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Rearrangements of α‐helical structures of FlgN chaperone control the binding affinity for its cognate substrates during flagellar type III export

Summary The bacterial flagellar type III export chaperones not only act as bodyguards to protect their cognate substrates from aggregation and proteolysis in the cytoplasm but also ensure the order of export through their interactions with an export gate protein FlhA. FlgN chaperone binds to FlgK an...

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Published in:Molecular microbiology 2016-08, Vol.101 (4), p.656-670
Main Authors: Kinoshita, Miki, Nakanishi, Yuki, Furukawa, Yukio, Namba, Keiichi, Imada, Katsumi, Minamino, Tohru
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c3455-3ed2c9a19923c6baa85df216e5a5055999d4248906c1ccb4e44a9e656b026653
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container_end_page 670
container_issue 4
container_start_page 656
container_title Molecular microbiology
container_volume 101
creator Kinoshita, Miki
Nakanishi, Yuki
Furukawa, Yukio
Namba, Keiichi
Imada, Katsumi
Minamino, Tohru
description Summary The bacterial flagellar type III export chaperones not only act as bodyguards to protect their cognate substrates from aggregation and proteolysis in the cytoplasm but also ensure the order of export through their interactions with an export gate protein FlhA. FlgN chaperone binds to FlgK and FlgL with nanomolar affinity and transfers them to FlhA for their efficient and rapid transport for the formation of the hook‐filament junction zone. However, it remains unknown how FlgN releases FlgK and FlgL at the FlhA export gate platform in a timely manner. Here, we have solved the crystal structure of Salmonella FlgN at 2.3 Å resolution and carried out structure‐based functional analyses. FlgN consists of three α helices, α1, α2 and α3. Helix α1 adopts two distinct, extended and bent conformations through the conformational change of N‐loop between α1 and α2. The N‐loop deletion not only increases the probability of FlgN dimer formation but also abolish the interaction between FlgN and FlgK. Highly conserved Asn‐92, Asn‐95 and Ile‐103 residues in helix α3 are involved in the strong interaction with FlgK. We propose that the N‐loop coordinates helical rearrangements of FlgN with the association and dissociation of its cognate substrates during their export. The structure and structure‐based functional analyses reveal that the N‐loop between α1 and α2 of FlgN acts as a structural switch for the rearrangement of three α helices to control the binding affinity of helix α3 for FlgK.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/mmi.13415
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FlgN chaperone binds to FlgK and FlgL with nanomolar affinity and transfers them to FlhA for their efficient and rapid transport for the formation of the hook‐filament junction zone. However, it remains unknown how FlgN releases FlgK and FlgL at the FlhA export gate platform in a timely manner. Here, we have solved the crystal structure of Salmonella FlgN at 2.3 Å resolution and carried out structure‐based functional analyses. FlgN consists of three α helices, α1, α2 and α3. Helix α1 adopts two distinct, extended and bent conformations through the conformational change of N‐loop between α1 and α2. The N‐loop deletion not only increases the probability of FlgN dimer formation but also abolish the interaction between FlgN and FlgK. Highly conserved Asn‐92, Asn‐95 and Ile‐103 residues in helix α3 are involved in the strong interaction with FlgK. We propose that the N‐loop coordinates helical rearrangements of FlgN with the association and dissociation of its cognate substrates during their export. 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FlgN chaperone binds to FlgK and FlgL with nanomolar affinity and transfers them to FlhA for their efficient and rapid transport for the formation of the hook‐filament junction zone. However, it remains unknown how FlgN releases FlgK and FlgL at the FlhA export gate platform in a timely manner. Here, we have solved the crystal structure of Salmonella FlgN at 2.3 Å resolution and carried out structure‐based functional analyses. FlgN consists of three α helices, α1, α2 and α3. Helix α1 adopts two distinct, extended and bent conformations through the conformational change of N‐loop between α1 and α2. The N‐loop deletion not only increases the probability of FlgN dimer formation but also abolish the interaction between FlgN and FlgK. Highly conserved Asn‐92, Asn‐95 and Ile‐103 residues in helix α3 are involved in the strong interaction with FlgK. We propose that the N‐loop coordinates helical rearrangements of FlgN with the association and dissociation of its cognate substrates during their export. 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FlgN chaperone binds to FlgK and FlgL with nanomolar affinity and transfers them to FlhA for their efficient and rapid transport for the formation of the hook‐filament junction zone. However, it remains unknown how FlgN releases FlgK and FlgL at the FlhA export gate platform in a timely manner. Here, we have solved the crystal structure of Salmonella FlgN at 2.3 Å resolution and carried out structure‐based functional analyses. FlgN consists of three α helices, α1, α2 and α3. Helix α1 adopts two distinct, extended and bent conformations through the conformational change of N‐loop between α1 and α2. The N‐loop deletion not only increases the probability of FlgN dimer formation but also abolish the interaction between FlgN and FlgK. Highly conserved Asn‐92, Asn‐95 and Ile‐103 residues in helix α3 are involved in the strong interaction with FlgK. We propose that the N‐loop coordinates helical rearrangements of FlgN with the association and dissociation of its cognate substrates during their export. The structure and structure‐based functional analyses reveal that the N‐loop between α1 and α2 of FlgN acts as a structural switch for the rearrangement of three α helices to control the binding affinity of helix α3 for FlgK.</abstract><cop>England</cop><pmid>27178222</pmid><doi>10.1111/mmi.13415</doi><tpages>15</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Amino Acid Sequence
Bacterial Proteins - chemistry
Bacterial Proteins - metabolism
Crystallography, X-Ray
Flagella - chemistry
Flagella - metabolism
Membrane Proteins - chemistry
Membrane Proteins - metabolism
Molecular Chaperones - chemistry
Molecular Chaperones - metabolism
Protein Binding
Protein Conformation, alpha-Helical
Protein Transport
Salmonella - metabolism
Sequence Analysis, Protein
Structure-Activity Relationship
title Rearrangements of α‐helical structures of FlgN chaperone control the binding affinity for its cognate substrates during flagellar type III export
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