Abstract

Anti-terminator protein GlpP regulates gene expression of glycerol uptake operon at post-transcriptional level in a number of bacteria. By now, the molecular dynamics details of ligand and RNA binding by GlpP are still obscure. In this study, we employed the molecular dynamic (MD) simulation and constructed a functional verification platform of GlpP to resolve these puzzles. By combining molecular docking, MD simulation and alanine scanning mutagenesis, a ligand binding pocket consisting of R14, R104 and R157 was identified. Among these residues with positive charge, R14 was dominant for binding glycerol-3-phosphate (G3P). Moreover, the "parallel to crossed" conformational change of the predicted RNA binding region was observed in MD simulation. In this process, the interaction between R104 and E129 was crucial to trigger the conformational change. To further verify this speculation, three ligand independent mutants were obtained by error-prone PCR. The MD simulation indicated that the conformational change happened in all the three mutants, confirming the "parallel to crossed" conformational change endowed GlpP the activity of binding RNA. In recent years, as a potable biological part, anti-terminator was more and more widely used to regulate gene expression in metabolic engineering and synthetic biology. The work in this study deepened our understanding to the typical anti-terminator GlpP, contributing to the further engineering and application of this type of regulator.

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