Crystal structure of CodW in Bacillus Subtilis - the first N-terminal serine pretense

  • Park, Seong-Hwan (Department of Life Science, Kwangju Institute of Science and Technology) ;
  • Park, Hyun-Ho (Department of Life Science, Kwangju Institute of Science and Technology) ;
  • Lim, Young-Jun (Department of Life Science, Kwangju Institute of Science and Technology) ;
  • Kang, Min-Suk (NRL of Protein Biochemistry, School of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University) ;
  • Lim, Byung-Kook (NRL of Protein Biochemistry, School of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University) ;
  • Seong, Ihn-Sik (NRL of Protein Biochemistry, School of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University) ;
  • Jimin Wang (Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University) ;
  • Chung, Chin-Ha (NRL of Protein Biochemistry, School of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University) ;
  • Eom, Soo-Hyun (Department of Life Science, Kwangju Institute of Science and Technology)
  • Published : 2002.11.01

Abstract

CodWX, encoded by the cod operon in Bacillus subtilis, is a member of the ATP-dependent protease complex family, and is homologous to the eukaryotic 26S proteasome. It consists of two multimeric complexes: two hexameric ATPase caps of CodX and a protease chamber consisting of CodW dodecamer. Prior structural studies have shown that the N-terminal threonine residue is solely functional as a proteolytic nucleophile in ATP-dependent proteases such as HslV and certain β-type subunits of 20S proteasome, which have a primary sequence similarity of -50% and -20% with CodW respectively. Here we present a 3.0 Å resolution crystal structure of CodW, which is the first N-terminal serine protease among the known proteolytic enzymes. In spite of the same fold and the conserved contacts between subunits with HslV in E. coli and H. influenza, this structure shows the five additional residues extending from conserved Thr1 among the other ATP-dependent pretense and extraordinary basic proteolytic chamber.

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