Structure of the Escherichia coli ProQ RNA-binding protein

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Abstract

The protein ProQ has recently been identified as a global small noncoding RNA-binding protein in Salmonella, and a similar role is anticipated for its numerous homologs in divergent bacterial species. We report the solution structure of Escherichia coli ProQ, revealing an N-terminal FinO-like domain, a C-terminal domain that unexpectedly has a Tudor domain fold commonly found in eukaryotes, and an elongated bridging intradomain linker that is flexible but nonetheless incompressible. Structure-based sequence analysis suggests that the Tudor domain was acquired through horizontal gene transfer and gene fusion to the ancestral FinO-like domain. Through a combination of biochemical and biophysical approaches, we have mapped putative RNA-binding surfaces on all three domains of ProQ and modeled the protein's conformation in the apo and RNA-bound forms. Taken together, these data suggest how the FinO, Tudor, and linker domains of ProQ cooperate to recognize complex RNA structures and serve to promote RNA-mediated regulation.

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Gonzalez, G. M., Hardwick, S. W., Maslen, S. L., Mark Skehel, J., Holmqvist, E., Vogel, J., … William Broadhurst, R. (2017). Structure of the Escherichia coli ProQ RNA-binding protein. RNA, 23(5), 696–711. https://doi.org/10.1261/rna.060343.116

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