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PDBsum entry 2cc3

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protein ligands Protein-protein interface(s) links
Secretion system PDB id
2cc3

 

 

 

 

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Contents
Protein chains
144 a.a. *
Ligands
MPD ×2
Waters ×171
* Residue conservation analysis
PDB id:
2cc3
Name: Secretion system
Title: Structure of agrobacterium tumefaciens virb8 protein
Structure: Protein virb8. Chain: a, b. Fragment: periplasmic domain, residues 92-237. Engineered: yes. Other_details: residues 88-91 are from tag and residues 92-231 correspond to virb8
Source: Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Organism_taxid: 358. Strain: ptic58. Expressed in: escherichia coli. Expression_system_taxid: 469008.
Biol. unit: Dimer (from PDB file)
Resolution:
2.20Å     R-factor:   0.239     R-free:   0.301
Authors: S.Bailey,D.Ward,R.Middleton,G.Grossmann,P.C.Zambryski
Key ref:
S.Bailey et al. (2006). Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirB8 structure reveals potential protein-protein interaction sites. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 103, 2582-2587. PubMed id: 16481621 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0511216103
Date:
11-Jan-06     Release date:   30-Jan-06    
PROCHECK
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 Headers
 References

Protein chains
Pfam   ArchSchema ?
P17798  (VIRB8_AGRFC) -  Protein virB8 from Agrobacterium fabrum (strain C58 / ATCC 33970)
Seq:
Struc:
237 a.a.
144 a.a.*
Key:    PfamA domain  Secondary structure  CATH domain
* PDB and UniProt seqs differ at 4 residue positions (black crosses)

 

 
DOI no: 10.1073/pnas.0511216103 Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 103:2582-2587 (2006)
PubMed id: 16481621  
 
 
Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirB8 structure reveals potential protein-protein interaction sites.
S.Bailey, D.Ward, R.Middleton, J.G.Grossmann, P.C.Zambryski.
 
  ABSTRACT  
 
Bacterial type IV secretion systems (T4SS) translocate DNA and/or proteins to recipient cells, thus providing a mechanism for conjugative transfer of genetic material and bacterial pathogenesis. Here we describe the first structure of a core component from the archetypal Agrobacterium tumefaciens T4SS: the 2.2-A resolution crystal structure of the VirB8 periplasmic domain (pVirB8(AT)). VirB8 forms a dimer in the crystal, and we identify residues likely important for stabilization of the dimer interface. Structural comparison of pVirB8(AT) with Brucella suis VirB8 confirms that the monomers have a similar fold. In addition, the pVirB8(AT) dimer superimposes very closely on the B. suis VirB8 dimer, supporting the proposal that dimer formation in the crystal reflects self-interactions that are biologically significant. The evolutionary conservation level for each residue was obtained from a data set of 84 VirB8 homologs and projected onto the protein structure to indicate conserved surface patches that likely contact other T4SS proteins.
 
  Selected figure(s)  
 
Figure 1.
Fig. 1. Structural features of pVirB8^AT and comparison with pVirB8^BS. Monomer A is colored magenta and cyan and monomer B is gray. (A) Ribbon representation of monomer A with secondary structure elements labeled. (B) Surface rendered image of pVirB8^AT in same orientation as A showing the deep groove. The surface is colored according to the secondary structure: cyan for helical segments, pink for -strands, and gray for loops. (C) C trace of superimposed pVirB8^AT (green with regions of greatest divergence highlighted in cyan) and pVirB8^BS (blue) monomers. (D) Ribbon diagram of the dimer rotated 90° with respect to A. Boxes indicate the three dimer contact regions. The side chains of Arg-107, Asp-113, Asp-115, Thr-116, Tyr-119, and Arg-157 are shown, and two 2-methyl-2-4-pentanediol molecules (yellow) are shown as stick models. (E–G) correspond to boxes D1, D2, and D3 and show details of the three dimer contact regions viewed down the dimer axis, equivalent to a 90° rotation from the view in D. (E) Residues involved in the major region of dimer contact. (F) Interactions across the central channel between the monomers. (G) Four aspartates at the lowest level of the interface.
Figure 3.
Fig. 3. Stick diagram of the loop containing helix 5. The highly conserved residues R210, N213, P214, G216, and V219 are part of this loop. Dashed lines represent the hydrogen bonds between the side chains of Arg-210 and Asn-213 and main chain atoms.
 
  Figures were selected by an automated process.  

Literature references that cite this PDB file's key reference

  PubMed id Reference
20070257 A.T.Rêgo, V.Chandran, and G.Waksman (2010).
Two-step and one-step secretion mechanisms in Gram-negative bacteria: contrasting the type IV secretion system and the chaperone-usher pathway of pilus biogenesis.
  Biochem J, 425, 475-488.  
20621482 G.Waksman, and R.Fronzes (2010).
Molecular architecture of bacterial type IV secretion systems.
  Trends Biochem Sci, 35, 691-698.  
20642798 K.Wallden, A.Rivera-Calzada, and G.Waksman (2010).
Type IV secretion systems: versatility and diversity in function.
  Cell Microbiol, 12, 1203-1212.  
19946141 C.E.Alvarez-Martinez, and P.J.Christie (2009).
Biological diversity of prokaryotic type IV secretion systems.
  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev, 73, 775-808.  
19251859 G.Bourg, R.Sube, D.O'Callaghan, and G.Patey (2009).
Interactions between Brucella suis VirB8 and its homolog TraJ from the plasmid pSB102 underline the dynamic nature of type IV secretion systems.
  J Bacteriol, 191, 2985-2992.  
19279686 J.J.Gillespie, N.C.Ammerman, S.M.Dreher-Lesnick, M.S.Rahman, M.J.Worley, J.C.Setubal, B.S.Sobral, and A.F.Azad (2009).
An anomalous type IV secretion system in Rickettsia is evolutionarily conserved.
  PLoS ONE, 4, e4833.  
19756009 R.Fronzes, P.J.Christie, and G.Waksman (2009).
The structural biology of type IV secretion systems.
  Nat Rev Microbiol, 7, 703-714.  
18084070 N.Handa, S.Kishishita, S.Morita, R.Akasaka, Z.Jin, J.Chrzas, L.Chen, Z.J.Liu, B.C.Wang, S.Sugano, A.Tanaka, T.Terada, M.Shirouzu, and S.Yokoyama (2007).
Structure of the human Tim44 C-terminal domain in complex with pentaethylene glycol: ligand-bound form.
  Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr, 63, 1225-1234.
PDB code: 2cw9
16648257 A.Paschos, G.Patey, D.Sivanesan, C.Gao, R.Bayliss, G.Waksman, D.O'callaghan, and C.Baron (2006).
Dimerization and interactions of Brucella suis VirB8 with VirB4 and VirB10 are required for its biological activity.
  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 103, 7252-7257.  
17215876 C.Baron (2006).
VirB8: a conserved type IV secretion system assembly factor and drug target.
  Biochem Cell Biol, 84, 890-899.  
16861687 G.Patey, Z.Qi, G.Bourg, C.Baron, and D.O'Callaghan (2006).
Swapping of periplasmic domains between Brucella suis VirB8 and a pSB102 VirB8 homologue allows heterologous complementation.
  Infect Immun, 74, 4945-4949.  
The most recent references are shown first. Citation data come partly from CiteXplore and partly from an automated harvesting procedure. Note that this is likely to be only a partial list as not all journals are covered by either method. However, we are continually building up the citation data so more and more references will be included with time. Where a reference describes a PDB structure, the PDB code is shown on the right.

 

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