User:Marilyn Vazquez Zarazua/Sandbox 1

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== Background ==
== Background ==
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<Structure load='4NYQ' size='350' frame='true' align='right' caption='Insert caption here' scene='Insert optional scene name here' />
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<Structure load='6E3D' size='350' frame='true' align='right' caption='Insert caption here' scene='Insert optional scene name here' />
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The milk protein <scene name='81/812870/Lili_mip/7'>Lili-Mip</scene> owes its origins to the viviparity of the Pacific beetle cockroach Diploptera punctate.1 This species gives birth to live young and utilizes a reproductive strategy, viviparity, in which a supply of nutrients is provided to growing embryos in gestation periods of their lives. Lili Mip analysis revealed that milk proteins contain all the essential amino acids which a vital characteristic for a nutrient is.
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Pathogenic bacteria require several metal cofactors for enzymatic activity and, therein, performance of biochemical processes. As a result, these parasites have evolved mechanisms by which they can uptake essential nutrients from their host. Though many of these ions are present in the cytosol of host cells or in the extracellular matrix of host tissue at various concentrations, thereby making sequestering these materials relatively simple, iron presents an interesting obstacle in terms of accessibility for bacteria in that it exists mainly in erythrocytes in the heme compound hemoglobin, though it also exists in storage compounds such as ferritin, lactoferrin, transferrin, and hemosiderin. As a result, pathogens have evolved several means by which heme and hemoglobin can be uptaken by cells and degraded for abstraction of iron.
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The time to reproductive maturity is significantly reduced because of viviparity. This enhancement of larval development provides a 60-fold whole body increase in protein during embryonic development. The viviparity of this cockroach species involves the rapid development of embryos that are capable of drinking and storing complex nutrients concentrated in crystalline form.1
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== Mycobacterium Tuberculosis and Iron Uptake ==
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Mycobacterium Tuberculosis (Mtb) is a droplet-spread bacteria which causes tuberculosis. The bacterium lives and reproduces within the phagosomes of alveolar macrophages. In 2018 alone, nearly 1.5 million people died from tuberculosis, making it among the top 10 diseases in terms of mortality. Being that iron is relatively scarce within alveolar macrophage phagosomes, Mtb has evolved intricate means by which iron is uptaken. The sheer number of genes dedicated to these processes is an indication of the complex evolution of this uptake. For instance, M. tuberculosis have approximately 35 known genes alone associated only with the production of salicylate-derivative iron siderophores termed mycobactins.
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While few study has been conducted on the Lili-Mip, the direct crystallographic phasing and structure determination from crystals naturally grown in vivo rather than in vitro from over expressed proteins is the first report of its kind.1
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== Heme Transport Into M. Tuberculosis ==
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Mycobacterium Tuberculosis has a two-membrane exterior, composed of a peptidoglycan exterior membrane and an interior cell membrane. Heme transport into the periplasmic space has been understood for some time, relative to the recent developments pertaining to the DPP complex, in that several integral proteins used in the transport of heme from the extracellular matrix into the periplasmic space have been elucidated, specifically PPE36, PPE22, and PPE62. The protein involved in the movement of heme through the periplasmic space, though, was unknown until September 2019, when the structure of DppA was elucidated. DppA is a type of periplasmic binding protein specific to M. Tuberculosus.
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== Structure of Lili Mip ==
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== Periplasmic Binding Proteins (PBPs) ==
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Twenty-five distinct Lili-Mip complementary DNAs have been cloned and partially characterized that encode twenty-two Milk proteins. These peptides are each 171 amino acids long1.
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Periplasmic binding proteins (PBPs) are non-enzymatic receptors that bacteria use to sense small molecules such as carbohydrates, amino acids, and ions, and transport them into the cytoplasm. These sorts of proteins are ubiquitous in both gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria, appearing in gram-positive bacteria as membrane-anchored lipoproteins. The glucose/galactose binding protein (<scene name='81/812870/Ggbp/1'>GBBP</scene>) of E. Coli is amongst the best studied of these proteins. These proteins typically exhibit a “Venus fly-trap” appearance, consisting of two globular domains connected by a small hinge region. The hinge-like appearance is evident in GBBP. These proteins often also work in conjunction with an ABC-binding cassette transporter which catalyzes the movement of the substance at hand across the cytoplasmic membrane.
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Lili-Mip has been characterized as part of the lipocalin family consisting of one <scene name='81/812870/Alpha_helix/1'>C-terminal alpha-helix</scene> and <scene name='81/812870/Nine_beta_strands_that_form_a/2'>nine Beta strands that form a barrel</scene>to coordinate the lipid. The lipocalin family typically consists of lipophilic ligands in a cavity shaped by a common fold composed of a central Beta barrel.2 The significant differences between lipocalin-like proteins is the hydrophobic pocket used for lipid coordination and categorizes the type of ligand that can be accommodated. [[Lipocalin proteins]] are known to carry fatty acids and other lipophilic materials.4
