| Literature DB >> 21977318 |
Darío Ortiz de Orué Lucana1, Ina Wedderhoff, Matthew R Groves.
Abstract
Bacteria are permanently in contact with reactive oxygen species (ROS), both over the course of their life cycle as well that present in their environment. These species cause damage to proteins, lipids, and nucleotides, negatively impacting the organism. To detect these ROS molecules and to stimulate the expression of proteins involved in antioxidative stress response, bacteria use a number of different protein-based regulatory and sensory systems. ROS-based stress detection mechanisms induce posttranslational modifications, resulting in overall conformational and structural changes within sensory proteins. The subsequent structural rearrangements result in changes of protein activity, which lead to regulated and appropriate response on the transcriptional level. Many bacterial enzymes and regulatory proteins possess a conserved signature, the zinc-containing redox centre Cys-X-X-Cys in which a disulfide bridge is formed upon oxidative stress. Other metal-dependent oxidative modifications of amino acid side-chains (dityrosines, 2-oxo-histidines, or carbonylation) also modulate the activity of redox-sensitive proteins. Using molecular biology, biochemistry, biophysical, and structure biology tools, molecular mechanisms involved in sensing and response to oxidative stress have been elucidated in detail. In this review, we analyze some examples of bacterial redox-sensing proteins involved in antioxidative stress response and focus further on the currently known molecular mechanism of function.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21977318 PMCID: PMC3184428 DOI: 10.1155/2012/605905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Signal Transduct ISSN: 2090-1747
Figure 1Formation of intramolecular disulfide bonds (S–S). Oxidation of a cysteine thiol by H2O2 yields a sulfenic acid residue that can undergo reaction with a neighbouring “back door” cysteine thiol to generate a disulfide linkage (S–S). S–S bonds can overtime be returned to the native SH state by reactions with biological thiols (RSH). This picture was adapted from [21].
Examples of proteins containing the redox-sensing motif Cys-X-X-Cys. (*) The references given are for the protein from the strain listed. Sequence alignments demonstrate that highly homologous proteins are found across many different bacterial species.
| Name | Strain* | Function | Zn2+-binding | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enzymatic function | Hsp33 |
| The redox-regulated heat shock protein Hsp33 is a dual stress sensor responding to peroxide stress and increased temperature. Stress-mediated conformational changes result in zinc release and activation of Hsp33 chaperone function leading to suppression of protein aggregation [ | Yes |
| Trx2 |
| Trx2 reductase activity is controlled by a redox switch within two CXXC motifs involved in zinc binding. Release of the bound zinc ion results in a conformational change leading to the reductase activity [ | Yes | |
| ResA |
| Substrate selection of the membrane-bound thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase ResA is regulated by conformational changes determined by CXXC reduction or oxidation [ | No | |
| DsbA |
| DsbA is a periplasmic protein oxidant for disulfide formation of extracellular proteins belonging to the Dsb family [ | No | |
| SbcC |
| SbcC is a DNA repair protein with exonuclease activity [ | Yes | |
| Cytochrome c |
| The covalent coordination of heme to apo-cytochrome c requires a reduced CXXC motif within the heme-binding motif [ | No | |
| AhpF/AhpC |
| AhpC and flavoprotein AhpF catalyze the pyridine nucleotide-dependent reduction of hydroperoxide substrates. AhpC, the peroxide-reducing component, is a scavenger of hydrogen peroxide in bacteria, whereas the disulfide reductase protein AhpF regenerates AhpC [ | No | |
| CopA |
| CopA, a copper transport ATPase, sustains important roles in homeostasis of heavy metals and delivery of copper to metalloenzymes [ | No | |
| HypA |
| HypA is required for nickel insertion into the hydrogenase precursor proteins [ | No | |
|
| ||||
| Transcriptional regulator | FurS |
| Oxidation of the transcriptional repressor FurS leads to derepression of the transcription of the gene | Yes |
| CatR |
| During peroxide stress, the Fur-like regulator CatR activates transcription of | No | |
| WhiB3 |
| WhiB3 DNA binding to control the expression of genes coding for polyketide synthases is reversibly regulated by a thiol-disulfide redox switch. Reduction of the apo-WhiB3 Cys thiols of the CXXC motif suppresses genes regulating the synthesis of complex lipids, whereas oxidation stimulates it [ | No | |
| SoxR |
| SoxR senses superoxide stress through a CXXC-coordinated [2Fe-2S]-cluster that results in transcriptional activation of a superoxide response regulon [ | No | |
| SurR |
| A redox switch regulates the transcriptional regulator SurR. Oxidation with S0 inhibits DNA binding by SurR, leading to repression of genes related to H2 production and activation of genes involved in S0 metabolism [ | No | |
|
| ||||
| Regulatory element | Spx |
| Global oxidative stress regulator interacting with the | No |
| RsrA |
| Antisigma factor RsrA negatively regulates expression of the thioredoxin system in response to cytoplasmatic oxidative stress. Under reducing conditions, RsrA binds to | Yes | |
| RslA |
| Membrane-associated RslA oxidation results in the release of bound Zn2+ through disulfide bond formation within the CXXC motif. The resulting conformational change leads to decreased | Yes | |
| RshA |
| RshA is an antisigma factor of the central regulator SigH that responds to oxidative and heat stress; it functions as a negative regulator of the alternative sigma factor SigH activity under reducing conditions [ | No | |
Figure 2An image showing the redox-sensing cysteine residues (Cys54 and Cys57) within the crystal structure of RslA from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (PDB: 3HUG). The coordinated zinc ion (shown as a violet ball) strongly contributes to the overall fold stability.
