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Featured researches published by Chun-Yang Li.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Structural basis for dimerization and catalysis of a novel esterase from the GTSAG motif subfamily of the bacterial hormone-sensitive lipase family

Ping-Yi Li; Peng Ji; Chun-Yang Li; Yi Zhang; Guang-Long Wang; Xi-Ying Zhang; Bin-Bin Xie; Qi-Long Qin; Xiu-Lan Chen; Bai-Cheng Zhou; Yu-Zhong Zhang

Background: Catalytic mechanisms of GTSAG motif subfamily enzymes of the bacterial hormone-sensitive lipases (HSLs) family are largely unknown. Results: E25, a GTSAG motif subfamily esterase, adopts a novel dimerization pattern. Dimerization keeps the catalytic Asp282 orientation for E25 catalysis. Conclusion: Dimerization and some catalytic profiles of E25 are distinctive from other HSLs. Significance: Our study sheds light on protein folding and evolution of HSLs. Hormone-sensitive lipases (HSLs) are widely distributed in microorganisms, plants, and animals. Microbial HSLs are classified into two subfamilies, an unnamed new subfamily and the GDSAG motif subfamily. Due to the lack of structural information, the detailed catalytic mechanism of the new subfamily is not yet clarified. Based on sequence analysis, we propose to name the new subfamily as the GTSAG motif subfamily. We identified a novel HSL esterase E25, a member of the GTSAG motif subfamily, by functional metagenomic screening, and resolved its structure at 2.05 Å. E25 is mesophilic (optimum temperature at 50 °C), salt-tolerant, slightly alkaline (optimum pH at 8.5) for its activity, and capable of hydrolyzing short chain monoesters (C2–C10). E25 tends to form dimers both in the crystal and in solution. An E25 monomer contains an N-terminal CAP domain, and a classical α/β hydrolase-fold domain. Residues Ser186, Asp282, and His312 comprise the catalytic triad. Structural and mutational analyses indicated that E25 adopts a dimerization pattern distinct from other HSLs. E25 dimer is mainly stabilized by an N-terminal loop intersection from the CAP domains and hydrogen bonds and salt bridges involving seven highly conserved hydrophilic residues from the catalytic domains. Further analysis indicated that E25 also has some catalytic profiles different from other HSLs. Dimerization is essential for E25 to exert its catalytic activity by keeping the accurate orientation of the catalytic Asp282 within the catalytic triad. Our results reveal the structural basis for dimerization and catalysis of an esterase from the GTSAG motif subfamily of the HSL family.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Molecular insight into bacterial cleavage of oceanic dimethylsulfoniopropionate into dimethyl sulfide

Chun-Yang Li; Tian-Di Wei; Sheng-Hui Zhang; Xiu-Lan Chen; Xiang Gao; Peng Wang; Bin-Bin Xie; Hai-Nan Su; Qi-Long Qin; Xi-Ying Zhang; Juan Yu; Hong-Hai Zhang; Bai-Cheng Zhou; Gui-Peng Yang; Yu-Zhong Zhang

Significance DMS is an important participant in the global sulfur and carbon cycles. DMS oxidation products cause the formation of cloud condensation nuclei and hence may influence weather and climate. DMS is produced through the cleavage of dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) mainly by marine bacterial DMSP lyases. The molecular mechanism of DMSP cleavage to generate DMS remains unclear. In this study, the crystal structure of DddQ, a DMSP lyase, was solved, and detailed biochemical and structural analyses were performed. Our results also provided a foremost insight into the catalytic mechanism of the DMSP cleavage reaction. This study offers a better understanding of how marine bacteria cleave DMSP to generate the climatically important gas DMS. The microbial cleavage of dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) generates volatile DMS through the action of DMSP lyases and is important in the global sulfur and carbon cycles. When released into the atmosphere from the oceans, DMS is oxidized, forming cloud condensation nuclei that may influence weather and climate. Six different DMSP lyase genes are found in taxonomically diverse microorganisms, and dddQ is among the most abundant in marine metagenomes. Here, we examine the molecular mechanism of DMSP cleavage by the DMSP lyase, DddQ, from Ruegeria lacuscaerulensis ITI_1157. The structures of DddQ bound to an inhibitory molecule 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid and of DddQ inactivated by a Tyr131Ala mutation and bound to DMSP were solved. DddQ adopts a β-barrel fold structure and contains a Zn2+ ion and six highly conserved hydrophilic residues (Tyr120, His123, His125, Glu129, Tyr131, and His163) in the active site. Mutational and biochemical analyses indicate that these hydrophilic residues are essential to catalysis. In particular, Tyr131 undergoes a conformational change during catalysis, acting as a base to initiate the β-elimination reaction in DMSP lysis. Moreover, structural analyses and molecular dynamics simulations indicate that two loops over the substrate-binding pocket of DddQ can alternate between “open” and “closed” states, serving as a gate for DMSP entry. We also propose a molecular mechanism for DMS production through DMSP cleavage. Our study provides important insight into the mechanism involved in the conversion of DMSP into DMS, which should lead to a better understanding of this globally important biogeochemical reaction.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2015

