Abstract

The rumen bacterium Ruminococcus flavefaciens produces a highly organized multienzyme cellulosome complex that plays a key role in the degradation of plant cell wall polysaccharides, notably cellulose. The R. flavefaciens cellulosomal system is anchored to the bacterial cell wall through a relatively small ScaE scaffoldin subunit, which bears a single type IIIe cohesin responsible for the attachment of two major dockerin-containing scaffoldin proteins, ScaB and the cellulose-binding protein CttA. Although ScaB recruits the catalytic machinery onto the complex, CttA mediates attachment of the bacterial substrate via its two putative carbohydrate-binding modules. In an effort to understand the structural basis for assembly and cell surface attachment of the cellulosome in R. flavefaciens, we determined the crystal structure of the high affinity complex (Kd = 20.83 nM) between the cohesin module of ScaE (CohE) and its cognate X-dockerin (XDoc) modular dyad from CttA at 1.97-Å resolution. The structure reveals an atypical calcium-binding loop containing a 13-residue insert. The results further pinpoint two charged specificity-related residues on the surface of the cohesin module that are responsible for specific versus promiscuous cross-strain binding of the dockerin module. In addition, a combined functional role for the three enigmatic dockerin inserts was established whereby these extraneous segments serve as structural buttresses that reinforce the stalklike conformation of the X-module, thus segregating its tethered complement of cellulosomal components from the cell surface. The novel structure of the RfCohE-XDoc complex sheds light on divergent dockerin structure and function and provides insight into the specificity features of the type IIIe cohesin-dockerin interaction.

Highlights

  • The type IIIe cohesin module of ScaE (CohE)-XDoc interaction connects cellulosomal components to the cell wall

  • Biophysical Characterization of the RfCohE-XDoc Interaction—Thermodynamic analysis of the RfCohE-XDoc complex revealed a stoichiometric interaction between the two components with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 20.83 nM, which is comparable with that reported for the type I Coh-Doc interaction [2] but weaker than that reported for the type II interaction [3]

  • The high Tm value associated with RfCohE-XDoc complex formation is somewhat surprising in view of the mesophilic properties of the bacterium

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Summary

Background

The type IIIe CohE-XDoc interaction connects cellulosomal components to the cell wall. The R. flavefaciens cellulosomal system is anchored to the bacterial cell wall through a relatively small ScaE scaffoldin subunit, which bears a single type IIIe cohesin responsible for the attachment of two major dockerin-containing scaffoldin proteins, ScaB and the cellulose-binding protein CttA. In an effort to understand the structural basis for assembly and cell surface attachment of the cellulosome in R. flavefaciens, we determined the crystal structure of the high affinity complex (Kd ‫ ؍‬20.83 nM) between the cohesin module of ScaE (CohE) and its cognate X-dockerin (XDoc) modular dyad from CttA at 1.97-Aresolution. The specific high affinity cohesin-dockerin (Coh-Doc) interaction is a fundamental component of cellulosome assembly This interaction dictates the interconnection between the different cellulosomal subunits to form a functional and efficient exocellular multienzyme cellulose-degrading complex. Extensive genetic and genome sequencing investigations have promoted the study of cellulase systems of rumen bacteria, in particular Ruminococcus flavefa-

The abbreviations used are
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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