Structural basis for the inhibition of the Bacillus subtilis c-di-AMP cyclase CdaA by the phosphoglucomutase GlmM
2021
Cyclic-di-adenosine monophosphate (c-di-AMP) is an important nucleotide signalling molecule, which plays a key role in osmotic regulation in bacteria. Cellular c-di-AMP levels are tightly regulated, as both high and low levels have a negative impact on bacterial growth. Here, we investigated how the activity of the main Bacillus subtilis c-di-AMP cyclase CdaA is regulated by the phosphoglucomutase GlmM. c-di-AMP is produced from two molecules of ATP by proteins containing a deadenylate cyclase (DAC) domain. CdaA is a membrane-linked cyclase with an N-terminal transmembrane domain followed by the cytoplasmic DAC domain. Here we show, using the soluble catalytic B. subtilis CdaACD domain and purified full-length GlmM or the GlmMF369 variant lacking the C-terminal flexible domain 4, that the cyclase and phosphoglucomutase form a stable complex in vitro and that GlmM is a potent cyclase inhibitor. We determined the crystal structure of the individual B. subtilis CdaACD and GlmM proteins, both of which form dimers in the structures, and of the CdaACD:GlmMF369 complex. In the complex structure, a CdaACD dimer is bound to a GlmMF369 dimer in such a manner that GlmM blocks the oligomerization of CdaACD and formation of active head-to-head cyclase oligomers, thus providing molecular details on how GlmM acts as cyclase inhibitor. The function of a key amino acid residue in CdaACD in complex formation was confirmed by mutagenesis analysis. As the amino acids at the CdaACD:GlmM interphase are conserved, we propose that the observed inhibition mechanism of CdaA by GlmM is conserved among Firmicutes.
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