Crystal structures of the elusive Rhizobium etli l-asparaginase reveal a peculiar active site

November 29, 2021

Title

Crystal structures of the elusive Rhizobium etli l-asparaginase reveal a peculiar active site

Author

Joanna l. Loch, Barbara Imiolczyk, Joanna Sliwiak, Anna Wantuch, Magdalena Bejger, Miroslaw Gilski & Marius Jaskolski

Year

2021

Journal

Nature Communications

Abstract

Rhizobium etli, a nitrogen-fixing bacterial symbiont of legume plants, encodes an essential l-asparaginase (ReAV) with no sequence homology to known enzymes with this activity. High-resolution crystal structures of ReAV show indeed a structurally distinct, dimeric enzyme, with some resemblance to glutaminases and β-lactamases. However, ReAV has no glutaminase or lactamase activity, and at pH 9 its allosteric asparaginase activity is relatively high, with Km for l-Asn at 4.2 mM and kcat of 438 s−1. The active site of ReAV, deduced from structural comparisons and confirmed by mutagenesis experiments, contains a highly specific Zn2+ binding site without a catalytic role. The extensive active site includes residues with unusual chemical properties. There are two Ser-Lys tandems, all connected through a network of H-bonds to the Zn center, and three tightly bound water molecules near Ser48, which clearly indicate the catalytic nucleophile.

Instrument

J-815

Keywords

Rhizobium etli, ReAV, enzyme, catalytic nucleophile