Examples of iron-dependent redox sensor proteins in bacteria. (*) The references given are for the protein from the strain listed. Sequence alignments demonstrate that highly homologous proteins are found across many different bacterial species.
| Name | Strain* | Function | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transcriptional regulator | Fur |
| Regulator with iron-dependent DNA-binding affinity negatively regulates genes involved in ferric iron uptake [ |
| DtxR |
| DtxR acts as a global iron-mediated regulator, activating genes involved in iron storage and DNA protection and repressing genes involved in iron uptake and utilization [ | |
| RirA |
| Transcriptional regulator RirA is involved in ferric uptake regulation by regulating genes coding for iron transport, siderophore biosynthesis, and iron-sulfur cluster assembly [ | |
| Irr |
| Iron response regulator (Irr) senses iron through the status of heme biosynthesis to regulate gene expression involved in iron homeostasis [ | |
| PerR |
| DNA binding by the regulator PerR in response to peroxide stress is iron dependent [ | |
| DmdR1 |
| The transcriptional regulator DmdR1 regulates genes involved in desferrioxamine production in response to iron availability [ | |
| IdeR |
| IdeR negatively regulates siderophore biosynthesis involved in iron acquisition [ | |
| SirR |
| SirR is a Fe2+or Mn2+-dependent transcriptional repressor regulating the | |
| FNR |
| Transcription factor FNR regulates gene expression in response to oxygen deficiency by its redox-sensitive bound iron. Binding of an iron-sulfur cluster is required for a conformational change to enhance DNA binding [ | |
| IscR |
| [2Fe-2S]-cluster assembly regulates activity in transcription factor IscR of genes coding for proteins involved in iron-sulfur cluster assembly [ | |
| TroR |
| TroR is a Mn2+ and Fe2+-dependent repressor of the ATP-binding cassette cation transport system ( | |
|
| |||
| Regulatory element | HbpS/SenS/SenR |
| Iron-dependent activation/inhibition of the two-component system SenS-SenR involved in oxidative stress response through heme degradation and associated secondary structural changes [ |
| PmrA/PmrB |
| The PmrA/PmrB two-component system senses iron and regulates the transcription of genes involved in iron resistance [ | |
| ChrS/ChrA |
| ChrS, the heme-sensing sensor kinase of the two-component system ChrS/ChrA, regulates genes involved in utilization of host heme as an iron source and in protecting the bacteria against the toxic effects of heme [ | |
| FecA/FecR/FecI |
| The periplasmic protein FecR senses periplasmic iron dicitrate by the outer membrane protein FecA which is loaded with ferric citrate. FecR transmits the signal to the sigma factor FecI which results in transcriptional activation of the | |
| AcnA/AcnB |
| The aconitases AcnA (induced by iron and oxidative stress) and AcnB posttranscriptionally regulate gene expression (i.e., | |
Figure 3Metal-catalyzed oxidation of histidine. The exact chemical mechanism of the iron-mediated formation of 2-Oxo-histidine remains unclear. This picture was adapted from [34].
Figure 4An image showing the arrangement of the internal EXXE motif between two subunits (red and turquoise chain, respectively) in the octameric HbpS (PDB: 3FPV). The amino acids Tyr77 (Y77), Glu78 (E78), Glu81 (E81), and Arg82 (R82) are indicated.