Literature DB >> 25945581

Structural and functional analysis of betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase from Staphylococcus aureus.

Andrei S Halavaty1, Rebecca L Rich2, Chao Chen3, Jeong Chan Joo3, George Minasov1, Ievgeniia Dubrovska1, James R Winsor1, David G Myszka2, Mark Duban4, Ludmilla Shuvalova1, Alexander F Yakunin3, Wayne F Anderson1.   

Abstract

When exposed to high osmolarity, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) restores its growth and establishes a new steady state by accumulating the osmoprotectant metabolite betaine. Effective osmoregulation has also been implicated in the acquirement of a profound antibiotic resistance by MRSA. Betaine can be obtained from the bacterial habitat or produced intracellularly from choline via the toxic betaine aldehyde (BA) employing the choline dehydrogenase and betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase (BADH) enzymes. Here, it is shown that the putative betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase SACOL2628 from the early MRSA isolate COL (SaBADH) utilizes betaine aldehyde as the primary substrate and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(+)) as the cofactor. Surface plasmon resonance experiments revealed that the affinity of NAD(+), NADH and BA for SaBADH is affected by temperature, pH and buffer composition. Five crystal structures of the wild type and three structures of the Gly234Ser mutant of SaBADH in the apo and holo forms provide details of the molecular mechanisms of activity and substrate specificity/inhibition of this enzyme.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Staphylococcus aureus; betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase; high-throughput approach; infectious diseases; structural genomics

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25945581      PMCID: PMC4427200          DOI: 10.1107/S1399004715004228

