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. 2010 Nov 9;5(11):e15388.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0015388.

Structural relationships in the lysozyme superfamily: significant evidence for glycoside hydrolase signature motifs

Affiliations

Structural relationships in the lysozyme superfamily: significant evidence for glycoside hydrolase signature motifs

Alexandre Wohlkönig et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Background: Chitin is a polysaccharide that forms the hard, outer shell of arthropods and the cell walls of fungi and some algae. Peptidoglycan is a polymer of sugars and amino acids constituting the cell walls of most bacteria. Enzymes that are able to hydrolyze these cell membrane polymers generally play important roles for protecting plants and animals against infection with insects and pathogens. A particular group of such glycoside hydrolase enzymes share some common features in their three-dimensional structure and in their molecular mechanism, forming the lysozyme superfamily.

Results: Besides having a similar fold, all known catalytic domains of glycoside hydrolase proteins of lysozyme superfamily (families and subfamilies GH19, GH22, GH23, GH24 and GH46) share in common two structural elements: the central helix of the all-α domain, which invariably contains the catalytic glutamate residue acting as general-acid catalyst, and a β-hairpin pointed towards the substrate binding cleft. The invariant β-hairpin structure is interestingly found to display the highest amino acid conservation in aligned sequences of a given family, thereby allowing to define signature motifs for each GH family. Most of such signature motifs are found to have promising performances for searching sequence databases. Our structural analysis further indicates that the GH motifs participate in enzymatic catalysis essentially by containing the catalytic water positioning residue of inverting mechanism.

Conclusions: The seven families and subfamilies of the lysozyme superfamily all have in common a β-hairpin structure which displays a family-specific sequence motif. These GH β-hairpin motifs contain potentially important residues for the catalytic activity, thereby suggesting the participation of the GH motif to catalysis and also revealing a common catalytic scheme utilized by enzymes of the lysozyme superfamily.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Clustering tree of the 32 structures of lysozyme superfamily.
Each enzyme is labelled by its protein code. GH families are indicated. A blue asterisk (*) is set to indicate an unreliable internal node according the jackknife test of Lanyon . The scale below the tree indicated a length of 4.0 in the modified DaliLite scoring scheme (see method).
Figure 2
Figure 2. Structural superposition of the seven GH representative structures.
Top left picture shows a superimposition of the 7 representative structures. Each representative GH structure is further shown in coloured ribbon. The protein colour scheme is grey for GH19 structure (protein code: 3cql), purple for GH22c (1iee), green for GH22i (2dqa), brown for GH23 (153l), yellow for GH24v (2lzm), blue for GH24l (1am7) and aquamarine for GH46 (1qgi). To locate the substrate binding site, the conserved catalytic glutamic acid (E67, E35, E18, E73, E11, E19 and E37 for GH19, GH22c, GH22i, GH23, GH24v, GH24l and GH46, respectively), as well as the sugar moieties found as ligands in X-ray representative structures of GH19, GH22i and GH46 are depicted in stick representation. The two regions of common structural core are showed in red colour. Limits of these regions in representative structure are 58-67/112-121 for GH19, 26-35/51-60 for GH22c, 9-18/34-43 for GH22i, 64-73/89-98 for GH23, 2-11/24-33 for GH24v, 10-19/62-71 for GH24l and 28-37/59-68 for GH46.
Figure 3
Figure 3. Amino acid conservation profiles in aligned sequences of GH families.
AL2CO conservation indices at each position in multiple sequence alignment for each GH families are mapped on the sequence of the corresponding representative protein. The regions displaying the highest conservation indices are showed in red.
Figure 4
Figure 4. WebLogo sequence signatures for GH motifs.
Basic amino acid (K, R, H) are coloured in blue, acidic (D, E) in red, aliphatic (A, V, L, I, M) in black, aromatic (W, F, Y) in green, polar (N, S, T, Q) in purple, glycine in orange, cysteine in yellow and proline in pink. Amino acid sequence numbering is based on the one of the representative structure of each GH family. Residues displaying backbone positive ϕ angle in X-ray structures are indicated by a grey or black box for extended or helical left handed conformations, respectively. Cysteine residues participating in disulfide bond are indicated by yellow boxes.

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