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== Other Heme Binding PBPs ==
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Researchers have elucidated a few other heme binding PBPs which are functionally similar to DppA of Mtb. <scene name='81/812870/Phut/1'>ShuT</scene> of Shigella dysenteriae and PhuT of P. aeruginosa were among the earliest of these proteins to be elucidated in 2007. A general mechanism has been proposed for the activity of these proteins, but these proteins differ significantly structurally from DppA, so it is unlikely the specific mechanism of these proteins relates to DppA.
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Electron density maps of the structure revealed densities for glycosylation at Asn35, Asn66, Asn79 and Asn145. N-acetyl-D-glucosamine <scene name='81/812870/Nag/1'>(NAG)</scene> were found to be unique ligands associated with Lili-Mip. One Beta-mannose (BMA) and two NAGS were identified at positions 35 and 79. Several other NAGs were identified at Asn145 (two) and one at Asn66.2 Models also coordinate lipids <scene name='81/812870/Eic/3'>linoleic acid</scene> or <scene name='81/812870/Oleic_acid/2'>oleic acid</scene> inside the hydrophobic pocket of Lili Mip. The pocket in the Lili-Mip structure is 15 Armstrong’s deep and can lodge up to 18-carbon fatty acid chain ligands. Aromatic residues (Phe76, Tyr84, Tyr88 and Phe100), combined with Leu113 and Glu38, delimit the deepest depression, notably through the formation of a stable π-stacking of Tyr88 and Phe100 rings that restrict the length of the lipid.2
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== DPP System in Mycobacterium Tuberculosis ==
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The DPP system in Mtb is used for influx of heme across the cellular membrane. DppA is a member of the DPP system in Mtb. DppA transports heme across the periplasmic space of Mtb to the DppBCD transporter, which likely transfers the heme across the membrane as has been seen with other substrate-binding proteins of ABC transporters. Research has shown the DPP complex is not involved in heme detoxification, but rather is involved in the import of heme across the cell membrane.
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Milk proteins are rich in leucine, valine, asparagine, lysine, proline, and tyrosine residues, each accounting for 7-8% of the amino acids. However, they are lower in methionine and tryptophan residues being only about 0.5% each.1 Lipids make up 16-22% of the dry weight, with cholesterol being the only steroid and linoleic acid the most abundant fatty acid. Fatty-acid chains in the barrel of Lili-Mip is presumed to be either linoleic acid or oleic acid.7
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== General Information about DppA ==
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Bacterial DppA proteins have signature Sec signal peptides specific to heme binding. Research indicates the Sec signal peptide present on DppA of Mtb must be present for heme binding to occur. DppA exhibits a much lower dissociation constant than other PBPs, around ~1.5 uM. This is significantly less than functionally similar proteins such as Haemophilus influenzae’s HbpA or E. Coli’s DppA (HbpA = ~655 uM and DppA of E. Coli = ~10 uM).
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== Function ==
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== Crystal Structure of DppA ==
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Lili-Mip is a complete nutritious material as it provides all of the essential amino acids, carbohydrates from the attached glycans, and lipids. Lili-Mips are the major nutrient source for growth for embryos.
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Crystal structure was obtained at 1.27Å resolution, with Rwork/free = 12.8/16.5%. The structure shows a globular, heart-like appearance. The tertiary structure is formed from two globular and mildly offset halves which are quite complementary. The two halves fold onto each other, similar to two shells of a mollusk.
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While measuring nutritional value based on the presence of essential amino acids, there are eight conserved regions in Lili-Mip which suggest the Milk proteins might have a function in addition to nutrition.1
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== “Clothespin Spring” α-helical Hinge ==
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A <scene name='81/812870/Hinge/5'>flexible α-helical hinge</scene> connects the <scene name='81/812870/N-terminus/1'>N-terminal half (residues 1-249)</scene> to the <scene name='81/812870/C-terminus/3'>C-terminal half (residues 267-541)</scene>. This is speculated to function similar to a “clothespin spring,” maintaining a closed conformation.
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The abundance of linoleic acid in the hydrophobic pocket of milk protein Lili-Mip of pregnant D. punctata is significant as linoleic acid is essential to most insects, and in other animals, lipocalins may transport hydrophobic molecules such as cholesterol and linoleic acid that cannot be synthesized by insects.2
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== Role of Tetrapeptide Binding in Core ==
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Between the two halves of the protein, buried inside the core, is a <scene name='81/812870/Tetrapeptide/3'>tetrapeptide composed of Ser-Ser-Val-Thr</scene>. The function of this is not as of yet fully understood. The highly conserved residues <scene name='81/812870/Active_site/3'>W442 and D445</scene> in the peptide-binding pocket of DppA were mutated to alanine by researchers. E. Coli did not yield any D445 mutant protein, suggesting it did not fold and subsequently degraded. E. Coli did yield W442 mutant which, under spectroscopic analysis, appeared to bind and rapidly dissociate from heme. This suggests that this residue perhaps plays a role in maintaining a specific flexibility of the DppA halves.
