Certain proteins of unicellular organisms are translated as precursor polypeptides containing inteins (intervening proteins), which are domains capable of performing protein splicing. These domains, in conjunction with a single residue following the intein, catalyze their own excision from the surrounding protein (extein) in a multistep reaction involving the cleavage of two intein–extein peptide bonds and the formation of a new peptide bond that ligates the two exteins to yield the mature protein. We report here the solution NMR structure of a 186‐residue precursor of the KlbA intein from Methanococcus jannaschii , comprising the intein together with N‐ and C‐extein segments of 7 and 11 residues, respectively. The intein is shown to adopt a single, well‐defined globular domain, representing a HINT (Hedgehog/Intein)‐type topology. Fourteen β‐strands are arranged in a complex fold that includes four β‐hairpins and an antiparallel β‐ribbon, and there is one α‐helix, which is packed against the β‐ribbon, and one turn of 3 10 ‐helix in the loop between the β‐strands 8 and 9. The two extein segments show increased disorder, and form only minimal nonbonding contacts with the intein domain. Structure‐based mutation experiments resulted in a proposal for functional roles of individual residues in the intein catalytic mechanism.
CITATION STYLE
Johnson, M. A., Southworth, M. W., Herrmann, T., Brace, L., Perler, F. B., & Wüthrich, K. (2007). NMR structure of a KlbA intein precursor from Methanococcus jannaschii. Protein Science, 16(7), 1316–1328. https://doi.org/10.1110/ps.072816707
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