The Crystal Structure of Nitrosomonas Europaea Sucrose Synthase Reveals Critical Conformational Changes and Insights into the Sucrose Metabolism in Prokaryotes

Rui Wu, Matías D Asención Diez, Carlos M. Figueroa, Matías Machtey, Alberto A Iglesias, Miguel Ballicora, Dali Liu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In this paper we report the first crystal structure of a prokaryotic sucrose synthase from the non-photosynthetic bacterium Nitrosomonas europaea . The obtained structure was in an open form, whereas the only other available structure from the plant Arabidopsis thaliana was in a closed conformation. Comparative structural analysis revealed a “hinge-latch” combination, which is critical to transition between the open and closed forms of the enzyme. The N. europaea sucrose synthase shares the same fold as the GT-B family of the retaining glycosyltransferases. In addition, a triad of conserved homologous catalytic residues in the family showed to be functionally critical in the N. europaea sucrose synthase (Arg567, Lys572, Glu663). This implies that sucrose synthase shares not only a common origin with the GT-B family, but also a similar catalytic mechanism. The enzyme preferred transferring glucose from ADP-glucose rather than UDP-glucose like the eukaryotic counterparts. This predicts that these prokaryotic organisms have a different sucrose metabolic scenario from plants. Nucleotide preference determines where the glucose moiety is targeted after sucrose is degraded.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalChemistry: Faculty Publications and Other Works
Volume197
Issue number17
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2015

Keywords

  • prokaryotic sucrose synthase
  • crystal structure

Disciplines

  • Chemistry
  • Biochemistry
  • Biology
  • Molecular Biology

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