Abstract

ScARP from the bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor belongs to the pierisin family of DNA-targeting ADP-ribosyltransferases (ARTs). These enzymes ADP-ribosylate the N2 amino groups of guanine residues in DNA to yield N2-(ADP-ribos-1-yl)-2'-deoxyguanosine. Although the structures of pierisin-1 and Scabin were revealed recently, the substrate recognition mechanisms remain poorly understood because of the lack of a substrate-binding structure. Here, we report the apo structure of ScARP and of ScARP bound to NADH and its GDP substrate at 1.50 and 1.57 Å resolutions, respectively. The bound structure revealed that the guanine of GDP is trapped between N-ribose of NADH and Trp-159. Interestingly, N2 and N3 of guanine formed hydrogen bonds with the OE1 and NE2 atoms of Gln-162, respectively. We directly observed that the ADP-ribosylating toxin turn-turn (ARTT)-loop, including Trp-159 and Gln-162, plays a key role in the specificity of DNA-targeting, guanine-specific ARTs as well as protein-targeting ARTs such as the C3 exoenzyme. We propose that the ARTT-loop recognition is a common substrate-recognition mechanism in the pierisin family. Furthermore, this complex structure sheds light on similarities and differences among two subclasses that are distinguished by conserved structural motifs: H-Y-E in the ARTD subfamily and R-S-E in the ARTC subfamily. The spatial arrangements of the electrophile and nucleophile were the same, providing the first evidence for a common reaction mechanism in these ARTs. ARTC (including ScARP) uses the ARTT-loop for substrate recognition, whereas ARTD (represented by Arr) uses the C-terminal helix instead of the ARTT-loop. These observations could help inform efforts to improve ART inhibitors.

Highlights

  • ScARP from the bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor belongs to the pierisin family of DNA-targeting ADP-ribosyltransferases (ARTs)

  • Clostridium botulinum C3 exoenzyme ADP-ribosylates Asn-41 of RhoA [7, 8] and Clostridium perfringens iota toxin A subunit (Ia) ADPribosylates Arg-177 of actin [9, 10]. These ARTs fall into two major subclasses that are distinguished by conserved structural motifs: H-Y-E in the ARTD subfamily and R-S-E in the ARTC subfamily (related to cholera toxin and clostridial toxins (C3 and Ia))

  • The substrate preferences are different among the pierisin family, the ARTTloop that is essential for binding with GDP is conserved among the three enzymes

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Summary

Edited by Ruma Banerjee

ScARP from the bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor belongs to the pierisin family of DNA-targeting ADP-ribosyltransferases (ARTs). It was proposed that ␾XXQXE or ␾XXEXE (where ␾ is Tyr, Phe, or Trp) known as the ADP-ribosylating toxin turn-turn (ARTT)-loop is important for substrate recognition in C3 and Ia (VIP2), respectively (Fig. 1b) [26]. It has not been confirmed until recently, we directly observed substrate recognition via the ARTT-loop in the C3–RhoA complex structure [25]. We used X-ray crystallography to reveal the ScARP-GDP (substrate)–NADH complex It shows a common substrate recognition mechanism of pierisin family enzyme and the first direct observation that the ARTT-loop plays a key role in the specificity of DNA-targeting, guaninespecific ART as well as protein-targeting ART. Compared with the Arr structure, which is a rifamycin ADP-ribosyltransferase belonging to ARTD, we propose the general significant substrate recognition differences between ARTC and ARTD

Results
Structural comparisons with pierisin and Scabin
Discussion
Expression and purification of ScARP
Data collection and structure determination
Activity measurement
Full Text
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