Dissecting the structure, function, and mechanisms of diverse protein-based metabolic organelles in bacteria

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $588,223 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Abstract/Summary: Bacterial microcompartments (MCPs) are giant protein assemblies that serve as metabolic organelles in diverse bacteria found throughout the microbial world. These extraordinary structures are composed of thousands of subunits that assemble to form a polyhedral outer shell encapsulating a series of sequentially acting metabolic enzymes. MCPs typically encapsulate pathways that produce volatile or toxic intermediates that must be confined and metabolized to other compounds before diffusing out of the MCP and into the bacterial cytosol. MCPs confer special growth advantages to enteric bacteria and are linked to bacterial pathogenesis and the dissemination of enteric pathogens. Prior studies have focused primarily on selected MCP types, and important advances have been made. However, a number of mechanistic questions remain unanswered and some important MCP types are essentially uncharacterized. Prior work by our dual-PI team (Bobik and Yeates) focused primarily on the propanediol utilization (Pdu) MCP, which is used by Salmonella and other enteric bacteria to degrade 1,2-propanediol while sequestering a toxic intermediate, propionaldehyde. Our research in the previous cycle led to numerous important discoveries and critical insights into mechanistic aspects of how the Pdu MCP functions. Our key findings cover biological phenomena related to protein structure and assembly, molecular recognition, molecular transport, and molecular evolution. Our current proposal focuses on (1) remaining questions about the assembly and operation of the Pdu MCP of Salmonella, and (2) early-stage investigations into a new and diverse class of MCPs (which we identified bioinformatically) whose key internalized enzymes catalyze glycyl-radical-based reactions. Our continuing work on the Pdu MCP will answer outstanding questions about protein-protein interactions used to guide the assembly of the Pdu MCP– our earlier work led to the discovery of peptide targeting sequences that direct enzyme encapsulation by binding the interior surface of MCP shells. However, further experiments are required to paint a clearer picture about preferential associations by varied targeting sequences and their contribution to higher-order structural organization. In prior work, we also showed that pores through the shell proteins in the Pdu MCP have evolved for selective diffusive molecular transport of small molecules. In our continuing work, we propose experiments to investigate the dynamics and regulation of protein conformational changes that affect pore opening and closing in MCP shell proteins. The second part of the proposal focuses on the newly-defined and little-studied class of MCPs that encapsulate metabolic pathways dependent on glycyl-radical (Gr) enzymes. A number of Gr-MCPs are found in bacteria that inhabit the large intestine and which can infect the urinary tract. We will undertake work on three proposed Gr subtypes: one type that metabolizes 1,2- PD (similar...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10141180
Project number
5R01AI081146-12
Recipient
IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
THOMAS Aquinas BOBIK
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$588,223
Award type
5
Project period
2009-07-17 → 2023-04-30