Brownian ratchet mechanisms for carboxysome positioning in bacteria.
Brownian ratchet mechanisms for carboxysome positioning in bacteria.
- Research Article
2
- 10.1016/j.biotechadv.2024.108511
- Mar 1, 2025
- Biotechnology advances
Carboxysomes: The next frontier in biotechnology and sustainable solutions.
- Research Article
53
- 10.1021/jacs.2c08723
- Oct 26, 2022
- Journal of the American Chemical Society
Chemically fueled autonomous molecular machines are catalysis-driven systems governed by Brownian information ratchet mechanisms. One fundamental principle behind their operation is kinetic asymmetry, which quantifies the directionality of molecular motors. However, it is difficult for synthetic chemists to apply this concept to molecular design because kinetic asymmetry is usually introduced in abstract mathematical terms involving experimentally inaccessible parameters. Furthermore, two seemingly contradictory mechanisms have been proposed for chemically driven autonomous molecular machines: Brownian ratchet and power stroke mechanisms. This Perspective addresses both these issues, providing accessible and experimentally useful design principles for catalysis-driven molecular machinery. We relate kinetic asymmetry to the Curtin-Hammett principle using a synthetic rotary motor and a kinesin walker as illustrative examples. Our approach describes these molecular motors in terms of the Brownian ratchet mechanism but pinpoints both chemical gating and power strokes as tunable design elements that can affect kinetic asymmetry. We explain why this approach to kinetic asymmetry is consistent with previous ones and outline conditions where power strokes can be useful design elements. Finally, we discuss the role of information, a concept used with different meanings in the literature. We hope that this Perspective will be accessible to a broad range of chemists, clarifying the parameters that can be usefully controlled in the design and synthesis of molecular machines and related systems. It may also aid a more comprehensive and interdisciplinary understanding of biomolecular machinery.
- Research Article
38
- 10.1016/j.jmb.2020.11.020
- Nov 21, 2020
- Journal of Molecular Biology
Self-assembling Shell Proteins PduA and PduJ have Essential and Redundant Roles in Bacterial Microcompartment Assembly
- Peer Review Report
- 10.7554/elife.14078.028
- Feb 2, 2016
Decision letter: Many-molecule encapsulation by an icosahedral shell
- Research Article
- 10.1007/978-1-4939-2131-7_7
- Oct 19, 2014
- Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)
Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are protein-based organelles that allow specific metabolic steps to be sequestered from the cytoplasmic environment. Compartmentalization of enzymes and pathway intermediates can increase flux through a metabolic pathway and protect the cell from toxic intermediates. BMCs thus offer the potential to increase the efficiency of engineered metabolic pathways. Moreover, as protein cages, BMCs may enable various other applications in biotechnology. These future applications of BMCs will require the ability to rapidly and efficiently produce BMCs for physical characterization and protein engineering. This chapter presents an analysis of approaches to expression and purification of BMCs and outlines a generalized strategy based on these approaches that can be used as a starting point for production of new BMCs.
- Research Article
- 10.1063/4.0000454
- Mar 1, 2025
- Structural Dynamics
Despite living in an oxygen-filled world, anaerobic bacteria are abundant; there are many oxygen-scarce sites in the human microbiome, including the gut, mouth, and even skin pores. Under low-oxygen conditions, anaerobic bacteria rely on oxygen- sensitive enzymes to carry out metabolic processes critical for survival, yet many sites in the human microbiome are vulnerable to oxygen or oxidative stress. Our nascent lab explores molecular tactics that human gut anaerobes rely on to protect such pathways in carrying oxidative states, potentially providing a competitive advantage for these microbes. One potential strategy is physically encapsulating oxygen-sensitive enzymes within icosahedral, self-assembling, protein-based organelles, or bacterial microcompartments (BMCs), potentially shielding them from molecular oxygen and reactive oxidants. They form a semipermeable protein shell that encapsulate associated catabolic enzymes and their intermediates to make an ideal catalytic environment. BMCs are associated with a range of oxygen-sensitive enzymes, including glycyl radical enzymes (GREs), [4Fe-4S] cluster enzymes, and B12-dependent enzymes. The human gut is a highly anaerobic environment enriched in ethanolamine, a nutrient and substrate of ethanolamine ammonia-lyase (EAL), a B12-dependent enzyme. EAL and other ethanolamine utilization (EUT) enzymes are encapsulated within BMCs in many gut anaerobes, and these BMCs are linked to pathogenesis in bacteria, such as Salmonella enterica. Here we use a combination of X-ray crystallography, electron microscopy, and genetics techniques to structurally and biochemically characterize EUT BMCs, under aerobic, anaerobic, and micro-anaerobic conditions. Along with studying how overall BMC architecture is impacted under different growth conditions, we are working towards solving the crystal structures of BMC-associated EALs, including their structurally elusive auto-encapsulation domains. Altogether these experiments will add to our basic biological understanding of these abundant bacterial organelles, potentially leading to new therapeutic targets.
