Background: Colicins are antibiotic-like proteins of Escherichia. coli that
kill related strains. Colicin E3 acts as an RNase that specifically cleave
s 1 6S rRNA, thereby inactivating the ribosomes in the infected cell. The p
roducing organism is protected against colicin E3 by a specific inhibitor,
the immunity protein lm3, which forms a tight 1:1 complex with colicin E3 a
nd renders it inactive. Crystallographic studies on colicin E3 and lm3 have
been undertaken to unravel the structural basis for the ribonucleolytic ac
tivity and its inhibition.
Results: The crystal structure of lm3 has been determined to a resolution o
f 1.8 Angstrom. The structure consists of a four-stranded antiparallel beta
sheet flanked by three alpha helices on one side of the sheet. Thr7, Phe9,
Phe16 and Phe74 form a hydrophobic cluster on the surface of the protein i
n the vicinity of Cys47. This cluster is part of a putative binding pocket
which also includes nine polar residues.
Conclusions: The putative binding pocket of lm3 is the probable site of int
eraction with colicin E3. The six acidic residues in the pocket may interac
t with some of the numerous basic residues of colicin E3. The involvement o
f hydrophobic moieties in the binding is consistent with the observation th
at the tight complex can only be dissociated by denaturation. The structure
of lm3 resembles those of certain nucleic acid binding proteins, in partic
ular domain II of topoisomerase I and RNA-binding proteins that contain the
ribonucleoprotein (RNP) sequence motif. This observation suggests that lm3
has a nucleic acid binding function in addition to binding colicin E3.