Diversity, Structures, and Collagen-Degrading Mechanisms of Bacterial Collagenolytic Proteases

Yu-Zhong Zhang; Li-Yuan Ran; Chun-Yang Li; Xiu-Lan Chen

ABSTRACT Bacterial collagenolytic proteases are important because of their essential role in global collagen degradation and because of their virulence in some human bacterial infections. Bacterial collagenolytic proteases include some metalloproteases of the M9 family from Clostridium or Vibrio strains, some serine proteases distributed in the S1, S8, and S53 families, and members of the U32 family. In recent years, there has been remarkable progress in discovering new bacterial collagenolytic proteases and in investigating the collagen-degrading mechanisms of bacterial collagenolytic proteases. This review provides comprehensive insight into bacterial collagenolytic proteases, especially focusing on the structures and collagen-degrading mechanisms of representative bacterial collagenolytic proteases in each family. The roles of bacterial collagenolytic proteases in human diseases and global nitrogen cycling, together with the biotechnological and medical applications for these proteases, are also briefly discussed.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Interdomain hydrophobic interactions modulate the thermostability of microbial esterases from the hormone-sensitive lipase family.

Ping-Yi Li; Xiu-Lan Chen; Peng Ji; Chun-Yang Li; Peng Wang; Yi Zhang; Bin-Bin Xie; Qi-Long Qin; Hai-Nan Su; Bai-Cheng Zhou; Yu-Zhong Zhang; Xi-Ying Zhang

Background: The effect of interdomain interactions on the thermostability of microbial hormone-sensitive lipases (HSLs) remains unclear. Results: The absence of interdomain hydrophobic interactions between loop 1 and α7 leads to the thermolability of E40, a thermolabile HSL esterase. Conclusion: Interdomain hydrophobic interactions are a key element for the thermostability of microbial HSLs. Significance: Our study is helpful for protein engineering of thermolabile HSLs. Microbial hormone-sensitive lipases (HSLs) contain a CAP domain and a catalytic domain. However, it remains unclear how the CAP domain interacts with the catalytic domain to maintain the stability of microbial HSLs. Here, we isolated an HSL esterase, E40, from a marine sedimental metagenomic library. E40 exhibited the maximal activity at 45 °C and was quite thermolabile, with a half-life of only 2 min at 40 °C, which may be an adaptation of E40 to the permanently cold sediment environment. The structure of E40 was solved to study its thermolability. Structural analysis showed that E40 lacks the interdomain hydrophobic interactions between loop 1 of the CAP domain and α7 of the catalytic domain compared with its thermostable homologs. Mutational analysis showed that the introduction of hydrophobic residues Trp202 and Phe203 in α7 significantly improved E40 stability and that a further introduction of hydrophobic residues in loop 1 made E40 more thermostable because of the formation of interdomain hydrophobic interactions. Altogether, the results indicate that the absence of interdomain hydrophobic interactions between loop 1 and α7 leads to the thermolability of E40. In addition, a comparative analysis of the structures of E40 and other thermolabile and thermostable HSLs suggests that the interdomain hydrophobic interactions between loop 1 and α7 are a key element for the thermostability of microbial HSLs. Therefore, this study not only illustrates the structural element leading to the thermolability of E40 but also reveals a structural determinant for HSL thermostability.


Molecular Microbiology | 2015

Structural and molecular basis for the novel catalytic mechanism and evolution of DddP, an abundant peptidase-like bacterial Dimethylsulfoniopropionate lyase: a new enzyme from an old fold.