- Research Article
4
- 10.1091/mbc.e23-11-0443
- Jul 11, 2024
- Molecular Biology of the Cell
Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are widespread, protein-based organelles that regulate metabolism. The model for studying BMCs is the carboxysome, which facilitates carbon fixation in several autotrophic bacteria. Carboxysomes can be distinguished as type α or β, which are structurally and phyletically distinct. We recently characterized the maintenance of carboxysome distribution (Mcd) systems responsible for spatially regulating α- and β-carboxysomes, consisting of the proteins McdA and McdB. McdA is an ATPase that drives carboxysome positioning, and McdB is the adaptor protein that directly interacts with carboxysomes to provide cargo specificity. The molecular features of McdB proteins that specify their interactions with carboxysomes, and whether these are similar between α- and β-carboxysomes, remain unknown. Here, we identify C-terminal motifs containing an invariant tryptophan necessary for α- and β-McdBs to associate with α- and β-carboxysomes, respectively. Substituting this tryptophan with other aromatic residues reveals corresponding gradients in the efficiency of carboxysome colocalization and positioning by McdB in vivo. Intriguingly, these gradients also correlate with the ability of McdB to form condensates in vitro. The results reveal a shared mechanism underlying McdB adaptor protein binding to carboxysomes, and potentially other BMCs. Our findings also implicate condensate formation as playing a key role in this association.
- Research Article
31
- 10.1371/journal.pone.0226395
- Mar 9, 2020
- PLoS ONE
Bacterial microcompartments (MCPs) are protein-based organelles that encapsulate metabolic pathways. Metabolic engineers have recently sought to repurpose MCPs to encapsulate heterologous pathways to increase flux through pathways of interest. As MCP engineering becomes more common, standardized methods for analyzing changes to MCPs and interpreting results across studies will become increasingly important. In this study, we demonstrate that different imaging techniques yield variations in the apparent size of purified MCPs from Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2, likely due to variations in sample preparation methods. We provide guidelines for preparing samples for MCP imaging and outline expected variations in apparent size and morphology between methods. With this report we aim to establish an aid for comparing results across studies.
- Research Article
17
- 10.1099/mic.0.000872
- Dec 1, 2019
- Microbiology
Bacterial microcompartments (MCPs) are protein-based organelles that consist of metabolic enzymes encapsulated within a protein shell. The function of MCPs is to optimize metabolic pathways by increasing reaction rates and sequestering toxic pathway intermediates. A substantial amount of effort has been directed toward engineering synthetic MCPs as intracellular nanoreactors for the improved production of renewable chemicals. A key challenge in this area is engineering protein shells that allow the entry of desired substrates. In this study, we used site-directed mutagenesis of the PduT shell protein to remove its central iron-sulfur cluster and create openings (pores) in the shell of the Pdu MCP that have varied chemical properties. Subsequently, in vivo and in vitro studies were used to show that PduT-C38S and PduT-C38A variants increased the diffusion of 1,2-propanediol, propionaldehyde, NAD+ and NADH across the shell of the MCP. In contrast, PduT-C38I and PduT-C38W eliminated the iron-sulfur cluster without altering the permeability of the Pdu MCP, suggesting that the side-chains of C38I and C38W occluded the opening formed by removal of the iron-sulfur cluster. Thus, genetic modification offers an approach to engineering the movement of larger molecules (such as NAD/H) across MCP shells, as well as a method for blocking transport through trimeric bacterial microcompartment (BMC) domain shell proteins.
- Research Article
104
- 10.7554/elife.15598
- May 16, 2016
- eLife
The essential process of protein secretion is achieved by the ubiquitous Sec machinery. In prokaryotes, the drive for translocation comes from ATP hydrolysis by the cytosolic motor-protein SecA, in concert with the proton motive force (PMF). However, the mechanism through which ATP hydrolysis by SecA is coupled to directional movement through SecYEG is unclear. Here, we combine all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with single molecule FRET and biochemical assays. We show that ATP binding by SecA causes opening of the SecY-channel at long range, while substrates at the SecY-channel entrance feed back to regulate nucleotide exchange by SecA. This two-way communication suggests a new, unifying 'Brownian ratchet' mechanism, whereby ATP binding and hydrolysis bias the direction of polypeptide diffusion. The model represents a solution to the problem of transporting inherently variable substrates such as polypeptides, and may underlie mechanisms of other motors that translocate proteins and nucleic acids.
