AI Article Synopsis

  • Colicin D is a toxin produced by bacteria that specifically kills sensitive E. coli strains by targeting tRNA(Arg) through its ribonuclease activity.
  • The toxin cleaves tRNA(Arg) at a precise location, indicating its ability to recognize unique structures in tRNA molecules.
  • Two crystal structures of colicin D were studied, revealing a positively charged area that likely acts as the binding site for tRNA, and experiments show that a specific part of the catalytic domain is almost as active as the full colicin D protein.

Article Abstract

Colicin D is a plasmid-encoded proteinaceous toxin which kills sensitive Escherichia coli. Toxicity stems from ribonuclease activity that targets exclusively four isoacceptors of tRNA(Arg) with a cleavage position between 38 and 39 of the corresponding anticodons. Since no other tRNAs with the same sequences at 38 and 39 as tRNA(Arg)s are cleaved, colicin D should be capable of recognizing some higher order structure of tRNAs. We report here two crystal structures of catalytic domains of colicin D which have different N-terminal lengths, both complexed with its cognate inhibitor protein, ImmD. A row of positive charge patches is found on the surface of the catalytic domain, suggestive of the binding site of the tRNAs. This finding, together with our refined tRNase activity experiments, indicates that the catalytic domain starting at position 595 has activity almost equivalent to that of colicin D.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2004.07.206DOI Listing

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