Litcius/Paper detail

Conditional DnaB Protein Splicing Is Reversibly Inhibited by Zinc in Mycobacteria

Daniel Woods, Sweta Vangaveti, Ikechukwu Egbanum, Allison M. Sweeney, Zhong Li, Valjean R. Bacot‐Davis, Danielle S. LeSassier, Matthew J. Stanger, Gabrielle E. Hardison, Hongmin Li, Marlene Belfort, Christopher W. Lennon

2020mBio28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Inteins are present in a large fraction of prokaryotes and localize within conserved proteins, including the mycobacterial replicative helicase DnaB. In addition to their extensive protein engineering applications, inteins have emerged as environmentally responsive posttranslational regulators of the genes that encode them. While several studies have shown compelling evidence of conditional protein splicing (CPS), examination of splicing in the native host of the intein has proven to be challenging. Here, we demonstrated through a number of measures, including the use of a splicing-dependent sensor capable of monitoring intein activity in the native host, that zinc is a potent and reversible inhibitor of mycobacterial DnaB splicing. This work also expands our knowledge of site selection for intein insertion within nonnative proteins, demonstrating that splicing-dependent host protein activation correlates with proximity to the active site. Additionally, we surmise that splicing regulation by zinc has mycobacteriocidal and CPS application potential.

Topics & Concepts

InteinRNA splicingProtein splicingdnaB helicaseBiologyComputational biologyGeneticsGeneHelicaseRNARNA and protein synthesis mechanismsMycobacterium research and diagnosisBacterial Genetics and Biotechnology