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Structure and function of the Escherichia coli Tol-Pal stator protein TolR.

J Biol Chem. 2015 Oct 30;290(44):26675-87. Epub 2015 Sep 09
Justyna A Wojdyla 1 , Erin Cutts 1 , Renata Kaminska 1 , Grigorios Papadakos 1 , Jonathan T S Hopper 2 , Phillip J Stansfeld 1 , David Staunton 1 , Carol V Robinson 2 , Colin Kleanthous 3
Justyna A Wojdyla 1 , Erin Cutts 1 , Renata Kaminska 1 , Grigorios Papadakos 1 , Jonathan T S Hopper 2 , Phillip J Stansfeld 1 , David Staunton 1 , Carol V Robinson 2 , Colin Kleanthous 3
+ et al

[No authors listed]

Author information
  • 1 From the Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QU and.
  • 2 the Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford, Mansfield Road, Oxford OX1 3TA, United Kingdom.
  • 3 From the Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QU and colin.kleanthous@bioch.ox.ac.uk.
全文

摘要


TolR is a 15-kDa inner membrane protein subunit of the Tol-Pal complex in Gram-negative bacteria, and its function is poorly understood. Tol-Pal is recruited to cell division sites where it is involved in maintaining the integrity of the outer membrane. TolR is related to MotB, the peptidoglycan (PG)-binding stator protein from the flagellum, suggesting it might serve a similar role in Tol-Pal. The only structure thus far reported for TolR is of the periplasmic domain from Haemophilus influenzae in which N- and C-terminal residues had been deleted (TolR(62-133), Escherichia coli numbering). H. influenzae TolR(62-133) is a symmetrical dimer with a large deep cleft at the dimer interface. Here, we present the 1.7-Å crystal structure of the intact periplasmic domain of E. coli TolR (TolR(36-142)). E. coli TolR(36-142) is also dimeric, but the architecture of the dimer is radically different from that of TolR(62-133) due to the intertwining of its N and C termini. TolR monomers are rotated ∼180° relative to each other as a result of this strand swapping, obliterating the putative PG-binding groove seen in TolR(62-133). We found that removal of the strand-swapped regions (TolR(60-133)) exposes cryptic PG binding activity that is absent in the full-length domain. We conclude that to function as a stator in the Tol-Pal complex dimeric TolR must undergo large scale structural remodeling reminiscent of that proposed for MotB, where the N- and C-terminal sequences unfold in order for the protein to both reach and bind the PG layer ∼90 Å away from the inner membrane.

KEYWORDS: Escherichia coli (E. coli), TolR, bacteria, crystal structure, dimerization, domain, membrane protein, periplasm, strand-swapped