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Department of Pharmacology

 
Author(s): 
Usenik, A, Renko, M, Mihelič, M, Lindič, N, Borišek, J, Perdih, A, Pretnar, G, Müller, U, Turk, D
Abstract: 

Bacterial cell wall proteins play crucial roles in cell survival, growth, and environmental interactions. In Gram-positive bacteria, cell wall proteins include several types that are non-covalently attached via cell wall binding domains. Of the two conserved surface-layer (S-layer)-anchoring modules composed of three tandem SLH or CWB2 domains, the latter have so far eluded structural insight. The crystal structures of Cwp8 and Cwp6 reveal multi-domain proteins, each containing an embedded CWB2 module. It consists of a triangular trimer of Rossmann-fold CWB2 domains, a feature common to 29 cell wall proteins in Clostridium difficile 630. The structural basis of the intact module fold necessary for its binding to the cell wall is revealed. A comparison with previously reported atomic force microscopy data of S-layers suggests that C. difficile S-layers are complex oligomeric structures, likely composed of several different proteins.

Publication ID: 
881810
Published date: 
7 March 2017
Publication source: 
pubmed
Publication type: 
Journal articles
Journal name: 
Structure
Publication volume: 
25
Publisher: 
Parent title: 
Edition: 
Publication number: