| Literature DB >> 21849072 |
Shen Yu1, Allegra Vit, Sean Devenish, H Khris Mahanty, Aymelt Itzen, Roger S Goody, Wulf Blankenfeldt.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The phenazines are redox-active secondary metabolites that a large number of bacterial strains produce and excrete into the environment. They possess antibiotic activity owing to the fact that they can reduce molecular oxygen to toxic reactive oxygen species. In order to take advantage of this activity, phenazine producers need to protect themselves against phenazine toxicity. Whereas it is believed that phenazine-producing pseudomonads possess highly active superoxide dismutases and catalases, it has recently been found that the plant-colonizing bacterium Enterobacter agglomerans expresses a small gene ehpR to render itself resistant towards D-alanyl-griseoluteic acid, the phenazine antibiotic produced by this strain.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21849072 PMCID: PMC3175449 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6807-11-33
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Struct Biol ISSN: 1472-6807
Figure 1Phenazine biosynthesis in . The phenazine biosynthesis operon of E. agglomerans Eh1087 contains 16 open reading frames, which are required to convert chorismic acid to phenazine-1,6-dicarboxylic acid (PDC; light grey) and further to D-alanyl griseoluteic acid (AGA; dark grey). EhpR (red) mediates resistance to self-produced AGA. It likely acts as a shuttle that delivers AGA to the major facilitator membrane transporter EhpJ (blue).
Data collection and refinement statistics
| Se-SAD2 | EhpR apo | Ehpr/GA complex | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Space group | P212121 | P212121 | P212121 |
| Cell dimensions | |||
| | 71.6, 78.9, 87.2 | 72.6, 79.3, 87.9 | 36.5, 79.8, 82.9 |
| Wavelength | 0.979147 | 0.934 | 0.934 |
| f' (electrons) | -8.2 | - | - |
| f'' (electrons) | 5.1 | - | - |
| Resolution (Å)3 | 20 - 2.7 (2.8 - 2.7) | 20 - 2.15 (2.25 - 2.15) | 20 - 1.01 (1.11 - 1.01) |
| 13.7 (52.8) | 5.0 (35.9) | 4.0 (35.9) | |
| 7.3 (33.4) | 5.6 (29.4) | 6.4 (36.6) | |
| < I/σ(I) > | 15.3 (4.2) | 23.0 (5.1) | 19.0 (4.0) |
| Completeness (%) | 99.7 (100) | 98.1 (92.5) | 98.5 (95.5) |
| Redundancy | 7.7 (7.6) | 6.8 (5.0) | 4.3 (3.1) |
| Resolution (Å) | 20 - 2.15 (2.20 - 2.15) | 20 - 1.01 (1.02 - 1.01) | |
| No. reflections | 26266 (1800) | 125498 (3663) | |
| 20.5 (29.2) | 12.6 (23.7) | ||
| 25.9 (30.1) | 14.6 (24.3) | ||
| No. atoms/ | |||
| Protein | 3928/73 | 2359/13 | |
| Ligands/ions | - | 21/17 | |
| Water | 66/44 | 499/29 | |
| R.m.s deviations | |||
| Bond lengths (Å) | 0.020 | 0.022 | |
| Bond angles (°) | 1.733 | 2.085 | |
1All data sets were collected from single crystals.
2Data collections statistics for MAD data refer to unmerged Friedel pairs.
3Values in parentheses refer to the highest resolution shell.
4Rsym(I) = (Σhkl Σi |I(h)j - |)/(Σhkl Σi I(h)j), where I(h)j is the measured diffraction intensity, is its average and the summation includes all observations.
5Rmerge(F) = (Σhkl SQRT (n/(n - 1)) Σi |F(h)j -
6The contribution of TLS parameters to B-factors of the EhpR apo structure has been removed with TLSANL [44].
Figure 2Overall structure of EhpR. (A-C) Three perpendicular views of the EhpR homodimer. Each monomer consists of two similar domains, shown in magenta and pink for one chain. The N-termini are arm-exchanged between the two chains and form extended antennae that are only visible in the high-resolution EhpR/griseoluteic acid complex (dark grey). Griseoluteic acid is shown in ball-and-stick representation, residues left behind after thrombin removal of the N-terminal His6-tag used for affinity purification are shown in white. (D) Molecular surface around the griseoluteic acid binding site, colored by electrostatic potential calculated with APBS [42]. The D-alanyl moiety of AGA has been modeled (grey).
Figure 3Griseoluteic acid binds EhpR. (A) Stopped-flow transient kinetic measurements demonstrate binding of griseoluteic acid to EhpR. Incubation of EhpR (5 μM) with an excess of griseoluteic acid (black circle: 250 μM; black triangle: 500 μM) leads to a time-dependent decrease of tryptophan fluorescence, whereas no change is observed in the absence of griseoluteic acid (cross) or EhpR (empty circle). (B) Microscale thermophoresis measurements of 25 nM fluorescein-labeled His6-EhpR incubated with the indicated amounts of griseoluteic acid. The relative fluorescence in the thermophoresis phase of the experiment has been plotted against the concentration of the ligand. (C) Stereo plot of |FO-FC| difference electron density at the ligand binding site of the high-resolution EhpR/griseoluteic acid (GA) complex before incorporation of the ligand, displayed at 3.5 σ.
Figure 4Interactions between griseoluteic acid and EhpR. (A) Stereo figure of the ligand binding site of EhpR with bound griseoluteic acid (GA). An asterisk indicates residues from the second monomer. Amino acids that block binding in unoccupied binding sites of the apo and complex structure (V108, F109) have been superimposed and are shown in thin black lines. Residues from a crystallographic neighboring molecule are shown in thin white lines. (B) Ligand binding site of mitomycin C resistance protein MRD from Streptomyces lavendulae in complex with 1,2-cis-1-hydroxy-2,7-diaminomitosene (1-OH-DAM; PDB entry 1KLL[21]). This related protein binds its ligand through a similar π-stacking as EhpR. (C) Aromatic side chains in the potential ligand binding site of the uncharacterized Pseudomonas aeruginosa protein PA1353 (PDB entry 1U6L).