Structural Comparison of ColH and ColG Collagen-Binding Domains from Clostridium histolyticum

by Bauer, Ryan; Wilson, Jeffrey J.; Philominathan, Sagaya Theresa Leena; Davis, Dan; Matsushita, Osamu; Sakon, Joshua

Clostridium histolyticum secretes collagenases, ColG and ColH, that cause extensive tissue destruction in myonecrosis. The C-terminal collagen-binding domain (CBD) of collagenase is required for insoluble collagen fibril binding and subsequent collagenolysis. The high-resolution crystal structures of ColG-CBD (s3b) and ColH-CBD (s3) are reported in this paper. The new X-ray structure of s3 was solved at 2.0-angstrom resolution (R = 17.4%; R-free = 23.3%), while the resolution of the previously determined s3b was extended to 1.4 angstrom (R = 17.9%; R-free = 21.0%). Despite sharing only 30% sequence identity, the molecules resemble one another closely (root mean square deviation [RMSD] C-alpha = 1.5 angstrom). All but one residue, whose side chain chelates with Ca2+, are conserved. The dual Ca2+ binding site in s3 is completed by an unconserved aspartate. Differential scanning calorimetric measurements showed that s3 gains thermal stability, comparable to s3b, by binding to Ca2+ (holo T-m = 94.1 degrees C; apo T-m = 70.2 degrees C). holo s3 is also stabilized against chemical denaturants urea and guanidine HCl. The three most critical residues for collagen interaction in s3b are conserved in s3. The general shape of the binding pocket is retained by altered loop structures and side chain positions. Small-angle X-ray scattering data revealed that s3 also binds asymmetrically to minicollagen. Besides the calcium-binding sites and the collagen-binding pocket, architecturally important hydrophobic residues and the hydrogen-bonding network around the cis-peptide bond are well conserved within the metallopeptidase subfamily M9B. CBDs were previously shown to bind to the extracellular matrix of various tissues. Compactness and extreme stability in physiological Ca2+ concentration possibly make both CBDs suitable for targeted growth factor delivery.

Journal
Journal of Bacteriology
Volume
195
Issue
2
Year
2013
Start Page
318-327
URL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jb.00010-12
ISBN/ISSN
1098-5530; 0021-9193
DOI
10.1128/jb.00010-12