8 research outputs found
The effect of sex on immune cells in healthy aging: Elderly women have more robust natural killer lymphocytes than do elderly men
Profound Asymmetry in the Structure of the cAMP-free cAMP Receptor Protein (CRP) from Mycobacterium tuberculosisS⃞
The cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP, also called catabolite
gene activator protein or CAP) plays a key role in
metabolic regulation in bacteria and has become a widely studied model
allosteric transcription factor. On binding its effector cAMP in the
N-terminal domain, CRP undergoes a structural transition to a conformation
capable of specific DNA binding in the C-terminal domain and transcription
initiation. The crystal structures of Escherichia coli CRP (EcCRP) in
the cAMP-bound state, both with and without DNA, are known, although its
structure in the off state (cAMP-free, apoCRP) remains unknown. We describe
the crystal structure at 2.0Å resolution of the cAMP-free CRP homodimer
from Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv (MtbCRP),
whose sequence is 30% identical with EcCRP, as the first reported structure of
an off-state CRP. The overall structure is similar to that seen for the
cAMP-bound EcCRP, but the apo MtbCRP homodimer displays a unique level of
asymmetry, with a root mean square deviation of 3.5Å between all
Cα positions in the two subunits. Unlike structures of on-state EcCRP
and other homologs in which the C-domains are asymmetrically positioned but
possess the same internal conformation, the two C-domains of apo MtbCRP differ
both in hinge structure and in internal arrangement, with numerous residues
that have completely different local environments and hydrogen bond
interactions, especially in the hinge and DNA-binding regions. Comparison of
the structures of apo MtbCRP and DNA-bound EcCRP shows how DNA binding would
be inhibited in the absence of cAMP and supports a mechanism involving
functional asymmetry in apoCRP