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr        ISSN: 0907-4449


Introduction

Staphylococcus aureus commensally colonizes the skin, mucous membranes and gastrointestinal tract of healthy humans and causes mild to severe infections in hospital settings (DeLeo & Chambers, 2009 ▶; Eady & Cove, 2003 ▶; Jevons, 1961 ▶; Moellering, 2012 ▶; Scheffler et al., 2013 ▶; Wendlandt et al., 2013 ▶). Methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) is the most dangerous strain and its diverse antibiotic resistance is a major global problem (Paulsen et al., 1997 ▶; Cosgrove et al., 2006 ▶; Wenzel, 2004 ▶; Abboud & Waisbren, 1959 ▶; Walsh, 1999 ▶; Otto, 2010 ▶; Gill et al., 2005 ▶). Community-associated MRSA infections are also on the rise (Moellering, 2012 ▶; Wendlandt et al., 2013 ▶) along with reports of animal/livestock-associated MRSA (Fluit, 2012 ▶; Armand-Lefevre et al., 2005 ▶; Cuny et al., 2010 ▶; Pantosti, 2012 ▶), suggesting that MRSA is a food-borne pathogen (Kluytmans, 2010 ▶). Food-preservation techniques, including the reduction of water activity, have routinely been used to suppress the growth of food-related pathogens (Archer, 1996 ▶; McDowell, 2004 ▶; McMahon et al., 2007 ▶). However, they have also been implicated in triggering the development and spread of antibiotic resistance (Katzif et al., 2003 ▶; Rowan, 1999 ▶; Rickard et al., 2004 ▶). In S. aureus, high salt stress increases resistance to penicillin-based antibiotics (Rohrer et al., 2003 ▶; Chambers & Hackbarth, 1987 ▶; Matthews & Stewart, 1984 ▶), represses the expression of virulence determinants (Chan & Foster, 1998 ▶) and affects cell morphology (Vijaranakul et al., 1995 ▶). Uniquely, S. aureus tolerates a wide range of salt concentrations on human skin, in foods or in human habitats by regulating cytoplasmic osmolarity through the accumulation of l-proline, choline, taurine and betaine (Eriksen et al., 1995 ▶; Graham & Wilkinson, 1992 ▶; Otto, 2010 ▶). Betaine is the most effective osmolyte that can be imported from the environment, or it can be synthesized from acquired choline by the choline-conversion pathway enzymes in all kingdoms of life (Roessler & Muller, 2001 ▶; Sleator & Hill, 2002 ▶; Lamark et al., 1991 ▶; Kapfhammer et al., 2005 ▶; Cánovas et al., 2000 ▶; Craig, 2004 ▶; Mendum & Smith, 2002 ▶; Graham & Wilkinson, 1992 ▶; Gill et al., 2005 ▶; Gadda & McAllister-Wilkins, 2003 ▶). Human tissues are rich sources of choline and betaine that can easily be depleted by colonizing and invading pathogenic bacteria (Ueland, 2011 ▶). The choline-conversion pathway of pathogenic bacteria represents a potential target for inhibiting or attenuating bacterial growth. Choline uptake and its oxidation to betaine is necessary for the survival of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in the mouse lung infection model (Wargo, 2013 ▶). Choline induces the expression of cudA and cudB (Rosenstein et al., 1999 ▶), which encode betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase (BADH) and choline dehydrogenase, respectively. Choline inhibits the growth of a cudA-deficient Staphylococcus xylosus strain. Similar effects of choline have been observed in Bacillus subtilis (Boch et al., 1996 ▶). In S. aureus, peak choline-transport activity appears to occur at a lower salt concentration than that of betaine transport. Thus, tolerance to a further salt increase would be determined by the influx of betaine, or its production from accumulated choline through the intermediate toxic product betaine aldehyde, and blocking further choline uptake by products of its oxidation (Kaenjak et al., 1993 ▶; Bae et al., 1993 ▶). BADHs are a group of enzymes from the aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) superfamily (Jackson et al., 2011 ▶) that primarily catalyze the oxidation of betaine aldehyde (BA) to betaine; some BADHs also utilize other substrates (Muñoz-Clares et al., 2010 ▶; Fitzgerald et al., 2009 ▶). In spite of varied substrate specificities, the generally accepted catalytic mechanism of the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate) [NAD(P)+]-dependent BADH/ALDH includes four steps (Feldman & Weiner, 1972 ▶). The first step is the formation of a covalent tetrahedral hemithioacetal–enzyme complex. Cofactor binding repositions a conserved catalytic cysteine for nucleophilic attack on the carbonyl of an aldehyde and the adjacent conserved glutamate residue deprotonates the nucleophile. Secondly, a covalent thioester intermediate is generated after a proton is transferred from the first intermediate to oxidized NAD(P)+. The third step includes the release of the reduced cofactor, allowing a nucleophilic water to attack the thioester to generate a second tetrahedral intermediate. Finally, an acid product leaves the active site and the cycle can repeat again. BADHs resemble ALDH in structure and are composed of a Rossmann-fold NAD(P)-binding domain, a catalytic (substrate-binding) domain and an oligomerization (bridging) domain (Muñoz-Clares et al., 2010 ▶). Although BADHs have been characterized in Escherichia coli (EcBADH; PDB entries 1wnb and 1wnd; Falkenberg & Strøm, 1990 ▶; Gruez et al., 2004 ▶), B. subtilis (Boch et al., 1997 ▶), Halomonas elongata DSM 3043 (Cánovas et al., 2000 ▶), Pseudoalteromonas atlantica T6c (PDB entry 3k2w; New York SGX Research Center for Structural Genomics, unpublished work), Agrobacterium tumefaciens (AtBADH; PDB entry 3r31; New York Structural Genomics Research Consortium, unpublished work), P. aeruginosa (PaBADH; PDB entries 2wme, 2wox, 2xdr and 3zqa; González-Segura et al., 2009 ▶; Díaz-Sánchez et al., 2011; A. G. Díaz-Sánchez, L. González-Segura, E. Rudiño-Piñera, A. Lira-Rocha, A. Torres-Larios & R. A. Muñoz-Clares, unpublished work) and in eukaryotic organisms such as Gadus morhua (GmBADH; PDB entries 1a4s and 1bpw; Johansson et al., 1998 ▶), Pisum sativum (PsBADH; PDB entries 3iwk and 3imj; Tylichová et al., 2010 ▶), Spinacia oleracae (SoBADH; PDB entry 4a0m; Díaz-Sánchez et al., 2012 ▶) and Solanum lycopersicum (SlBADH; PDB entries 4i8p, 4i9b and 4i8q; Kopečny et al., 2013 ▶), questions remain about the molecular mechanism of action of BADH. The sequenced genome of the early MRSA COL isolate revealed the presence of genes encoding osmoprotectant transport systems and choline-conversion pathway enzymes (Gill et al., 2005 ▶). Although osmotic stress response in S. aureus may involve alternative pathways (Tsai et al., 2011 ▶), the putative S. aureus BADH (SaBADH) may be a key contributing factor to this process. Initial structural analysis of SaBADH provided a platform for in-depth site-directed mutagenesis studies, which identified residues crucial to function and substrate inhibition, and these have been published elsewhere (Chen et al., 2014 ▶). The aim of this study was to provide essential insights into the structure and function of SaBADH. Our initial kinetic and preliminary surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy data revealed temperature, pH and buffer effects on the dehydrogenase activity, stability and NAD+/NADH affinity of SaBADH. Among the previously functionally characterized SaBADH mutants (Chen et al., 2014 ▶), the Gly234Ser (G234S) mutant, G234S-SaBADH, had a higher affinity for NAD+ and decreased substrate inhibition, suggesting the existence of a structural and functional interaction between the NAD-binding and substrate-binding sites (Chen et al., 2014 ▶). Thus, this mutant was of particular interest and its structure determination in the apo and holo forms provides key atomic details on how the G234S substitution affects NAD+ binding. The structures of wild-type SaBADH and G234S-SaBADH purified and crystallized with β-mercaptoethanol (BME) reveal that the catalytic Cys289 is oxidized and this chemical modification may affect the affinity of SaBADH for its natural ligands. To maximize the structural resemblance of SaBADH to its native apo and holo states, we determined structures of the enzyme in the absence of BME. Comparison of the BME-free structures with those in the presence of BME highlight some interesting features that provide further understanding of the catalytic and inhibitory potential of SaBADH.