Peng Wang; Xiu-Lan Chen; Chun-Yang Li; Xiang Gao; De-yu Zhu; Bin-Bin Xie; Qi-Long Qin; Xi-Ying Zhang; Hai-Nan Su; Bai-Cheng Zhou; Luying Xun; Yu-Zhong Zhang

The microbial cleavage of dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) generates volatile dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and is an important step in global sulfur and carbon cycles. DddP is a DMSP lyase in marine bacteria, and the deduced dddP gene product is abundant in marine metagenomic data sets. However, DddP belongs to the M24 peptidase family according to sequence alignment. Peptidases hydrolyze C‐N bonds, but DddP is deduced to cleave C‐S bonds. Mechanisms responsible for this striking functional shift are currently unknown. We determined the structures of DMSP lyase RlDddP (the DddP from Ruegeria lacuscaerulensis ITI_1157) bound to inhibitory 2‐(N‐morpholino) ethanesulfonic acid or PO43− and of two mutants of RlDddP bound to acrylate. Based on structural, mutational and biochemical analyses, we characterized a new ion‐shift catalytic mechanism of RlDddP for DMSP cleavage. Furthermore, we suggested the structural mechanism leading to the loss of peptidase activity and the subsequent development of DMSP lyase activity in DddP. This study sheds light on the catalytic mechanism and the divergent evolution of DddP, leading to a better understanding of marine bacterial DMSP catabolism and global DMS production.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Molecular Insight into the Role of the N-terminal Extension in the Maturation, Substrate Recognition, and Catalysis of a Bacterial Alginate Lyase from Polysaccharide Lyase Family 18

Sheng Dong; Tian-Di Wei; Xiu-Lan Chen; Chun-Yang Li; Peng Wang; Bin-Bin Xie; Qi-Long Qin; Xi-Ying Zhang; Xiuhua Pang; Bai-Cheng Zhou; Yu-Zhong Zhang

Background: The maturation and catalysis mechanisms of the PL18 alginate lyases have not yet been reported. Results: The N-terminal extension in the precursor of PL18, aly-SJ02, helped the catalytic domain fold correctly. Key residues for substrate recognition and catalysis were determined. Conclusion: The catalytic mechanism of aly-SJ02 is proposed. Significance: This study provides the foremost insight into maturation and catalysis of PL18 alginate lyases. Bacterial alginate lyases, which are members of several polysaccharide lyase (PL) families, have important biological roles and biotechnological applications. The mechanisms for maturation, substrate recognition, and catalysis of PL18 alginate lyases are still largely unknown. A PL18 alginate lyase, aly-SJ02, from Pseudoalteromonas sp. 0524 displays a β-jelly roll scaffold. Structural and biochemical analyses indicated that the N-terminal extension in the aly-SJ02 precursor may act as an intramolecular chaperone to mediate the correct folding of the catalytic domain. Molecular dynamics simulations and mutational assays suggested that the lid loops over the aly-SJ02 active center serve as a gate for substrate entry. Molecular docking and site-directed mutations revealed that certain conserved residues at the active center, especially those at subsites +1 and +2, are crucial for substrate recognition. Tyr353 may function as both a catalytic base and acid. Based on our results, a model for the catalysis of aly-SJ02 in alginate depolymerization is proposed. Moreover, although bacterial alginate lyases from families PL5, 7, 15, and 18 adopt distinct scaffolds, they share the same conformation of catalytic residues, reflecting their convergent evolution. Our results provide the foremost insight into the mechanisms of maturation, substrate recognition, and catalysis of a PL18 alginate lyase.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017

Novel Molecular Insights into the Catalytic Mechanism of Marine Bacterial Alginate Lyase AlyGC from Polysaccharide Lyase Family 6

Fei Xu; Fang Dong; Peng Wang; Hai-Yan Cao; Chun-Yang Li; Ping-Yi Li; Xiuhua Pang; Yu-Zhong Zhang; Xiu-Lan Chen

