Crystal structure of an inferred ancestral bacterial pyruvate decarboxylase

Author:

Buddrus LisaORCID,Andrews Emma S. V.,Leak David J.ORCID,Danson Michael J.,Arcus Vickery L.ORCID,Crennell Susan J.ORCID

Abstract

Pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC; EC 4.1.1.1) is a key enzyme in homofermentative metabolism where ethanol is the major product. PDCs are thiamine pyrophosphate- and Mg2+ion-dependent enzymes that catalyse the non-oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate to acetaldehyde and carbon dioxide. As this enzyme class is rare in bacteria, current knowledge of bacterial PDCs is extremely limited. One approach to further the understanding of bacterial PDCs is to exploit the diversity provided by evolution. Ancestral sequence reconstruction (ASR) is a method of computational molecular evolution to infer extinct ancestral protein sequences, which can then be synthesized and experimentally characterized. Through ASR a novel PDC was generated, designated ANC27, that shares only 78% amino-acid sequence identity with its closest extant homologue (Komagataeibacter medellinensisPDC, GenBank accession No. WP_014105323.1), yet is fully functional. Crystals of this PDC diffracted to 3.5 Å resolution. The data were merged in space groupP3221, with unit-cell parametersa=b =108.33,c= 322.65 Å, and contained two dimers (two tetramer halves) in the asymmetric unit. The structure was solved by molecular replacement using PDB entry 2wvg as a model, and the finalRvalues wereRwork= 0.246 (0.3671 in the highest resolution bin) andRfree= 0.319 (0.4482 in the highest resolution bin). Comparison with extant bacterial PDCs supports the previously observed correlation between decreased tetramer interface area (and number of interactions) and decreased thermostability.

Publisher

International Union of Crystallography (IUCr)

Subject

Condensed Matter Physics,Genetics,Biochemistry,Structural Biology,Biophysics

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