2011
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.m110.196220
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Binding of Cyclic Diguanylate in the Non-catalytic EAL Domain of FimX Induces a Long-range Conformational Change

Abstract: FimX is a multidomain signaling protein required for type IV pilus biogenesis and twitching motility in the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. FimX is localized to the single pole of the bacterial cell, and the unipolar localization is crucial for the correct assembly of type IV pili. FimX contains a non-catalytic EAL domain that lacks cyclic diguanylate (c-di-GMP) phosphodiesterase activity. It was shown that deletion of the EAL domain or mutation of the signature EVL motif affects the unipolar lo… Show more

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Cited by 80 publications
(73 citation statements)
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“…These "retired from active duty" domains have evolved to carry out new functions. One of these functions may involve binding (but not processing) of the substrate, e.g., GTP binding in the A sites of inactive GGDEF domains (44) or c-di-GMP binding in the substrate binding sites of enzymatically inactive EAL domains (85,101,133). Another set of functions of GGDEF, EAL, and HD-GYP domains that have "retired" from catalysis includes their participation in protein-protein or protein-RNA interactions.…”
Section: Proteins With Ggdef and Eal Or Hd-gyp Domains Arranged In Tamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These "retired from active duty" domains have evolved to carry out new functions. One of these functions may involve binding (but not processing) of the substrate, e.g., GTP binding in the A sites of inactive GGDEF domains (44) or c-di-GMP binding in the substrate binding sites of enzymatically inactive EAL domains (85,101,133). Another set of functions of GGDEF, EAL, and HD-GYP domains that have "retired" from catalysis includes their participation in protein-protein or protein-RNA interactions.…”
Section: Proteins With Ggdef and Eal Or Hd-gyp Domains Arranged In Tamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An interesting example of such a hybrid protein is P. aeruginosa FimX, involved in type IV pilus-based motility. The degenerate and enzymatically inactive C-terminal EAL domain of FimX serves as a high-affinity c-di-GMP receptor (85,101,133). Another example involves the GGDEF-EAL c-di-GMP receptor LapD from Pseudomonas fluorescens (166,167).…”
Section: Types Of C-di-gmp Receptorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Consistent with this hypothesis, mutation of the GGDEF domain in FimX, abolishes GTP binding and stimulation of PDE activity (Kazmierczak, 2006). However, recent structural studies indicate that the degenerate GGDEF domain of FimX is incapable of nucleotide binding, while the EAL domain binds c-di-GMP with high affinity inducing a conformational change that may impede FimX binding to its putative partner located at the bacterial pole to regulate Tfp production and twitching motility (Navarro, 2010;Qi, 2011).…”
Section: Biofilm Formation and Adherencementioning
confidence: 91%
“…In contrast, many nucleotide-binding proteins were captured with a relatively low specificity and, to a large degree, are probably false positives. Further validation of the specific binding to c-di-GMP using techniques such as DRaCALA 20 , UV cross-linking 15 , differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF) 21 , Microscale thermophoresis (MST) 22 , isothermal calorimetry (ITC) [23][24] … is thus necessary.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%