Insights into Nucleotide Recognition by Cell Division Protein FtsZ from a mant-GTP Competition Assay and Molecular Dynamics
Citations Over TimeTop 14% of 2010 papers
Abstract
Essential cell division protein FtsZ forms the bacterial cytokinetic ring and is a target for new antibiotics. FtsZ monomers bind GTP and assemble into filaments. Hydrolysis to GDP at the association interface between monomers leads to filament disassembly. We have developed a homogeneous competition assay, employing the fluorescence anisotropy change of mant-GTP upon binding to nucleotide-free FtsZ, which detects compounds binding to the nucleotide site in FtsZ monomers and measures their affinities within the millimolar to 10 nM range. We have employed this method to determine the apparent contributions of the guanine, ribose, and the α-, β-, and γ-phosphates to the free energy change of nucleotide binding. Similar relative contributions have also been estimated through molecular dynamics and binding free energy calculations, employing the crystal structures of FtsZ−nucleotide complexes. We find an energetically dominant contribution of the β-phosphate, comparable to the whole guanosine moiety. GTP and GDP bind with similar observed affinity to FtsZ monomers. Loss of the regulatory γ-phosphate results in a predicted accommodation of GDP which has not been observed in the crystal structures. The binding affinities of a series of C8-substituted GTP analogues, known to inhibit FtsZ but not eukaryotic tubulin assembly, correlate with their inhibitory capacity on FtsZ polymerization. Our methods permit testing of FtsZ inhibitors targeting its nucleotide site, as well as compounds from virtual screening of large synthetic libraries. Our results give insight into the FtsZ−nucleotide interactions, which could be useful in the rational design of new inhibitors, especially GTP phosphate mimetics.
Related Papers
- → Structural insight into the rearrangement of the switch I region in GTP-bound G12A K-Ras(2017)61 cited
- → The FtsZ protein of Bacillus subtilis is localized at the division site and has GTPase activity that is dependent upon FtsZ concentration(1993)153 cited
- → Non‐hydrolysable GTP‐γ‐S stabilizes the FtsZ polymer in a GDP‐bound state(2000)55 cited
- → Dynamic FtsZ polymerization is sensitive to the GTP to GDP ratio and can be maintained at steady state using a GTP-regeneration system(2003)52 cited
- → Measurement of the GTPase Activity of Signal-Transducing G-Proteins in Neuronal Membranes(2003)4 cited