University of Wollongong
Browse

Stability of the octameric structure affects plasminogen-binding capacity of streptococcal enolase

Download (1.35 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-15, 11:59 authored by Amanda Cork, Daniel J Ericsson, Ruby H P Law, Lachlan W Casey, Eugene Valkov, Carlo Bertozzi, Anna L Stamp, Blagojce Jovcevski, Andrew Aquilina, James Whisstock, Mark Walker, Bostjan Kobe
Group A Streptococcus (GAS) is a human pathogen that has the potential to cause invasive disease by binding and activating human plasmin(ogen). Streptococcal surface enolase (SEN) is an octameric α-enolase that is localized at the GAS cell surface. In addition to its glycolytic role inside the cell, SEN functions as a receptor for plasmin(ogen) on the bacterial surface, but the understanding of the molecular basis of plasmin(ogen) binding is limited. In this study, we determined the crystal and solution structures of GAS SEN and characterized the increased plasminogen binding by two SEN mutants. The plasminogen binding ability of SENK312A and SENK362A is ~2- and ~3.4-fold greater than for the wild-type protein. A combination of thermal stability assays, native mass spectrometry and X-ray crystallography approaches shows that increased plasminogen binding ability correlates with decreased stability of the octamer. We propose that decreased stability of the octameric structure facilitates the access of plasmin(ogen) to its binding sites, leading to more efficient plasmin(ogen) binding and activation.

History

Citation

Cork, A. J., Ericsson, D. J., Law, R. H. P., Casey, L. W., Valkov, E., Bertozzi, C., Stamp, A., Jovcevski, B., Aquilina, J. Andrew., Whisstock, J. C., Walker, M. J. & Kobe, B. (2015). Stability of the octameric structure affects plasminogen-binding capacity of streptococcal enolase. PLoS ONE, 10 (3), e0121764-1 - e0121764-18.

Journal title

PLoS ONE

Volume

10

Issue

3

Pagination

e0121764

Language

English

RIS ID

99877

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC