti-leishmanial drug, miltefosine. L. mexicana parasites engineered to overproduce DUB16 showed a modest increase in resistance to IMP-1710, providing evidence that IMP-1710 inhibits DUB16 in vivo. While it is highly likely that IMP-1710 has additional targets, these results suggest that DUB16 is a potential target for the development of new anti-leishmanial compounds.
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Jun 2025
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I03-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Gijs
Ruijgrok
,
Wendy A.
Offen
,
Isabelle B.
Pickles
,
Deepa
Raju
,
Thanasis
Patsos
,
Casper
De Boer
,
Tim
Ofman
,
Joep
Rompa
,
Daan
Van Oord
,
Eleanor J.
Dodson
,
Alexander
Beekers
,
Thijs
Voskuilen
,
Michela
Ferrari
,
Liang
Wu
,
Antonius P. A.
Janssen
,
Jeroen D. C.
Codée
,
P. Lynne
Howell
,
Gideon J.
Davies
,
Herman S.
Overkleeft
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[32736]
Open Access
Abstract: During infection, the human opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa forms protective biofilms, whose matrix consists of proteins, nucleic acids, and polysaccharides such as alginate, Psl, and Pel. Psl, a polymeric pentasaccharide composed of mannose, rhamnose, and glucose, is produced during the early stages of biofilm formation, serving as a protective barrier against antibiotics and the immune system. The Psl biosynthesis gene cluster, besides encoding various glycosyltransferases, also includes an endoglycosidase, PslG. Here, we show, by activity-based protein profiling, structural studies on enzyme–inhibitor complexes, and defined substrate processing, that PslG is not, as previously suggested, an endo-β-mannosidase but instead a retaining endo-β-glucosidase. This insight allows the design of both competitive and covalent PslG inhibitors, as we show for repeating pentasaccharide mimetics featuring either a reducing end deoxynojirimycin or cyclophellitol moiety. This work provides valuable tools to deepen the understanding of Psl biosynthesis, its function in biofilm formation, and its contribution to antibiotic resistance. We demonstrate the enzyme’s actual endo−β–glucosidase activity, a means to monitor PslG activity in P. aeruginosa biofilms, and a blueprint for inhibitor design.
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Feb 2025
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I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[13587]
Open Access
Abstract: YejABEF is an ATP-binding cassette transporter that is implicated in the sensitivity of Escherichia coli to anti-microbial peptides, the best-characterized example being microcin C, a peptide-nucleotide antibiotic that targets aspartyl-tRNA synthetase. Here the structure of the extracellular solute binding protein, YejA, has been determined, revealing an oligopeptide-binding protein fold enclosing a ligand-binding pocket larger than those of other peptide-binding proteins of known structure. Prominent electron density in this cavity defines an undecapeptide sequence LGEPRYAFNFN, an observation that is confirmed by mass spectrometry. In the structure, the peptide interactions with the protein are mediated by main chain hydrogen bonds with the exception of Arg5 whose guanidinium side chain makes a set of defining polar interactions with four YejA residues. More detailed characterization of purified recombinant YejA, by a combination of ESI and MALDI-mass spectrometry as well as thermal shift assays, reveals a set of YejA complexes containing overlapping peptides 10–19 residues in length. All contain the sequence LGEPRYAFN. Curiously, these peptides correspond to residues 8–26 of the mature YejA protein, which belong to a unique N-terminal extension that distinguishes YejA from other cluster C oligopeptide binding proteins of known structure. This 35-residue extension is well-ordered and packs across the surface of the protein. The undecapeptide ligand occupies only a fraction of the enclosed pocket volume suggesting the possibility that much larger peptides or peptide conjugates could be accommodated, though thermal shift assays of YejA binding to antimicrobial peptides and peptides unrelated to LGEPRYAFNFN have not provided evidence of binding. While the physiological significance of this ‘auto-binding’ is not clear, the experimental data suggest that it is not an artefact of the crystallization process and that it may have a function in the sensing of periplasmic or membrane stress.
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Feb 2024
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I03-Macromolecular Crystallography
I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[18598, 24948]
Open Access
Abstract: Siderophore-binding proteins from two thermophilic bacteria, Geobacillus stearothermophilus and Parageobacillus thermoglucosidasius, were identified from a search of sequence databases, cloned and overexpressed. They are homologues of the well characterized protein CjCeuE from Campylobacter jejuni. The iron-binding histidine and tyrosine residues are conserved in both thermophiles. Crystal structures were determined of the apo proteins and of their complexes with iron(III)-azotochelin and its analogue iron(III)-5-LICAM. The thermostability of both homologues was shown to be about 20°C higher than that of CjCeuE. Similarly, the tolerance of the homologues to the organic solvent dimethylformamide (DMF) was enhanced, as reflected by the respective binding constants for these ligands measured in aqueous buffer at pH 7.5 in the absence and presence of 10% and 20% DMF. Consequently, these thermophilic homologues offer advantages in the development of artificial metalloenzymes using the CeuE family.