Alginate lyases that degrade alginate via a β-elimination reaction fall into seven polysaccharide lyase (PL) families. Although the structures and catalytic mechanisms of alginate lyases in the other PL families have been clarified, those in family PL6 have yet to be revealed. Here, the crystal structure of AlyGC, a PL6 alginate lyase from marine bacterium Glaciecola chathamensis S18K6T, was solved, and its catalytic mechanism was illustrated. AlyGC is a homodimeric enzyme and adopts a structure distinct from other alginate lyases. Each monomer contains a catalytic N-terminal domain and a functionally unknown C-terminal domain. A combined structural and mutational analysis using the structures of AlyGC and of an inactive mutant R241A in complex with an alginate tetrasaccharide indicates that conformational changes occur in AlyGC when a substrate is bound and that the two active centers in AlyGC may not bind substrates simultaneously. The C-terminal domain is shown to be essential for the dimerization and the catalytic activity of AlyGC. Residues Tyr130, Arg187, His242, Arg265, and Tyr304 in the active center are also important for the activity of AlyGC. In catalysis, Lys220 and Arg241 function as the Brønsted base and acid, respectively, and a Ca2+ in the active center neutralizes the negative charge of the C5 carboxyl group of the substrate. Finally, based on our data, we propose a metal ion-assisted catalytic mechanism of AlyGC for alginate cleavage with a state change mode, which provides a better understanding for polysaccharide lyases and alginate degradation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Reply to Tawfik et al.: DddQ is a dimethylsulfoniopropionate lyase involved in dimethylsulfoniopropionate catabolism in marine bacterial cells

Chun-Yang Li; Xiu-Lan Chen; Bin-Bin Xie; Hai-Nan Su; Qi-Long Qin; Yu-Zhong Zhang

In our report we describe the structure of DddQ, a dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) lyase, and its catalytic mechanism of the DMSP cleavage reaction (1), and we thank Tawfik et al. for their comments (2) on our paper.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Mechanistic insights into elastin degradation by pseudolysin, the major virulence factor of the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Jie Yang; Hui-Lin Zhao; Li-Yuan Ran; Chun-Yang Li; Xi-Ying Zhang; Hai-Nan Su; Mei Shi; Bai-Cheng Zhou; Xiu-Lan Chen; Yu-Zhong Zhang

Pseudolysin is the most abundant protease secreted by Pseudomonas aeruginosa and is the major extracellular virulence factor of this opportunistic human pathogen. Pseudolysin destroys human tissues by solubilizing elastin. However, the mechanisms by which pseudolysin binds to and degrades elastin remain elusive. In this study, we investigated the mechanism of action of pseudolysin on elastin binding and degradation by biochemical assay, microscopy and site-directed mutagenesis. Pseudolysin bound to bovine elastin fibers and preferred to attack peptide bonds with hydrophobic residues at the P1 and P1’ positions in the hydrophobic domains of elastin. The time-course degradation processes of both bovine elastin fibers and cross-linked human tropoelastin by pseudolysin were further investigated by microscopy. Altogether, the results indicate that elastin degradation by pseudolysin began with the hydrophobic domains on the fiber surface, followed by the progressive disassembly of macroscopic elastin fibers into primary structural elements. Moreover, our site-directed mutational results indicate that five hydrophobic residues in the S1-S1’ sub-sites played key roles in the binding of pseudolysin to elastin. This study sheds lights on the pathogenesis of P. aeruginosa infection.


Molecular Microbiology | 2017

Mechanistic insight into acrylate metabolism and detoxification in marine dimethylsulfoniopropionate-catabolizing bacteria

Peng Wang; Hai-Yan Cao; Xiu-Lan Chen; Chun-Yang Li; Ping-Yi Li; Xi-Ying Zhang; Qi-Long Qin; Jonathan D. Todd; Yu-Zhong Zhang

Dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) cleavage, yielding dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and acrylate, provides vital carbon sources to marine bacteria, is a key component of the global sulfur cycle and effects atmospheric chemistry and potentially climate. Acrylate and its metabolite acryloyl‐CoA are toxic if allowed to accumulate within cells. Thus, organisms cleaving DMSP require effective systems for both the utilization and detoxification of acrylate. Here, we examine the mechanism of acrylate utilization and detoxification in Roseobacters. We propose propionate‐CoA ligase (PrpE) and acryloyl‐CoA reductase (AcuI) as the key enzymes involved and through structural and mutagenesis analyses, provide explanations of their catalytic mechanisms. In most cases, DMSP lyases and DMSP demethylases (DmdAs) have low substrate affinities, but AcuIs have very high substrate affinities, suggesting that an effective detoxification system for acylate catabolism exists in DMSP‐catabolizing Roseobacters. This study provides insight on acrylate metabolism and detoxification and a possible explanation for the high Km values that have been noted for some DMSP lyases. Since acrylate/acryloyl‐CoA is probably produced by other metabolism, and AcuI and PrpE are conserved in many organisms across all domains of life, the detoxification system is likely relevant to many metabolic processes and environments beyond DMSP catabolism.

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