Literature DB >> 23024345

Crystal structure of the Klebsiella pneumoniae NFeoB/FeoC complex and roles of FeoC in regulation of Fe2+ transport by the bacterial Feo system.

Kuo-Wei Hung1, Jia-Yin Tsai, Tzu-Hsuan Juan, Yen-Lan Hsu, Chwan-Deng Hsiao, Tai-Huang Huang.   

Abstract

Feo is a transport system commonly used by bacteria to acquire environmental Fe(2+). It consists of three proteins: FeoA, FeoB, and FeoC. FeoB is a large protein with a cytosolic N-terminal domain (NFeoB) that contains a regulatory G protein domain and a helical S domain. The C-terminal region of FeoB is a transmembrane domain that likely acts as the Fe(2+) permease. NFeoB has been shown to form a trimer pore that may function as an Fe(2+) gate. FeoC is a small winged-helix protein that possesses four conserved cysteine residues with a consensus sequence that likely provides binding sites for the [Fe-S] cluster. Therefore, FeoC is presumed to be an [Fe-S] cluster-dependent regulator that directly controls transcription of the feo operon. Despite the apparent significance of the Feo system, however, the function of FeoC has not been experimentally demonstrated. Here, we show that Klebsiella pneumoniae FeoC (KpFeoC) forms a tight complex with the intracellular N-terminal domain of FeoB (KpNFeoB). The crystal structure of the complex reveals that KpFeoC binds to KpNFeoB between the switch II region of the G protein domain and the effector S domain and that the long KpFeoC W1 loop lies above the KpNFeoB nucleotide-binding site. These interactions suggest that KpFeoC modulates the guanine nucleotide-mediated signal transduction process. Moreover, we showed that binding of KpFeoC disrupts pore formation by interfering with KpNFeoB trimerization. These results provide strong evidence suggesting that KpFeoC plays a crucial role in regulating Fe(2+) transport in Klebsiella pneumonia in addition to the presumed gene regulator role.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23024345      PMCID: PMC3497523          DOI: 10.1128/JB.01228-12

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bacteriol        ISSN: 0021-9193            Impact factor:   3.490


  33 in total

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5.  Structure of an atypical FeoB G-domain reveals a putative domain-swapped dimer.

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