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Aug 2023
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Jon
Agirre
,
Mihaela
Atanasova
,
Haroldas
Bagdonas
,
Charles B.
Ballard
,
Arnaud
Basle
,
James
Beilsten-Edmands
,
Rafael J.
Borges
,
David G.
Brown
,
J. Javier
Burgos-Marmol
,
John M.
Berrisford
,
Paul S.
Bond
,
Iracema
Caballero
,
Lucrezia
Catapano
,
Grzegorz
Chojnowski
,
Atlanta G.
Cook
,
Kevin D.
Cowtan
,
Tristan I.
Croll
,
Judit É.
Debreczeni
,
Nicholas E.
Devenish
,
Eleanor J.
Dodson
,
Tarik R.
Drevon
,
Paul
Emsley
,
Gwyndaf
Evans
,
Phil R.
Evans
,
Maria
Fando
,
James
Foadi
,
Luis
Fuentes-Montero
,
Elspeth F.
Garman
,
Markus
Gerstel
,
Richard J.
Gildea
,
Kaushik
Hatti
,
Maarten L.
Hekkelman
,
Philipp
Heuser
,
Soon Wen
Hoh
,
Michael A.
Hough
,
Huw T.
Jenkins
,
Elisabet
Jiménez
,
Robbie P.
Joosten
,
Ronan M.
Keegan
,
Nicholas
Keep
,
Eugene B.
Krissinel
,
Petr
Kolenko
,
Oleg
Kovalevskiy
,
Victor S.
Lamzin
,
David M.
Lawson
,
Andrey
Lebedev
,
Andrew G. W.
Leslie
,
Bernhard
Lohkamp
,
Fei
Long
,
Martin
Maly
,
Airlie
Mccoy
,
Stuart J.
Mcnicholas
,
Ana
Medina
,
Claudia
Millán
,
James W.
Murray
,
Garib N.
Murshudov
,
Robert A.
Nicholls
,
Martin E. M.
Noble
,
Robert
Oeffner
,
Navraj S.
Pannu
,
James M.
Parkhurst
,
Nicholas
Pearce
,
Joana
Pereira
,
Anastassis
Perrakis
,
Harold R.
Powell
,
Randy J.
Read
,
Daniel J.
Rigden
,
William
Rochira
,
Massimo
Sammito
,
Filomeno
Sanchez Rodriguez
,
George M.
Sheldrick
,
Kathryn L.
Shelley
,
Felix
Simkovic
,
Adam J.
Simpkin
,
Pavol
Skubak
,
Egor
Sobolev
,
Roberto A.
Steiner
,
Kyle
Stevenson
,
Ivo
Tews
,
Jens M. H.
Thomas
,
Andrea
Thorn
,
Josep Triviño
Valls
,
Ville
Uski
,
Isabel
Uson
,
Alexei
Vagin
,
Sameer
Velankar
,
Melanie
Vollmar
,
Helen
Walden
,
David
Waterman
,
Keith S.
Wilson
,
Martyn
Winn
,
Graeme
Winter
,
Marcin
Wojdyr
,
Keitaro
Yamashita
Open Access
Abstract: The Collaborative Computational Project No. 4 (CCP4) is a UK-led international collective with a mission to develop, test, distribute and promote software for macromolecular crystallography. The CCP4 suite is a multiplatform collection of programs brought together by familiar execution routines, a set of common libraries and graphical interfaces. The CCP4 suite has experienced several considerable changes since its last reference article, involving new infrastructure, original programs and graphical interfaces. This article, which is intended as a general literature citation for the use of the CCP4 software suite in structure determination, will guide the reader through such transformations, offering a general overview of the new features and outlining future developments. As such, it aims to highlight the individual programs that comprise the suite and to provide the latest references to them for perusal by crystallographers around the world.
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Jun 2023
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I02-Macromolecular Crystallography
I03-Macromolecular Crystallography
I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[9948, 13587]
Open Access
Abstract: Peptide transporters play important nutritional and cell signalling roles in Bacillus subtilis, which are pronounced during stationary phase adaptations and development. Three high-affinity ATP-binding cassette (ABC) family transporters are involved in peptide uptake – the oligopeptide permease (Opp), another peptide permease (App) and a less well-characterized dipeptide permease (Dpp). Here we report crystal structures of the extracellular substrate binding proteins, OppA and DppE, which serve the Opp and Dpp systems, respectively. The structure of OppA was determined in complex with endogenous peptides, modelled as Ser-Asn-Ser-Ser, and with the sporulation-promoting peptide Ser-Arg-Asn-Val-Thr, which bind with Kd values of 0.4 and 2 µM, respectively, as measured by isothermal titration calorimetry. Differential scanning fluorescence experiments with a wider panel of ligands showed that OppA has highest affinity for tetra- and penta-peptides. The structure of DppE revealed the unexpected presence of a murein tripeptide (MTP) ligand, l-Ala-d-Glu-meso-DAP, in the peptide binding groove. The mode of MTP binding in DppE is different to that observed in the murein peptide binding protein, MppA, from Escherichia coli, suggesting independent evolution of these proteins from an OppA-like precursor. The presence of MTP in DppE points to a role for Dpp in the uptake and recycling of cell wall peptides, a conclusion that is supported by analysis of the genomic context of dpp, which revealed adjacent genes encoding enzymes involved in muropeptide catabolism in a gene organization that is widely conserved in Firmicutes.
