2ff4
From Proteopedia
Mycobacterium tuberculosis EmbR in complex with low affinity phosphopeptide
Structural highlights
Function[EMBR_MYCTU] Positively regulates the transcription of the embCAB operon. Exhibits ATPase and GTPase activities.[1] [2] [RAD9_YEAST] Essential for cell cycle arrest at the G2 stage following DNA damage by X-irradiation or inactivation of DNA ligase. Evolutionary ConservationCheck, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf. Publication Abstract from PubMedSer/Thr phosphorylation has emerged as a critical regulatory mechanism in a number of bacteria, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis. This problematic pathogen encodes 11 eukaryotic-like Ser/Thr kinases, yet few substrates or signaling targets have been characterized. Here, we report the structure of EmbR (2.0 A), a putative transcriptional regulator of key arabinosyltransferases (EmbC, -A, and -B), and an endogenous substrate of the Ser/Thr-kinase PknH. EmbR presents a unique domain architecture: the N-terminal winged-helix DNA-binding domain forms an extensive interface with the all-helical central bacterial transcriptional activation domain and is positioned adjacent to the regulatory C-terminal forkhead-associated (FHA) domain, which mediates binding to a Thr-phosphorylated site in PknH. The structure in complex with a phospho-peptide (1.9 A) reveals a conserved mode of phospho-threonine recognition by the FHA domain and evidence for specific recognition of the cognate kinase. The present structures suggest hypotheses as to how EmbR might propagate the phospho-relay signal from its cognate kinase, while serving as a template for the structurally uncharacterized Streptomyces antibiotic regulatory protein family of transcription factors. Molecular structure of EmbR, a response element of Ser/Thr kinase signaling in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.,Alderwick LJ, Molle V, Kremer L, Cozzone AJ, Dafforn TR, Besra GS, Futterer K Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Feb 21;103(8):2558-63. Epub 2006 Feb 13. PMID:16477027[3] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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