Abstract
The Cellulosome is an intricate macromolecular protein complex that centralizes the cellulolytic efforts of many anaerobic microorganisms through the promotion of enzyme synergy and protein stability. The assembly of numerous carbohydrate processing enzymes into a macromolecular multiprotein structure results from the interaction of enzyme-borne dockerin modules with repeated cohesin modules present in noncatalytic scaffold proteins, termed scaffoldins. Cohesin–dockerin (Coh-Doc) modules are typically classified into different types, depending on structural conformation and cellulosome role. Thus, type I Coh-Doc complexes are usually responsible for enzyme integration into the cellulosome, while type II Coh-Doc complexes tether the cellulosome to the bacterial wall. In contrast to other known cellulosomes, cohesin types from Bacteroides cellulosolvens, a cellulosome-producing bacterium capable of utilizing cellulose and cellobiose as carbon sources, are reversed for all scaffoldins, i.e., the type II cohesins are located on the enzyme-integrating primary scaffoldin, whereas the type I cohesins are located on the anchoring scaffoldins. It has been previously shown that type I B. cellulosolvens interactions possess a dual-binding mode that adds flexibility to scaffoldin assembly. Herein, we report the structural mechanism of enzyme recruitment into B. cellulosolvens cellulosome and the identification of the molecular determinants of its type II cohesin–dockerin interactions. The results indicate that, unlike other type II complexes, these possess a dual-binding mode of interaction, akin to type I complexes. Therefore, the plasticity of dual-binding mode interactions seems to play a pivotal role in the assembly of B. cellulosolvens cellulosome, which is consistent with its unmatched complexity and size.
Highlights
Recycling of photosynthetically fixed carbon is a crucial microbial process, critical to the cycling of carbon between plants, herbivores, and microbes
Cellulosomes are built around a primary noncatalytic protein scaffold, named scaffoldin, bearing reiterated cohesin (Coh) modules that serve as protein–protein interaction targets to dockerin (Doc) modules found in an extensive repertoire of independent Carbohydrate-Active enZymes (CAZymes)
A critical factor to understand the mechanism of cellulosome assembly of B. cellulosolvens is the availability of an X-ray crystal structure of the type II Cohesin– dockerin (Coh-Doc) interaction, central to CAZyme assembly around the primary BcScaA1 scaffoldin
Summary
A critical factor to understand the mechanism of cellulosome assembly of B. cellulosolvens is the availability of an X-ray crystal structure of the type II Coh-Doc interaction, central to CAZyme assembly around the primary BcScaA1 scaffoldin. When comparing BcCohScaA111-DocCel48’s X-ray structure with a modeled one where the Doc was rotated 180 relative to the cohesin, it was observed that most contacts are maintained and no significant clashes were found (Fig. 3B) suggesting that, to type I dockerins in C. thermocellum and B. cellulosolvens itself [6, 10, 22], this type II dockerin can interact with the cohesin in two distinct orientations To test this hypothesis, the critical methionine and phenylalanine were replaced in only one of the dockerin repeats (BcDocCel mutants M1, M2, F27A, and F60A). Besides supporting the dual-binding mode, this suggests that methionine residues 17 and 50 participate in binding in an
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