2aiz

From Proteopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Solution structure of peptidoglycan associated lipoprotein from Haemophilus influenza bound to UDP-N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanyl-D-glutamyl-meso-2,6-diaminopimeloyl-D-alanyl-D-alanine

Structural highlights

2aiz is a 2 chain structure with sequence from Haemophilus influenzae and Synthetic construct. Full experimental information is available from OCA. For a guided tour on the structure components use FirstGlance.
Method:Solution NMR, 20 models
Ligands:6CL, AMU, DAL, DGL, UDP
Resources:FirstGlance, OCA, PDBe, RCSB, PDBsum, ProSAT

Function

PAL_HAEIN Thought to play a role in bacterial envelope integrity. Links the outer membrane to the peptidoglycan layer.

Evolutionary Conservation

Check, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf.

Publication Abstract from PubMed

Peptidoglycan-associated lipoprotein (Pal) is a potential vaccine candidate from Haemophilus influenzae that is highly conserved in Gram-negative bacteria and anchored to the outer membrane through an N-terminal lipid attachment. Pal stabilizes the outer membrane by providing a noncovalent link to the peptidoglycan (PG) layer through a periplasmic domain. Using NMR spectroscopy, we determined the three-dimensional structure of a complex between the periplasmic domain of Pal and a biosynthetic peptidoglycan precursor (PG-P), UDP-N-acetylmuramyl-L-Ala-alpha-d-Glu-m-Dap-D-Ala-d-Ala (m-Dap is meso-diaminopimelate). Pal has a binding pocket lined with conserved surface residues that interacts exclusively with the peptide portion of the ligand. The m-Dap residue, which is mainly found in the cell walls of Gram-negative bacteria, is sequestered in this pocket and plays an important role by forming hydrogen bond and hydrophobic contacts to Pal. The structure provides insight into the mode of cell wall recognition for a broad class of Gram-negative membrane proteins, including OmpA and MotB, which have peptidoglycan-binding domains homologous to that of Pal.

Peptidoglycan recognition by Pal, an outer membrane lipoprotein.,Parsons LM, Lin F, Orban J Biochemistry. 2006 Feb 21;45(7):2122-8. PMID:16475801[1]

From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Loading citation details..
Citations
13 reviews cite this structure
Kovacs-Simon et al. (2011)
No citations found

References

  1. Parsons LM, Lin F, Orban J. Peptidoglycan recognition by Pal, an outer membrane lipoprotein. Biochemistry. 2006 Feb 21;45(7):2122-8. PMID:16475801 doi:10.1021/bi052227i

Contents


PDB ID 2aiz

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools