Abstract

The bacterial phosphotransferase system (PTS) is a signal transduction pathway that couples phosphoryl transfer to active sugar transport across the cell membrane. The PTS is initiated by the binding of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to the C-terminal domain (EIC) of enzyme I (EI), a highly conserved protein that is common to all sugar branches of the PTS. EIC exists in a dynamic monomer/dimer equilibrium that is modulated by ligand binding and is thought to regulate the overall PTS. Isolation of EIC has proven challenging, and conformational dynamics within the EIC domain during the catalytic cycle are still largely unknown. Here, we present a robust protocol for expression and purification of recombinant EIC from Escherichia coli and show that isolated EIC is capable of hydrolyzing PEP. NMR analysis and residual dipolar coupling measurements indicate that the isolated EIC domain in solution adopts a stable tertiary fold and quaternary structure that is consistent with previously reported crystallographic data. NMR relaxation dispersion measurements indicate that residues around the PEP binding site and in the β3α3 turn (residues 333-366), which is located at the dimer interface, undergo a rapid transition on the sub-millisecond time scale (with an exchange rate constant of ∼1500 s(-1)) between major open (∼97%) and minor closed (∼3%) conformations. Upon PEP binding, the β3α3 turn is effectively locked in the closed state by the formation of salt bridges between the phosphate group of PEP and the side chains of Lys(340) and Arg(358), thereby stabilizing the dimer.

Highlights

  • Conformational changes in the EIC domain of enzyme I upon ligand binding are thought to regulate the phosphotransfer system by modulating the monomer/dimer equilibrium

  • EIC exists in a dynamic monomer/dimer equilibrium that is modulated by ligand binding and is thought to regulate the overall phosphotransferase system (PTS)

  • Conformational changes in EIC are thought to play an important role in regulation of the overall PTS [14, 22], the conformations adopted by EIC during catalysis are still poorly understood

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Summary

Background

Conformational changes in the EIC domain of enzyme I upon ligand binding are thought to regulate the phosphotransfer system by modulating the monomer/dimer equilibrium. EIC exists in a dynamic monomer/dimer equilibrium that is modulated by ligand binding and is thought to regulate the overall PTS. The EI structures reveal large rigid body conformational transitions involving domain reorientation of EIN relative to EIC, as well as reorientation of the two subdomains of EIN relative to each other These large-scale conformational changes permit transfer of the phosphoryl group from PEP bound to the EIC domain to His189 located on EIN in the conformation found in the trapped phosphorylated intermediate [15], and subsequent transfer of the phosphoryl group on His189 to HPr in the conformation found in the structures of free EI and the EI-HPr complex where the structure of the EIN domain is identical to that of the isolated EIN domain [17]. The data presented here suggest that EIC represents a good model system for studying the combined effects of substrate binding and conformational dynamics on enzymatic regulation

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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