Abstract

Protein-protein interactions play a pivotal role in the assembly of the cellulosome, one of nature's most intricate nanomachines dedicated to the depolymerization of complex carbohydrates. The integration of cellulosomal components usually occurs through the binding of type I dockerin modules located at the C terminus of the enzymes to cohesin modules located in the primary scaffoldin subunit. Cellulosomes are typically recruited to the cell surface via type II cohesin-dockerin interactions established between primary and cell-surface anchoring scaffoldin subunits. In contrast with type II interactions, type I dockerins usually display a dual binding mode that may allow increased conformational flexibility during cellulosome assembly. Acetivibrio cellulolyticus produces a highly complex cellulosome comprising an unusual adaptor scaffoldin, ScaB, which mediates the interaction between the primary scaffoldin, ScaA, through type II cohesin-dockerin interactions and the anchoring scaffoldin, ScaC, via type I cohesin-dockerin interactions. Here, we report the crystal structure of the type I ScaB dockerin in complex with a type I ScaC cohesin in two distinct orientations. The data show that the ScaB dockerin displays structural symmetry, reflected by the presence of two essentially identical binding surfaces. The complex interface is more extensive than those observed in other type I complexes, which results in an ultra-high affinity interaction (Ka ∼10(12) M). A subset of ScaB dockerin residues was also identified as modulating the specificity of type I cohesin-dockerin interactions in A. cellulolyticus. This report reveals that recruitment of cellulosomes onto the cell surface may involve dockerins presenting a dual binding mode to incorporate additional flexibility into the quaternary structure of highly populated multienzyme complexes.

Highlights

  • Cohesin-dockerin interactions support the binding of multienzyme complexes onto the cell surface

  • The sequence and structural symmetry within the type I dockerin module from C. thermocellum support a dual binding mode with the main Coh-contacting residues at positions 11 and 12 in the N-terminal (Ser-11 and Thr-12) or C-terminal (Ser-45 and Thr-46) helix of the protein domain [17]. This symmetry is evident in the enzyme-borne dockerins of A. cellulolyticus that interact with ScaA, where the specificity residues in MAY 22, 2015

  • In nature, type I Coh-Doc interactions are essential for the assembly of cellulosomal enzymes onto a primary scaffoldin, which in turn attaches to the cell surface via a type II Coh-Doc pair

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Summary

Background

Cohesin-dockerin interactions support the binding of multienzyme complexes (cellulosomes) onto the cell surface. This report reveals that recruitment of cellulosomes onto the cell surface may involve dockerins presenting a dual binding mode to incorporate additional flexibility into the quaternary structure of highly populated multienzyme complexes. The cellulosomal organization of Clostridium thermocellum is the most well defined and characterized system, and it is used as a blueprint for typical cellulosome assembly In this system, assembly occurs through the binding of type I cohesin modules found in a primary scaffoldin subunit to enzyme-borne type I dockerin modules. The primary scaffoldin (where the enzymes of the cellulosome are recruited), ScaA, contains an internal carbohydrate-binding module, bordered by seven type I cohesin modules and a single X module that provides structural stability to the neighboring C-terminal type II dockerin domain.

The abbreviations used are
Experimental Procedures
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