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Published April 9, 2019 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Structures of Class Id Ribonucleotide Reductase Catalytic Subunits Reveal a Minimal Architecture for Deoxynucleotide Biosynthesis

Abstract

Class I ribonucleotide reductases (RNRs) share a common mechanism of nucleotide reduction in a catalytic α subunit. All RNRs initiate catalysis with a thiyl radical, generated in class I enzymes by a metallocofactor in a separate β subunit. Class Id RNRs use a simple mechanism of cofactor activation involving oxidation of a Mn^(II)_2 cluster by free superoxide to yield a metal-based Mn^(III)Mn^(IV)oxidant. This simple cofactor assembly pathway suggests that class Id RNRs may be representative of the evolutionary precursors to more complex class Ia–c enzymes. X-ray crystal structures of two class Id α proteins from Flavobacterium johnsoniae (Fj) and Actinobacillus ureae(Au) reveal that this subunit is distinctly small. The enzyme completely lacks common N-terminal ATP-cone allosteric motifs that regulate overall activity, a process that normally occurs by dATP-induced formation of inhibitory quaternary structures to prevent productive β subunit association. Class Id RNR activity is insensitive to dATP in the Fj and Au enzymes evaluated here, as expected. However, the class Id α protein from Fj adopts higher-order structures, detected crystallographically and in solution. The Au enzyme does not exhibit these quaternary forms. Our study reveals structural similarity between bacterial class Id and eukaryotic class Ia α subunits in conservation of an internal auxiliary domain. Our findings with the Fj enzyme illustrate that nucleotide-independent higher-order quaternary structures can form in simple RNRs with truncated or missing allosteric motifs.

Additional Information

© 2019 American Chemical Society. Received: December 4, 2018; Revised: March 6, 2019; Published: March 11, 2019. Accession Codes: PDB entries: Fj α, 6DQW; Au α, 6DQX. UniProt entries: Fj α, A5FCJ4; Fj β, A5FCJ5; Fj thioredoxin (Trx), A5FK98; Fj thioredoxin reductase (TRR), A5FNI6; Au α, E8KJ17; Au β, E8KJ18. This work was supported by grants from the Searle Scholars Program (to A.K.B.) and the National Institutes of Health (GM119707 to A.K.B.). K.M.D. is grateful for the support from the Arnold O. Beckman Postdoctoral Fellowship Program. The authors declare no competing financial interest.

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August 19, 2023
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