Biochemical and biophysical research communications | 2019
Structural insight into the carboxylesterase BioH from Klebsiella pneumoniae.
Abstract
The BioH carboxylesterase which is a typical α/β-hydrolase enzyme involved in biotin synthetic pathway in most bacteria. BioH acts as a gatekeeper and blocks the further elongation of its substrate. In the pathogen Klebsiella pneumoniae, BioH plays a critical role in the biosynthesis of biotin. To better understand the molecular function of BioH, we determined the crystal structure of BioH from K.\xa0pneumoniae at 2.26\u202fÅ resolution using X-ray crystallography. The structure of KpBioH consists of an α-β-α sandwich domain and a cap domain. B-factor analysis revealed that the α-β-α sandwich domain is a rigid structure, while the loops in the cap domain shows the structural flexibility. The active site of KpBioH contains the catalytic triad (Ser82-Asp207-His235) on the interface of the α-β-α sandwich domain, which is surrounded by the cap domain. Size exclusion chromatography shows that KpBioH prefers the monomeric state in solution, whereas two-fold symmetric dimeric formation of KpBioH was observed in the asymmetric unit, the conserved Cys31-based disulfide bonds can maintain the irreversible dimeric formation of KpBioH. Our study provides important structural insight for understanding the molecular mechanisms of KpBioH and its homologous proteins.