Crystal structure of the MazE/MazF complex: molecular bases of antidote-toxin recognition
- PMID: 12718874
- DOI: 10.1016/s1097-2765(03)00097-2
Crystal structure of the MazE/MazF complex: molecular bases of antidote-toxin recognition
Abstract
A structure of the Escherichia coli chromosomal MazE/MazF addiction module has been determined at 1.7 A resolution. Addiction modules consist of stable toxin and unstable antidote proteins that govern bacterial cell death. MazE (antidote) and MazF (toxin) form a linear heterohexamer composed of alternating toxin and antidote homodimers (MazF(2)-MazE(2)-MazF(2)). The MazE homodimer contains a beta barrel from which two extended C termini project, making interactions with flanking MazF homodimers that resemble the plasmid-encoded toxins CcdB and Kid. The MazE/MazF heterohexamer structure documents that the mechanism of antidote-toxin recognition is common to both chromosomal and plasmid-borne addiction modules, and provides general molecular insights into toxin function, antidote degradation in the absence of toxin, and promoter DNA binding by antidote/toxin complexes.
Comment in
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Distressing bacteria: structure of a prokaryotic detox program.Mol Cell. 2003 Apr;11(4):848-50. doi: 10.1016/s1097-2765(03)00146-1. Mol Cell. 2003. PMID: 12718870 Review.
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