Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular, Microbial and Structural Biology, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut, USA
2. Department of Physics, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The proteins encoded by the
spoVA
operon, including SpoVAD, are essential for the uptake of the 1:1 chelate of pyridine-2,6-dicarboxylic acid (DPA
2,6
) and Ca
2+
into developing spores of the bacterium
Bacillus subtilis
. The crystal structure of
B. subtilis
SpoVAD has been determined recently, and a structural homology search revealed that SpoVAD shares significant structural similarity but not sequence homology to a group of enzymes that bind to and/or act on small aromatic molecules. We find that molecular docking placed DPA
2,6
exclusively in a highly conserved potential substrate-binding pocket in SpoVAD that is similar to that in the structurally homologous enzymes. We further demonstrate that SpoVAD binds both DPA
2,6
and Ca
2+
-DPA
2,6
with a similar affinity, while exhibiting markedly weaker binding to other DPA isomers. Importantly, mutations of conserved amino acid residues in the putative DPA
2,6
-binding pocket in SpoVAD essentially abolish its DPA
2,6
-binding capacity. Moreover, replacement of the wild-type
spoVAD
gene in
B. subtilis
with any of these
spoVAD
gene variants effectively eliminated DPA
2,6
uptake into developing spores in sporulation, although the variant proteins were still located in the spore inner membrane. Our results provide direct evidence that SpoVA proteins, in particular SpoVAD, are directly involved in DPA
2,6
movement into developing
B. subtilis
spores.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
71 articles.
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