학술논문

The crystal structure of a bacterial Sufu-like protein defines a novel group of bacterial proteins that are similar to the N-terminal domain of human Sufu.
Document Type
article
Source
Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society. 19(11)
Subject
Humans
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Bacterial Proteins
Repressor Proteins
Crystallography
Reproducibility of Results
Sequence Alignment
Sequence Analysis
Protein
Amino Acid Sequence
Protein Structure
Tertiary
Structural Homology
Protein
Sequence Homology
Amino Acid
Models
Molecular
Molecular Sequence Data
Static Electricity
Molecular Sequence Annotation
NGO1391
UniProt Q5F6Z8
Pfam PF05076
suppressor of fused
sufu-like
structural genomics
Models
Molecular
Protein Structure
Tertiary
Sequence Analysis
Protein
Sequence Homology
Amino Acid
Structural Homology
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Computation Theory and Mathematics
Other Information and Computing Sciences
Biophysics
Language
Abstract
Sufu (Suppressor of Fused), a two-domain protein, plays a critical role in regulating Hedgehog signaling and is conserved from flies to humans. A few bacterial Sufu-like proteins have previously been identified based on sequence similarity to the N-terminal domain of eukaryotic Sufu proteins, but none have been structurally or biochemically characterized and their function in bacteria is unknown. We have determined the crystal structure of a more distantly related Sufu-like homolog, NGO1391 from Neisseria gonorrhoeae, at 1.4 Å resolution, which provides the first biophysical characterization of a bacterial Sufu-like protein. The structure revealed a striking similarity to the N-terminal domain of human Sufu (r.m.s.d. of 2.6 Å over 93% of the NGO1391 protein), despite an extremely low sequence identity of ∼15%. Subsequent sequence analysis revealed that NGO1391 defines a new subset of smaller, Sufu-like proteins that are present in ∼200 bacterial species and has resulted in expansion of the SUFU (PF05076) family in Pfam.