Abstract

BackgroundThe C-terminal domain of MotB (MotB-C) shows high sequence similarity to outer membrane protein A and related peptidoglycan (PG)-binding proteins. It is believed to anchor the power-generating MotA/MotB stator unit of the bacterial flagellar motor to the peptidoglycan layer of the cell wall. We previously reported the first crystal structure of this domain and made a puzzling observation that all conserved residues that are thought to be essential for PG recognition are buried and inaccessible in the crystal structure. In this study, we tested a hypothesis that peptidoglycan binding is preceded by, or accompanied by, some structural reorganization that exposes the key conserved residues.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe determined the structure of a new crystalline form (Form B) of Helicobacter pylori MotB-C. Comparisons with the existing Form A revealed conformational variations in the petal-like loops around the carbohydrate binding site near one end of the β-sheet. These variations are thought to reflect natural flexibility at this site required for insertion into the peptidoglycan mesh. In order to understand the nature of this flexibility we have performed molecular dynamics simulations of the MotB-C dimer. The results are consistent with the crystallographic data and provide evidence that the three loops move in a concerted fashion, exposing conserved MotB residues that have previously been implicated in binding of the peptide moiety of peptidoglycan.Conclusion/SignificanceOur structural analysis provides a new insight into the mechanism by which MotB inserts into the peptidoglycan mesh, thus anchoring the power-generating complex to the cell wall.

Highlights

  • The motility protein B (MotB) is a key component of the bacterial flagellar motor

  • The PG-binding site of MotB resides on the periplasmic Cterminal domain (MotB-C) which shows sequence similarity to outer membrane protein A (OmpA) and related PG-binding proteins [5]

  • Overall Structure The structure of previously unobserved crystal form (Form B) of recombinant H. pylori MotB-C was solved by a molecular replacement approach using AMORE [10]

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Summary

Introduction

The motility protein B (MotB) is a key component of the bacterial flagellar motor. It anchors the MotA/MotB stator ring of the motor to peptidoglycan (PG) of the cell wall and forms part of the proton-conducting channel that couples proton flow to generation of the turning force via an as yet unknown mechanism [1,2]. The PG-binding grooves formed by these loops are topologically very similar in different OmpA-like proteins, all five conserved residues (Gly161, Asp164, Leu179, Arg183, Arg226) that are thought to be essential for PG recognition are buried and inaccessible [6].

Results
Conclusion
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