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The relationship between lipocalin family of proteins and Lili Mip may suggest that Lili Mip may function in the transport of cholesterol to the embryos as lipocalin proteins have been documented to bind a variety of hydrophobic molecules as well as cholesterol.2
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== Solvent-Exposed Binding Sight ==
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The CASTp software computed a solvent-accessible pocket on the closed conformation of the protein with a Richards’ solvent-accessible volume of 268Å6. Though this contains a few heme-binding residues, including <scene name='81/812870/131_179/1'>His131 and Arg 179</scene>, it is too small to accommodate heme. Normal mode analysis, though, showed that the first three lowest frequency modes produced a wide opening in the cleft which was brought on by a clamp-like, 10.7Å motion of the two halves, during which the halves slightly twisted in opposite directions. The generated pocket has a Richards’ solvent-accessible volume ~2583Å, which would be compatible with heme binding. Similarly, this conformation would place heme in bonding distance with several DppA residues such as <scene name='81/812870/131_179_the_rest/1'>R179, H131, S134, E481, and L477</scene>.
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== Heterogeneity in Lili-Mip amino-acid sequence ==
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== Further Elucidation of the Binding Pocket through Specific Residues ==
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Heterogeneity is observed in the primary protein structure evident by glycosylation and lipid content of Lili-Mip; however, the function of heterogeneity is currently unclear.2 Lili-Mip crystals containing multiple proteins with differing primary amino-acid sequences have been identified, heterogeneity for six of the 28 residues could be visualized clearly in the electron density maps.2
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Amino acids <scene name='81/812870/131_179/2'>H131 and R179</scene> have been mutated experimentally to assess the effects of these specific residues on heme binding. H131 mutations resulted in a nonfunctional protein which would not fold. R179 mutations resulted in a crystalized protein nearly structurally identical to wild type DppA, with RMSD ~.11Å. After introduction to heme, spectroscopic findings showed that heme-binding abilities of the protein were abolished in the mutant, suggesting this residue plays a significant function in binding with heme.
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The significance of heterogeneity here is that there is no identified or reported crystal structure that has heterogeneity in protein sequence, carbohydrate, and lipid content together.2 There are some examples of heterogeneity in protein sequence but with glycosylation and ligand binding independently. Also notable is the ability for Lili-Mip’s ability to diffract to atomic resolution.2 The molecular weight ranges from 27 to 37 kDa which can be partially explained by the differential glycosylation of Milk proteins. The Lili-Mip contain four to six potential glycosylation sites that might be differentially glycosylated depending on the protein folding. 1
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== Genetic Homology with Other PBPs ==
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Furthermore, all heterogeneous residues of the protein are located on the surface of and not inside the barrel. This suggests the binding pocket is conserved.2
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Other periplasmic binding proteins have been isolated and studied. DppA shares no homology with HemT of S. marcescens. The M. tuberculosis rv3666c-rv3663c operon, though, does encode four proteins that share ~25-45% sequence similarity with DPP dipeptide transporter of E. Coli, which similarly transports hemoglobin through the periplasmic space.
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== Medical Implications ==
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== Structural Homology with Other PBPs ==
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According to the UNICEF, nearly half of all deaths in children under the age of five are attributable to under nutrition.5 This organization and the World Health Organization’s data suggests this translates to about three-million deaths of children a year.5 Sources to treat this malnutrition are vital to the survival of millions of people.
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DppA is similar structurally to a few homologous proteins, especially to the S. typhimurium ortholog that superimposes the structure with an RMSD ~1.45Å.
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Given the discovery of the nutritious capabilities of Lili-Mip has opened doors into research about reproducibility to treat malnutrition and other protein-deficiency diseases. While milking cockroaches may not be the most productive, the discovery of this Milk protein will pave the way for an efficient method to reproducing it in mass.
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== Environmental Implications ==
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Dairy milk and other alternatives are currently under environmental scrutiny as the amount of greenhouse gases produced by livestock raised for their milk and meat is too significant to ignore.6 While cockroach Diploptera punctate is far from the planet’s only solution to alleviate the stress of the accumulation of greenhouse gasses, there is potential for further research of the Milk protein produced by D. punctate as a more sustainable nutritious substances for our diets.
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== References ==
== References ==
<references/>
<references/>

