Crystal structures of the apo and ATP bound Mycobacterium tuberculosis nitrogen regulatory PII protein. | Academic Article individual record
abstract

PII constitutes a family of signal transduction proteins that act as nitrogen sensors in microorganisms and plants. Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) has a single homologue of PII whose precise role has as yet not been explored. We have solved the crystal structures of the Mtb PII protein in its apo and ATP bound forms to 1.4 and 2.4 A resolutions, respectively. The protein forms a trimeric assembly in the crystal lattice and folds similarly to the other PII family proteins. The Mtb PII:ATP binary complex structure reveals three ATP molecules per trimer, each bound between the base of the T-loop of one subunit and the C-loop of the neighboring subunit. In contrast to the apo structure, at least one subunit of the binary complex structure contains a completely ordered T-loop indicating that ATP binding plays a role in orienting this loop region towards target proteins like the ammonium transporter, AmtB. Arg38 of the T-loop makes direct contact with the gamma-phosphate of the ATP molecule replacing the Mg(2+) position seen in the Methanococcus jannaschii GlnK1 structure. The C-loop of a neighboring subunit encloses the other side of the ATP molecule, placing the GlnK specific C-terminal 3(10) helix in the vicinity. Homology modeling studies with the E. coli GlnK:AmtB complex reveal that Mtb PII could form a complex similar to the complex in E. coli. The structural conservation and operon organization suggests that the Mtb PII gene encodes for a GlnK protein and might play a key role in the nitrogen regulatory pathway.

publication outlet

Protein Sci

author list (cited authors)
Shetty, N. D., Reddy, M., Palaninathan, S. K., Owen, J. L., & Sacchettini, J. C.
publication date
2010
publisher
Wiley Publisher
keywords
  • Signal Transduction
  • Protein Conformation
  • Protein Multimerization
  • Mycobacterium Tuberculosis
  • Adenosine Triphosphate
  • Pii Nitrogen Regulatory Proteins
  • Binding Sites
  • Crystallography, X-Ray
  • Nitrogen
  • Molecular Sequence Data
citation count

10

PubMed ID
20521335
identifier
74717SE
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
start page
1513
end page
1524
volume
19
issue
8