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Crystal structures and biochemical characterization of DNA sliding clamps from three Gram-negative bacterial pathogens

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posted on 2024-11-16, 02:24 authored by Amy McGrath, Alexander Martyn, Louise Whittell, Fay E Dawes, Jennifer BeckJennifer Beck, Nicholas DixonNicholas Dixon, Michael KelsoMichael Kelso, Aaron OakleyAaron Oakley
Bacterial sliding clamps bind to DNA and act as protein-protein interaction hubs for several proteins involved in DNA replication and repair. The partner proteins all bind to a common pocket on sliding clamps via conserved linear peptide sequence motifs, which suggest the pocket as an attractive target for development of new antibiotics. Herein we report the X-ray crystal structures and biochemical characterization of β sliding clamps from the Gram-negative pathogens Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Acinetobacter baumannii and Enterobacter cloacae. The structures reveal close similarity between the pathogen and Escherichia coli clamps and similar patterns of binding to linear clamp-binding motif peptides. The results suggest that linear motif-sliding clamp interactions are well conserved and an antibiotic targeting the sliding clamp should have broad-spectrum activity against Gram-negative pathogens.

Funding

Fragment-based screening approaches for new antibiotics directed against the bacterial sliding clamp

Australian Research Council

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Molecular Interactions with an antibiotic target in DNA replication

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

McGrath, A. E., Martyn, A. P., Whittell, L. R., Dawes, F. E., Beck, J. L., Dixon, N. E., Kelso, M. J. & Oakley, A. J. (2018). Crystal structures and biochemical characterization of DNA sliding clamps from three Gram-negative bacterial pathogens.. Journal of Structural Biology, 204 (3), 396-405.

Journal title

Journal of Structural Biology

Volume

204

Issue

3

Pagination

396-405

Language

English

RIS ID

131382

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