The scientists produced the structural map of this nanomachine - diacylglycerol kinase - by using a 'hit and run' crystallography technique.
By using one of the brightest X-ray sources on Earth, scientists have drawn up molecular blueprints of a tiny cellular 'nanomachine', whose evolution is an extraordinary feat of nature. The scientists produced the structural map of this nanomachine - diacylglycerol kinase - by using a 'hit and run' crystallography technique. In doing so, they have been able to understand how the tiny enzyme performs critical cellular duties - answering questions that have been on the table for over 50 years about this 'paradigmatic protein'.
‘By producing the structural blueprint of nanomachine - diacylglycerol kinase, scientists have been able to understand how the tiny enzyme performs critical cellular duties.’
Kinases are key players in metabolism, cell signalling, protein regulation, cellular transport, secretory processes, and many other cellular pathways that allow us to function healthily. They coordinate the transfer of energy from certain molecules to specific substrates, affecting their activity, reactivity, and ability to bind other molecules. Diacylglycerol kinase, the focus of this study, plays a role in bacterial cell wall synthesis. It is a small, integral membrane enzyme that coordinates a particularly complex reaction: its lipid substrate is hydrophobic (repelled by water) and resides in cell membranes, while its co-substrate, ATP, is entirely water soluble.
How it does this had remained a mystery for decades, but the newly produced blueprints have answered these questions.
Professor of Membrane Structural and Functional Biology at Trinity College Dublin, Martin Caffrey, said, "How this diminutive nanomachine, less than 10 nm tall, brings these two disparate substrates together at the membrane interface for reaction is revealed in a molecularly detailed crystal structure. It is the smallest known kinase, and seeing its form with crystal clarity is now helping us to answer questions that formed from over 50 years of work on this paradigmatic protein."
Figuring out how this tiny machine works at the molecular level was enormously facilitated by our use of one of the brightest X-ray sources on Earth, the X-ray free-electron laser at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center.
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According to Petra Fromme, the director of the Center for Applied Structural Discovery at Arizona State University's Biodesign Institute and a co-author of the current study, "This is the first structure of a protein that is a membrane-integral enzyme and important biocatalyst in the cell."
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The ASU team contributed to the work with expertise in crystal growth and sample injection, as well as data collection and evaluation.
In the future, the scientists hope to extend their free-electron laser work to make 'X-ray movies' of this remarkable nanomachine, so as to watch how it 'does chemistry' in atomic detail in real time.
The article describing the work has just been published in Nature Communications.
Source-Eurekalert