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Crystal structure of UbiX, an aromatic acid decarboxylase from the psychrophilic bacterium Colwellia psychrerythraea that undergoes FMN-induced conformational changes

Cited 11 time in wos
Cited 13 time in scopus
Title
Crystal structure of UbiX, an aromatic acid decarboxylase from the psychrophilic bacterium Colwellia psychrerythraea that undergoes FMN-induced conformational changes
Authors
Do, Hackwon
Kim, Soo Jin
Lee, Chang Woo
Kim, Han-Woo
Park, Hyun Ho
Kim, Ho Min
Park, Hyun
Park, HaJeung
Lee, Jun Hyuck
Subject
Science & Technology - Other Topics
Keywords
Colwellia psychrerythraeaUbiXX-ray crystallographyAromatic acid decarboxylaseUbiquinone
Issue Date
2015
Citation
Do, Hackwon, et al. 2015. "Crystal structure of UbiX, an aromatic acid decarboxylase from the psychrophilic bacterium Colwellia psychrerythraea that undergoes FMN-induced conformational changes". Scientific Reports,, 5(8196): 1-9.
Abstract
The ubiX gene of Colwellia psychrerythraea strain 34H encodes a 3-octaprenyl-4-hydroxybenzoate carboxylase (CpsUbiX, UniProtKB code: Q489U8) that is involved in the third step of the ubiquinone biosynthesis pathway and harbors a flavin mononucleotide (FMN) as a potential cofactor. Here, we report the crystal structures of two forms of CpsUbiX: an FMN-bound wild type form and an FMN-unbound V47S mutant form. CpsUbiX is a dodecameric enzyme, and each monomer possesses a typical Rossmann-fold structure. The FMN-binding domain of UbiX is composed of three neighboring subunits. The highly conserved Gly15, Ser41, Val47, and Tyr171 residues play important roles in FMN binding. Structural comparison of the FMN-bound wild type form with the FMN-free form reveals a significant conformational difference in the C-terminal loop region (comprising residues 170?176 and 195?206). Subsequent computational modeling and liposome binding assay both suggest that the conformational flexibility observed in the C-terminal loops plays an important role in substrate and lipid bindings. The crystal structures presented in this work provide structural framework and insights into the catalytic mechanism of CpsUbiX.
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep08196
Type
Article
Appears in Collections  
2014-2016, Antarctic Organisms: Cold-Adaptation Mechanism and Its Application (14-16) / Park; Hyun (PE14070; PE15070; PE16070)
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