Structural analysis of the housecleaning nucleoside triphosphate pyrophosphohydrolase MazG from Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Sen Wang, Baocai Gao, Anke Chen, Zhifei Zhang, Sheng Wang, Liangdong Lv, Guoping Zhao, Jixi Li
Frontiers in Microbiology · 2023-03
Abstract
The housecleaning enzyme of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), MazG, is a nucleoside triphosphate pyrophosphohydrolase (NTP-PPase) and can hydrolyze all canonical or non-canonical NTPs into NMPs and pyrophosphate. The Mycobacterium tuberculosis MazG (Mtb-MazG) contributes to antibiotic resistance in response to oxidative or nitrosative stress under dormancy, making it a promising target for treating TB in latent infection patients. However, the structural basis of Mtb-MazG is not clear. Here we describe the crystal structure of Mtb-MazG (1–185) at 2.7 Å resolution, composed of two similar folded spherical domains in tandem. Unlike other all-α NTP pyrophosphatases, Mtb-MazG has an N-terminal extra region composed of three α-helices and five β-strands. The second domain is global, with five α-helices located in the N-terminal domain. Gel-filtration assay and SAXS analysis show that Mtb-MazG forms an enzyme-active dimer in solution. In addition, the metal ion Mg 2+ is bound with four negative-charged residues Glu119, Glu122, Glu138, and Asp141. Different truncations and site-directed mutagenesis revealed that the full-length dimeric form and the metal ion Mg 2+ are indispensable for the catalytic activity of Mtb-MazG. Thus, our work provides new insights into understanding the molecular basis of Mtb - MazG.
MeSH terms
- Pyrophosphatases
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Chemistry
- Biochemistry
- Pyrophosphate
- Mycobacterium smegmatis
- Enzyme
- Nucleoside