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Dec 2022
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I03-Macromolecular Crystallography
I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[18598, 13587]
Open Access
Abstract: Body odour is a characteristic trait of Homo sapiens, however its role in human behaviour and evolution is poorly understood. Remarkably, body odour is linked to the presence of a few species of commensal microbes. Herein we discover a bacterial enzyme, limited to odour-forming staphylococci that are able to cleave odourless precursors of thioalcohols, the most pungent components of body odour. We demonstrated using phylogenetics, biochemistry and structural biology that this cysteine-thiol lyase (C-T lyase) is a PLP-dependent enzyme that moved horizontally into a unique monophyletic group of odour-forming staphylococci about 60 million years ago, and has subsequently tailored its enzymatic function to human-derived thioalcohol precursors. Significantly, transfer of this enzyme alone to non-odour producing staphylococci confers odour production, demonstrating that this C-T lyase is both necessary and sufficient for thioalcohol formation. The structure of the C-T lyase compared to that of other related enzymes reveals how the adaptation to thioalcohol precursors has evolved through changes in the binding site to create a constrained hydrophobic pocket that is selective for branched aliphatic thioalcohol ligands. The ancestral acquisition of this enzyme, and the subsequent evolution of the specificity for thioalcohol precursors implies that body odour production in humans is an ancient process.
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Jul 2020
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I02-Macromolecular Crystallography
I03-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[9948]
Open Access
Abstract: CotE is a coat protein that is present in the spores of Clostridium difficile, an obligate anaerobic bacterium and a pathogen that is a leading cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea in hospital patients. Spores serve as the agents of disease transmission, and CotE has been implicated in their attachment to the gut epithelium and subsequent colonization of the host. CotE consists of an N-terminal peroxiredoxin domain and a C-terminal chitinase domain. Here, a C-terminal fragment of CotE comprising residues 349–712 has been crystallized and its structure has been determined to reveal a core eight-stranded β-barrel fold with a neighbouring subdomain containing a five-stranded β-sheet. A prominent groove running across the top of the barrel is lined by residues that are conserved in family 18 glycosyl hydrolases and which participate in catalysis. Electron density identified in the groove defines the pentapeptide Gly-Pro-Ala-Met-Lys derived from the N-terminus of the protein following proteolytic cleavage to remove an affinity-purification tag. These observations suggest the possibility of designing peptidomimetics to block C. difficile transmission.
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Jun 2020
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I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[13587]
Abstract: Peptides play an important signalling role in Bacillus subtilis, where their uptake by one of two ABC-type oligopeptide transporters, Opp and App, is required for efficient sporulation. Homologues of these transporters in Clostridium difficile have been characterized, but their role, and hence that of peptides, in regulating sporulation in this organism is less clear. Here, the oligopeptide-binding receptor proteins for these transporters, CdAppA and CdOppA, have been purified and partially characterized, and the crystal structure of CdAppA has been determined in an open unliganded form. Peptide binding to either protein could not be observed in Thermofluor assays with a set of ten peptides of varying lengths and compositions. Re-examination of the protein sequences together with structure comparisons prompts the proposal that CdAppA is not a versatile peptide-binding protein but instead may bind a restricted set of peptides. Meanwhile, CdOppA is likely to be the receptor protein for a nickel-uptake system.
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Apr 2019
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I03-Macromolecular Crystallography
I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[13587]
Abstract: Artificial metalloenzymes that contain protein-anchored synthetic catalysts are attracting increasing interest. An exciting, but still unrealized advantage of non-covalent anchoring is its potential for reversibility and thus component recycling. Here we present a siderophore–protein combination that enables strong but redox-reversible catalyst anchoring, as exemplified by an artificial transfer hydrogenase (ATHase). By linking the iron(iii)-binding siderophore azotochelin to an iridium-containing imine-reduction catalyst that produces racemic product in the absence of the protein CeuE, but a reproducible enantiomeric excess if protein bound, the assembly and reductively triggered disassembly of the ATHase was achieved. The crystal structure of the ATHase identified the residues involved in high-affinity binding and enantioselectivity. While in the presence of iron(iii), the azotochelin-based anchor binds CeuE with high affinity, and the reduction of the coordinated iron(iii) to iron(ii) triggers its dissociation from the protein. Thus, the assembly of the artificial enzyme can be controlled via the iron oxidation state.
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Aug 2018
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