9F7E image
Deposition Date 2024-05-03
Release Date 2025-05-14
Last Version Date 2025-11-26
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
9F7E
Title:
CtdA Canavanine tRNA-editing deacetylase from Pseudomonas canavaninivorans
Biological Source:
Source Organism:
Host Organism:
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Resolution:
1.50 Å
R-Value Free:
0.20
R-Value Work:
0.15
R-Value Observed:
0.15
Space Group:
P 1 21 1
Macromolecular Entities
Structures with similar UniProt ID
Protein Blast
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Molecule:CtdA Canavanyl tRNA Deacylase
Chain IDs:A, B
Chain Length:231
Number of Molecules:2
Biological Source:Pseudomonas canavaninivorans
Ligand Molecules
Primary Citation
Indel-driven evolution of the canavanine tRNA-editing deacetylase enzyme CtdA.
J Struct Biol X 12 100132 100132 (2025)
PMID: 40687620 DOI: 10.1016/j.yjsbx.2025.100132

Abstact

Proteins are heteropolymers composed of twenty standard amino acids, but over 500 non-proteogenic amino acids exist in nature that can be misincorporated into proteins. Canavanine is an antimetabolite of the chemically similar L-arginine. It can be utilized by bacteria such as Pseudomonas canavaninivorans in the legume rhizome as a sole source of carbon and nitrogen. However, canavanine misincorporates in proteins of this bacterium as its arginyl-tRNA synthetase loads tRNAArg with both canavanine and arginine. Canavanyl-tRNAArg deacetylase (CtdA) removes canavanine from misloaded tRNAArg, preventing its protein toxicity, being the first enzyme known to edit tRNA mischarged with a non-proteinogenic amino acid. We have elucidated CtdA's crystal structure and studied its active site using site-directed mutagenesis. We found that CtdA is a small monomeric enzyme with a central, deep cavity that predictably is the canavanine binding site and a positively charged surface area that likely coordinates the CCA-3' tRNA attachment sequence. CtdA is distantly related to the B3/B4 cis-editing domains of the multi-subunit enzyme Phenylalanine-tRNA-Synthetase (PheRS). CdtA and B3/B4 domains from bacterial and archaeal/eukaryotic origin are three subclasses of a conserved 3D-fold that differ in type-specific indels, which shape the substrate binding site. We propose a class-unifying nomenclature of secondary structure for this fold. In CtdA, residues Y104, N105, E118 and E191 are relevant for catalysis, of which N105 is conserved in bacterial B3/B4 domains. Residue N105 is in proximity of the canavanyl-ribose junction and might coordinate the nucleophilic water molecule that attacks the substrate, possibly sharing a mechanistic role in CtdA and bacterial B3/B4 editing enzymes.

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Chemical

Disease

Primary Citation of related structures
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