Study: Odd biochemistry yields lethal bacterial protein
Graphic by Weixin Tang |
While working out the structure of a cell-killing protein
produced by some strains of the bacterium Enterococcus faecalis,
researchers stumbled on a bit of unusual biochemistry. They found that a single
enzyme helps form distinctly different, three-dimensional ring structures in
the protein, one of which had never been observed before. The new findings,
reported in Nature Chemical Biology,
should help scientists find new ways to target the enterococcal cytolysin
protein, a "virulence factor that is associated with acute infection in
humans," said University of Illinois chemistry and Institute for Genomic
Biology professor Wilfred van der Donk, who conducted the study with graduate
student Weixin Tang.
Enterococcus
faecalis (EN-ter-oh-cock-us
faye-KAY-liss) is a normal microbial inhabitant of the gastrointestinal tracts
of humans and other mammals and generally does not harm its host. Some virulent
strains, however, produce cytolysin (sigh-toe-LIE-sin), a protein that, once
assembled, attacks other microbes and kills mammalian cells.
"The cytolysin protein made by Enterococcus faecalis consists of two compounds that have no
activity by themselves but when combined kill human cells," van der Donk
said. "We know from epidemiological studies that if you are infected with
a strain of E. faecalis that has the genes to make cytolysin, you have
a significantly higher chance of dying from your infection." E. faecalis contributes
to root canal infections, urinary tract infections, endocarditis, meningitis,
bacteremia and other infections.
Enterococcal
cytolysin belongs to a class of antibiotic proteins, called lantibiotics, which
have two or more sulfur-containing ring structures. Scientists had been unable
to determine the three-dimensional structure of this cytolysin because the
bacterium produces it at very low concentrations. Another problem that has
stymied researchers is that the two protein components of cytolysin tend to
clump together when put in a lab dish.
Van der Donk and Tang got around these problems by producing the
two cytolysin components separately in another bacterium, Escherichia coli(esh-uh-REE-kee-uh KOH-lie),
and analyzing them separately.
"The
two components are both cyclic peptides, one with three rings and the other
with two rings," van der Donk said. "Curiously, a single enzyme makes
both compounds."
L. Brian Stauffer |
In a
series of experiments, the researchers found that one ring on each of the
proteins adopted a (D-L) stereochemistry that is common in lantibiotics (see
image, above). But the other rings all had an unusual (L-L) configuration,
something van der Donk had never seen before.
Scientists
had assumed that the enzyme that shaped enterococcal cytolysin, a lantibiotic
synthetase, acted like a three-dimensional mold that gave the ring structures
of cytolysin the exact same stereochemistry, van der Donk said.
"But
we found that the enzyme, enterococcal cytolysin synthetase, makes the rings
with different stereochemistry," he said. "I don't know of any other
examples where one enzyme can make very similar products but with different
stereochemistries."
The
researchers don't know how the enzyme accomplishes this feat, but found a clue
in the sequence of amino acids that make up the protein rings. The chemical
characteristics of the three amino acids in the middle of the ring structure
and their proximity to another amino acid, a cysteine, determined whether the
rings took on a D-L or L-L stereochemistry.
The
researchers tested the idea that the amino acid sequence of the cytolysin
protein was guiding the stereochemistry by looking at other lantibiotic
proteins with similar sequences. So far, every protein they've tested that has
the same sequence characteristics conforms to the pattern they discovered, van
der Donk said.
Further tests showed that the cytolysin produced in E. coli had the
same anti-microbial and cell-killing potency as the E. faecalis variety.
"Knowing
the structure of enterococcal cytolysin and having a method to produce it in
relatively large quantities will allow scientists to find out how it kills
human cells and, in turn, how we might fight against it," van der Donk said.
The
National Institutes of Health supported this research. Van der Donk also is a
Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.
Source: University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
DON’T
FORGET TO-
Leave Your Comments!