Structural characterization of free-state and product-state Mycobacterium tuberculosis methionyl-tRNA synthetase reveals an induced-fit ligand-recognition mechanism

IUCrJ. 2018 Jun 22;5(Pt 4):478-490. doi: 10.1107/S2052252518008217. eCollection 2018 Jul 1.

Abstract

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) caused 10.4 million cases of tuberculosis and 1.7 million deaths in 2016. The incidence of multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant MTB is becoming an increasing threat to public health and the development of novel anti-MTB drugs is urgently needed. Methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MetRS) is considered to be a valuable drug target. However, structural characterization of M. tuberculosis MetRS (MtMetRS) was lacking for decades, thus hampering drug design. Here, two high-resolution crystal structures of MtMetRS are reported: the free-state structure (apo form; 1.9 Å resolution) and a structure with the intermediate product methionyl-adenylate (Met-AMP) bound (2.4 Å resolution). It was found that free-state MtMetRS adopts a previously unseen conformation that has never been observed in other MetRS homologues. The pockets for methionine and AMP are not formed in free-state MtMetRS, suggesting that it is in a nonproductive conformation. Combining these findings suggests that MtMetRS employs an induced-fit mechanism in ligand binding. By comparison with the structure of human cytosolic MetRS, additional pockets specific to MtMetRS that could be used for anti-MTB drug design were located.

Keywords: Mycobacterium tuberculosis; antituberculosis drugs; crystal structure; induced fit; methionyl-tRNA synthetase.

Grants and funding

This work was funded by National Natural Science Foundation of China grants 11775308 and 81401714. National Key Research and Development Program of China grant 2016YFD0500300. Fundamental Research Funds for Central Universities grant 2016ZX310054. Natural Science Foundation of Beijing Municipality grants 7182117 and 7174288. China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences grants 2017PT31049 and 2017-I2M-1-014.