Structural highlights
Function
[CEA5_ECOLX] Colicins are polypeptide toxins produced by and active against E.coli and closely related bacteria. This colicin is an endonuclease.
Evolutionary Conservation
Check, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf.
Publication Abstract from PubMed
Colicin E5 specifically cleaves four tRNAs in Escherichia coli that contain the modified nucleotide queuosine (Q) at the wobble position, thereby preventing protein synthesis and ultimately resulting in cell death. Here, the crystal structure of the catalytic domain of colicin E5 (E5-CRD) from E. coli was determined at 1.5 A resolution. Unexpectedly, E5-CRD adopts a core folding with a four-stranded beta-sheet packed against an alpha-helix, seen in the well-studied ribonuclease T1 despite a lack of sequence similarity. Beyond the core catalytic domain, an N-terminal helix, a C-terminal beta-strand and loop, and an extended internal loop constitute an RNA binding cleft. Mutational analysis identified five amino acids that were important for tRNA substrate binding and cleavage by E5-CRD. The structure, together with the mutational study, allows us to propose a model of colicin E5-tRNA interactions, suggesting the molecular basis of tRNA substrate recognition and the mechanism of tRNA cleavage by colicin E5.
Structural and mutational studies of the catalytic domain of colicin E5: a tRNA-specific ribonuclease.,Lin YL, Elias Y, Huang RH Biochemistry. 2005 Aug 9;44(31):10494-500. PMID:16060658[1]
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
See Also
References
- ↑ Lin YL, Elias Y, Huang RH. Structural and mutational studies of the catalytic domain of colicin E5: a tRNA-specific ribonuclease. Biochemistry. 2005 Aug 9;44(31):10494-500. PMID:16060658 doi:10.1021/bi050749s