Current revision

Contents

Background

Insert caption here

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Pathogenic bacteria require several metal cofactors for enzymatic activity and, therein, performance of biochemical processes. As a result, these parasites have evolved mechanisms by which they can uptake essential nutrients from their host. Though many of these ions are present in the cytosol of host cells or in the extracellular matrix of host tissue at various concentrations, thereby making sequestering these materials relatively simple, iron presents an interesting obstacle in terms of accessibility for bacteria in that it exists mainly in erythrocytes in the heme compound hemoglobin, though it also exists in storage compounds such as ferritin, lactoferrin, transferrin, and hemosiderin. As a result, pathogens have evolved several means by which heme and hemoglobin can be uptaken by cells and degraded for abstraction of iron.

Mycobacterium Tuberculosis and Iron Uptake

Mycobacterium Tuberculosis (Mtb) is a droplet-spread bacteria which causes tuberculosis. The bacterium lives and reproduces within the phagosomes of alveolar macrophages. In 2018 alone, nearly 1.5 million people died from tuberculosis, making it among the top 10 diseases in terms of mortality. Being that iron is relatively scarce within alveolar macrophage phagosomes, Mtb has evolved intricate means by which iron is uptaken. The sheer number of genes dedicated to these processes is an indication of the complex evolution of this uptake. For instance, M. tuberculosis have approximately 35 known genes alone associated only with the production of salicylate-derivative iron siderophores termed mycobactins.

Heme Transport Into M. Tuberculosis

Mycobacterium Tuberculosis has a two-membrane exterior, composed of a peptidoglycan exterior membrane and an interior cell membrane. Heme transport into the periplasmic space has been understood for some time, relative to the recent developments pertaining to the DPP complex, in that several integral proteins used in the transport of heme from the extracellular matrix into the periplasmic space have been elucidated, specifically PPE36, PPE22, and PPE62. The protein involved in the movement of heme through the periplasmic space, though, was unknown until September 2019, when the structure of DppA was elucidated. DppA is a type of periplasmic binding protein specific to M. Tuberculosus.

Periplasmic Binding Proteins (PBPs)

Periplasmic binding proteins (PBPs) are non-enzymatic receptors that bacteria use to sense small molecules such as carbohydrates, amino acids, and ions, and transport them into the cytoplasm. These sorts of proteins are ubiquitous in both gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria, appearing in gram-positive bacteria as membrane-anchored lipoproteins. The glucose/galactose binding protein () of E. Coli is amongst the best studied of these proteins. These proteins typically exhibit a “Venus fly-trap” appearance, consisting of two globular domains connected by a small hinge region. The hinge-like appearance is evident in GBBP. These proteins often also work in conjunction with an ABC-binding cassette transporter which catalyzes the movement of the substance at hand across the cytoplasmic membrane.