- Research Article
20
- 10.7554/elife.15598.031
- May 13, 2016
- eLife
The essential process of protein secretion is achieved by the ubiquitous Sec machinery. In prokaryotes, the drive for translocation comes from ATP hydrolysis by the cytosolic motor-protein SecA, in concert with the proton motive force (PMF). However, the mechanism through which ATP hydrolysis by SecA is coupled to directional movement through SecYEG is unclear. Here, we combine all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with single molecule FRET and biochemical assays. We show that ATP binding by SecA causes opening of the SecY-channel at long range, while substrates at the SecY-channel entrance feed back to regulate nucleotide exchange by SecA. This two-way communication suggests a new, unifying 'Brownian ratchet' mechanism, whereby ATP binding and hydrolysis bias the direction of polypeptide diffusion. The model represents a solution to the problem of transporting inherently variable substrates such as polypeptides, and may underlie mechanisms of other motors that translocate proteins and nucleic acids.DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.15598.001
- Research Article
48
- 10.1002/biot.201300391
- Jan 14, 2014
- Biotechnology Journal
Bacterial microcompartments (MCPs) are protein-based organelles that have been suggested as scaffolds for creating in vivo nanobioreactors. One of the key steps towards engineering MCPs is to understand and maximize the encapsulation of enzymes into the lumen of the MCP. However, there are currently no high-throughput methods for investigating protein encapsulation. Here, we describe the development of a rapid in vivo assay for quantifying the relative amount of protein encapsulated within MCPs based on fluorescence. In this assay, we fuse a degradation peptide to a MCP-targeted fluorescence reporter and use flow cytometry to measure overall fluorescence from the encapsulated, protected reporter protein. Using this assay, we characterized various MCP-targeting signal sequence mutants for their ability to encapsulate proteins and identified mutants that encapsulate a greater amount of protein than the wild type signal sequence. This assay is a powerful tool for reporting protein encapsulation and is an important step towards encapsulating metabolic enzymes into MCPs for synthetic biochemical pathways.
- Research Article
16
- 10.1186/s13062-022-00323-z
- Apr 28, 2022
- Biology Direct
Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are protein-based organelles found across the bacterial tree of life. They consist of a shell, made of proteins that oligomerize into hexagonally and pentagonally shaped building blocks, that surrounds enzymes constituting a segment of a metabolic pathway. The proteins of the shell are unique to BMCs. They also provide selective permeability; this selectivity is dictated by the requirements of their cargo enzymes. We have recently surveyed the wealth of different BMC types and their occurrence in all available genome sequence data by analyzing and categorizing their components found in chromosomal loci using HMM (Hidden Markov Model) protein profiles. To make this a “do-it yourself” analysis for the public we have devised a webserver, BMC Caller (https://bmc-caller.prl.msu.edu), that compares user input sequences to our HMM profiles, creates a BMC locus visualization, and defines the functional type of BMC, if known. Shell proteins in the input sequence data are also classified according to our function-agnostic naming system and there are links to similar proteins in our database as well as an external link to a structure prediction website to easily generate structural models of the shell proteins, which facilitates understanding permeability properties of the shell. Additionally, the BMC Caller website contains a wealth of information on previously analyzed BMC loci with links to detailed data for each BMC protein and phylogenetic information on the BMC shell proteins. Our tools greatly facilitate BMC type identification to provide the user information about the associated organism’s metabolism and enable discovery of new BMC types by providing a reference database of all currently known examples.
- Research Article
9
- 10.1016/j.cofs.2021.11.011
- Dec 2, 2021
- Current Opinion in Food Science
Bacterial microcompartments in food-related microbes
- Research Article
11
- 10.1002/pro.3941
- Sep 14, 2020
- Protein Science
Bacterial microcompartments are protein-based organelles that carry out specialized metabolic functions in diverse bacteria. Their outer shells are built from several thousand protein subunits. Some of the architectural principles of bacterial microcompartments have been articulated, with lateral packing of flat hexameric BMC proteins providing the basic foundation for assembly. Nonetheless, a complete understanding has been elusive, partly owing to polymorphic mechanisms of assembly exhibited by most microcompartment types. An earlier study of one homologous BMC shell protein subfamily, EutS/PduU, revealed a profoundly bent, rather than flat, hexameric structure. The possibility of a specialized architectural role was hypothesized, but artifactual effects of crystallization could not be ruled out. Here we report a series of crystal structures of an orthologous protein, CutR, from a glycyl-radical type choline-utilizing microcompartment from the bacterium Streptococcus intermedius. Depending on crystal form, expression construct, and minor mutations, a range of novel quaternary architectures was observed, including two spiral hexagonal assemblies. A new graphical approach helps illuminate the variations in BMC hexameric structure, with results substantiating the idea that the EutS/PduU/CutR subfamily of BMC proteins may endow microcompartment shells with flexible modes of assembly.
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