Journal:Acta Cryst D:S2059798321008937

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Bacterial Homospermidine Synthase
Bacterial Homospermidine Synthase
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The highly conserved bacterial homospermidine synthase (HSS) is a key enzyme of the polyamine metabolism of many proteobacteria including pathogenic strains such as ''Legionella pneumophila'', ''Brucella spp.'', and various ''Pseudomonas aeruginosa'' strains<ref name="Shaw">PMID:20194510</ref>. The enzyme HSS is required for the NAD-dependent synthesis of the polyamine homospermidine (HSP) from the diamine putrescine (PUT) (Figure 1)<ref name="Tait">PMID:437275</ref>. Recently we have determined the crystal structures of two bacterial HSS, HSS from Blastochloris viridis (BvHSS) and from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PaHSS). BvHSS exists as a homo-dimeric enzyme in solution, whereas the PaHSS is monomeric in solution but displays the same dimeric arrangement in the crystal as BvHSS<ref name="Krossa">PMID:26776105</ref> (; Helfrich & Scheidig, 2021).
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The highly conserved bacterial homospermidine synthase (HSS) is a key enzyme of the polyamine metabolism of many proteobacteria including pathogenic strains such as ''Legionella pneumophila'', ''Brucella spp.'', and various ''Pseudomonas aeruginosa'' strains<ref name="Shaw">PMID:20194510</ref>. The enzyme HSS is required for the NAD-dependent synthesis of the polyamine homospermidine (HSP) from the diamine putrescine (PUT) (Figure 1)<ref name="Tait">PMID:437275</ref>. Recently we have determined the crystal structures of two bacterial HSS, HSS from Blastochloris viridis (BvHSS) and from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PaHSS). BvHSS exists as a homo-dimeric enzyme in solution, whereas the PaHSS is monomeric in solution but displays the same dimeric arrangement in the crystal as BvHSS<ref name="Krossa">PMID:26776105</ref>,<ref name="Helfrich1">PMID:34605434</ref>.
The HSS is composed of two domains, an “NAD(P)-binding Rossmann-like domain” and an “HSS-like domain” (Figure 2). The substrate binding pocket is located between these two domains. The cofactor NAD(H) is bound as a prosthetic group in the binding pocket with its nicotinamide ring being part of the active site. An “ionic slide” (BvHSS residues D94 and E117<ref name="Krossa">PMID:26776105</ref>) was proposed to lead positively charged amine substrates from the entrance of the binding pocket into the active site. The entrance tunnel is thereby lined by a so-called “track-and-trace” loop (BvHSS residues 114-130 <ref name="Krossa">PMID:26776105</ref>). Both enzymes display structural characteristics at their active site suggesting cation-π interaction through a highly conserved tryptophan as an important contribution for the catalyzed reaction.
The HSS is composed of two domains, an “NAD(P)-binding Rossmann-like domain” and an “HSS-like domain” (Figure 2). The substrate binding pocket is located between these two domains. The cofactor NAD(H) is bound as a prosthetic group in the binding pocket with its nicotinamide ring being part of the active site. An “ionic slide” (BvHSS residues D94 and E117<ref name="Krossa">PMID:26776105</ref>) was proposed to lead positively charged amine substrates from the entrance of the binding pocket into the active site. The entrance tunnel is thereby lined by a so-called “track-and-trace” loop (BvHSS residues 114-130 <ref name="Krossa">PMID:26776105</ref>). Both enzymes display structural characteristics at their active site suggesting cation-π interaction through a highly conserved tryptophan as an important contribution for the catalyzed reaction.
Polyamines
Polyamines

Revision as of 10:45, 17 November 2021

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