International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2020)

The Convergence of the Hedgehog/Intein Fold in Different Protein Splicing Mechanisms

  • Hannes M. Beyer,
  • Salla I. Virtanen,
  • A. Sesilja Aranko,
  • Kornelia M. Mikula,
  • George T. Lountos,
  • Alexander Wlodawer,
  • O. H. Samuli Ollila,
  • Hideo Iwaï

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21218367
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 21
p. 8367

Abstract

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Protein splicing catalyzed by inteins utilizes many different combinations of amino-acid types at active sites. Inteins have been classified into three classes based on their characteristic sequences. We investigated the structural basis of the protein splicing mechanism of class 3 inteins by determining crystal structures of variants of a class 3 intein from Mycobacterium chimaera and molecular dynamics simulations, which suggested that the class 3 intein utilizes a different splicing mechanism from that of class 1 and 2 inteins. The class 3 intein uses a bond cleavage strategy reminiscent of proteases but share the same Hedgehog/INTein (HINT) fold of other intein classes. Engineering of class 3 inteins from a class 1 intein indicated that a class 3 intein would unlikely evolve directly from a class 1 or 2 intein. The HINT fold appears as structural and functional solution for trans-peptidyl and trans-esterification reactions commonly exploited by diverse mechanisms using different combinations of amino-acid types for the active-site residues.

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