Other Heme Binding PBPs

Researchers have elucidated a few other heme binding PBPs which are functionally similar to DppA of Mtb. of Shigella dysenteriae and PhuT of P. aeruginosa were among the earliest of these proteins to be elucidated in 2007. A general mechanism has been proposed for the activity of these proteins, but these proteins differ significantly structurally from DppA, so it is unlikely the specific mechanism of these proteins relates to DppA.

DPP System in Mycobacterium Tuberculosis

The DPP system in Mtb is used for influx of heme across the cellular membrane. DppA is a member of the DPP system in Mtb. DppA transports heme across the periplasmic space of Mtb to the DppBCD transporter, which likely transfers the heme across the membrane as has been seen with other substrate-binding proteins of ABC transporters. Research has shown the DPP complex is not involved in heme detoxification, but rather is involved in the import of heme across the cell membrane.

General Information about DppA

Bacterial DppA proteins have signature Sec signal peptides specific to heme binding. Research indicates the Sec signal peptide present on DppA of Mtb must be present for heme binding to occur. DppA exhibits a much lower dissociation constant than other PBPs, around ~1.5 uM. This is significantly less than functionally similar proteins such as Haemophilus influenzae’s HbpA or E. Coli’s DppA (HbpA = ~655 uM and DppA of E. Coli = ~10 uM).

Crystal Structure of DppA

Crystal structure was obtained at 1.27Å resolution, with Rwork/free = 12.8/16.5%. The structure shows a globular, heart-like appearance. The tertiary structure is formed from two globular and mildly offset halves which are quite complementary. The two halves fold onto each other, similar to two shells of a mollusk.

“Clothespin Spring” α-helical Hinge

A connects the to the . This is speculated to function similar to a “clothespin spring,” maintaining a closed conformation.

Role of Tetrapeptide Binding in Core

Between the two halves of the protein, buried inside the core, is a . The function of this is not as of yet fully understood. The highly conserved residues in the peptide-binding pocket of DppA were mutated to alanine by researchers. E. Coli did not yield any D445 mutant protein, suggesting it did not fold and subsequently degraded. E. Coli did yield W442 mutant which, under spectroscopic analysis, appeared to bind and rapidly dissociate from heme. This suggests that this residue perhaps plays a role in maintaining a specific flexibility of the DppA halves.

Solvent-Exposed Binding Sight

The CASTp software computed a solvent-accessible pocket on the closed conformation of the protein with a Richards’ solvent-accessible volume of 268Å6. Though this contains a few heme-binding residues, including , it is too small to accommodate heme. Normal mode analysis, though, showed that the first three lowest frequency modes produced a wide opening in the cleft which was brought on by a clamp-like, 10.7Å motion of the two halves, during which the halves slightly twisted in opposite directions. The generated pocket has a Richards’ solvent-accessible volume ~2583Å, which would be compatible with heme binding. Similarly, this conformation would place heme in bonding distance with several DppA residues such as .

Further Elucidation of the Binding Pocket through Specific Residues

Amino acids have been mutated experimentally to assess the effects of these specific residues on heme binding. H131 mutations resulted in a nonfunctional protein which would not fold. R179 mutations resulted in a crystalized protein nearly structurally identical to wild type DppA, with RMSD ~.11Å. After introduction to heme, spectroscopic findings showed that heme-binding abilities of the protein were abolished in the mutant, suggesting this residue plays a significant function in binding with heme.

Genetic Homology with Other PBPs

Other periplasmic binding proteins have been isolated and studied. DppA shares no homology with HemT of S. marcescens. The M. tuberculosis rv3666c-rv3663c operon, though, does encode four proteins that share ~25-45% sequence similarity with DPP dipeptide transporter of E. Coli, which similarly transports hemoglobin through the periplasmic space.

Structural Homology with Other PBPs

DppA is similar structurally to a few homologous proteins, especially to the S. typhimurium ortholog that superimposes the structure with an RMSD ~1.45Å.

References

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Marilyn Vazquez Zarazua

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