Crystal structures of RbsD leading to the identification of cytoplasmic sugar-binding proteins with a novel folding architecture

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Abstract

RbsD is the only protein whose biochemical function is unknown among the six gene products of the rbs operon involved in the active transport of ribose. FucU, a paralogue of RbsD conserved from bacteria to human, is also the only protein whose function is unknown among the seven gene products of the L-fucose regulon. Here we report the crystal structures of Bacillus subtilis RbsD, which reveals a novel decameric toroidal assembly of the protein. Nuclear magnetic resonance and other studies on RbsD reveal that the intersubunit cleft of the protein binds specific forms of D-ribose, but it does not have an enzyme activity toward the sugar. Likewise, FucU binds L-fucose but lacks an enzyme activity toward this sugar. We conclude that RbsD and FucU are cytoplasmic sugar-binding proteins, a novel class of proteins whose functional role may lie in helping influx of the sugar substrates.

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Kim, M. S., Shin, J., Lee, W., Lee, H. S., & Oh, B. H. (2003). Crystal structures of RbsD leading to the identification of cytoplasmic sugar-binding proteins with a novel folding architecture. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(30), 28173–28180. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M304523200

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