Abstract

Enzymatic phosphorylation through a family of enzymes called aminoglycoside O-phosphotransferases (APHs) is a major mechanism by which bacteria confer resistance to aminoglycoside antibiotics. Members of the APH(2″) subfamily are of particular clinical interest because of their prevalence in pathogenic strains and their broad substrate spectra. APH(2″) enzymes display differential preferences between ATP or GTP as the phosphate donor, with aminoglycoside 2″-phosphotransferase IVa (APH(2″)-IVa) being a member that utilizes both nucleotides at comparable efficiencies. We report here four crystal structures of APH(2″)-IVa, two of the wild type enzyme and two of single amino acid mutants, each in complex with either adenosine or guanosine. Together, these structures afford a detailed look at the nucleoside-binding site architecture for this enzyme and reveal key elements that confer dual nucleotide specificity, including a solvent network in the interior of the nucleoside-binding pocket and the conformation of an interdomain linker loop. Steady state kinetic studies, as well as sequence and structural comparisons with members of the APH(2″) subfamily and other aminoglycoside kinases, rationalize the different substrate preferences for these enzymes. Finally, despite poor overall sequence similarity and structural homology, analysis of the nucleoside-binding pocket of APH(2″)-IVa shows a striking resemblance to that of eukaryotic casein kinase 2 (CK2), which also exhibits dual nucleotide specificity. These results, in complement with the multitude of existing inhibitors against CK2, can serve as a structural basis for the design of nucleotide-competitive inhibitors against clinically relevant APH enzymes.

Highlights

  • Aminoglycoside 2Љ-phosphotransferase IVa is an antibiotic resistance enzyme capable of using both ATP and GTP

  • Overall Structural Characteristics—The wild type aminoglycoside O-phosphotransferases (APHs)(2Љ)IVa-adenosine complex has been refined to 2.15 Å with an Rcryst of 0.192 and an Rfree of 0.244, whereas the guanosine-bound structure of wild type APH(2Љ)-IVa has been refined to 2.10 Å with an Rcryst of 0.187 and an Rfree of 0.247

  • These represent the first nucleoside-bound structures of APH(2Љ)-IVa and the first crystal structure of an aminoglycoside phosphotransferase in complex with a bound GTP-like substrate

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Aminoglycoside 2Љ-phosphotransferase IVa is an antibiotic resistance enzyme capable of using both ATP and GTP. We report here four crystal structures of APH(2؆)-IVa, two of the wild type enzyme and two of single amino acid mutants, each in complex with either adenosine or guanosine. Together, these structures afford a detailed look at the nucleoside-binding site architecture for this enzyme and reveal key elements that confer dual nucleotide specificity, including a solvent network in the interior of the nucleoside-binding pocket and the conformation of an interdomain linker loop. As well as sequence and structural comparisons with members of the APH(2؆) subfamily and other aminoglycoside kinases, rationalize the different substrate preferences for these enzymes.

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.