辅因子
古细菌
DNA连接酶
生物分子
生物化学
酶
化学
生物
基因
作者
Ghader Bashiri,Esther M. M. Bulloch,William R. Bramley,Madison Davidson,Stephanie M. Stuteley,Paul G. Young,Paul W. R. Harris,Muhammad S. H. Naqvi,Martin Middleditch,Michael Schmitz,Wei‐chen Chang,Edward N. Baker,C.J. Squire
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-45632-1
摘要
Abstract Poly-γ-glutamate tails are a distinctive feature of archaeal, bacterial, and eukaryotic cofactors, including the folates and F 420 . Despite decades of research, key mechanistic questions remain as to how enzymes successively add glutamates to poly-γ-glutamate chains while maintaining cofactor specificity. Here, we show how poly-γ-glutamylation of folate and F 420 by folylpolyglutamate synthases and γ-glutamyl ligases, non-homologous enzymes, occurs via processive addition of L -glutamate onto growing γ-glutamyl chain termini. We further reveal structural snapshots of the archaeal γ-glutamyl ligase (CofE) in action, crucially including a bulged-chain product that shows how the cofactor is retained while successive glutamates are added to the chain terminus. This bulging substrate model of processive poly-γ-glutamylation by terminal extension is arguably ubiquitous in such biopolymerisation reactions, including addition to folates, and demonstrates convergent evolution in diverse species from archaea to humans.
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