Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5533017 Journal of Molecular Biology 2016 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

•NRPS subunit interaction was studied with a photocrosslinking amino acid.•Three hydrophobic residues in a C-terminal donor helix are key interaction points.•Residues from the interior of the acceptor NRPS module are contacting the donor helix.•Mapping of crosslinks reveals reversed helix orientation compared to a previous model.•First direct insight into the architecture of interaction important for NRPS engineering

Nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) are large modular protein templates that assemble bioactive peptides, many of which possess therapeutic importance. Protein-protein interactions between subunits of bacterial NRPSs are essential for proper template formation. The structural basis of the typical subunit interface between epimerization (E) and condensation domains is only poorly understood. Conflicting helix-helix and helix-hand models were previously proposed. Here, the genetically encoded photocrosslinker p-benzoylphenylalanine (BpF) was incorporated into the C-terminal communication-mediating domain (COM) of GrsA. Using the partner elongation module TycB1 to form a dipeptide product, we could correlate the ability to form covalent crosslinks with the functional module interaction. Perturbation of the module interaction with the large side chain of BpF in a scan at 19 positions demonstrated the importance of three hydrophobic residues in an α-helical arrangement. Mapping of covalent crosslinks using tandem mass spectrometry revealed the residues from the interior of the condensation domain as part of the protein interface; a finding not predicted by the helix-helix model. The epimerization domain of GrsA was found to be important for the interaction. Together with multiple sequence analyses and structural modeling, our results suggest an upside-down helix-hand model in which the C-terminal COM-helix is embedded in a hand motif with a hydrophobic core in a reversed orientation compared to a previous proposal. Our results provide a more detailed and the first direct structural understanding of the COM domain interaction and will contribute to successful biocombinatorial engineering attempts in the design of artificial NRPS templates.

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