Materials and methods

Expression and purification of SaBADH and G234S-SaBADH

SaBADH was cloned into the pMCSG7 vector and expressed in E. coli BL21(DE3)/pMAGIC cells. The G234S mutation was introduced using the QuikChange site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, California, USA) and the construct was cloned into the p15TV-LIC vector for expression. For each construct, E. coli cells harboring the expression plasmid were grown to an OD600 of 0.8 at 310 K with aeration at 200 rev min−1, chilled to 289 K and induced with 1 mM IPTG overnight. Cells were collected (6118g, 277 K) and lysed by sonication on ice in 10 mM TrisHCl pH 8.3 buffer, 500 mM NaCl, in the presence of 5 mM BME (buffer A) [SaBADHBME(+) and G234S-SaBADHBME(+)] or in the presence of 0.5 mM tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP) (buffer B) [SaBADHBME(−) and G234S-SaBADHBME(−)]. The proteins were purified using an Ni–NTA column (GE Healthcare, Piscataway, New Jersey, USA) and a Superdex 200 column (pre-equilibrated with either buffer A or B; GE Healthcare) at 277 K. The purity of the proteins was assayed by SDSPAGE. The proteins were stored at 193 K.

Enzyme kinetics of SaBADH

The dehydrogenase activity of SaBADH was determined at 303 K by measuring the continuous absorbance increase of NADH at 340 nm (∊ = 6.22 mM −1 cm−1). The optimal catalytic pH was determined using 0.15 mM betaine aldehyde and 1 mM NAD+ in various buffers at 100 mM: 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid (MES; pH 5.5–6.5), potassium phosphate (pH 7.0–8.0) and N-cyclohexyl-2-aminoethanesulfonic acid (CHES; pH 8.5–10.0). Kinetic parameters were determined with various concentrations of one substrate in the presence of a saturated or subinhibitory concentration of the second substrate in 100 mM potassium phosphate buffer pH 8.0 and were calculated from the initial reaction rates using (1) or (2) with GraphPad Prism v.5.02 (GraphPad Software, San Diego, California, USA), where [S] is the concentration of the varied substrate, K m is the Michaelis–Menten constant of the varied substrate and K i is the dissociation constant of the varied substrate. One unit (U) of enzyme activity corresponds to the release of 1 µmol of NADH in 1 min. The effect of increasing the ionic strength on betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase activity was tested in the presence of 0.0–2.5 M NaCl/KCl with 5 mM NAD+, 1 mM betaine aldehyde and 100 mM 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid (HEPES) buffer pH 8.0.

SPR studies of SaBADH

SaBADH was studied by SPR using Biacore S51 and 4000 optical biosensors (GE Healthcare). SaBADH (in buffer A at 22 mg ml−1) was immobilized (0.4 mg ml−1 in 10 mM sodium acetate buffer pH 5.0) on a CM5 sensor chip (GE Healthcare) using the standard amino-coupling method. Initially, 2 mM NAD+/NADH (using twofold dilution series; each concentration was tested three times) were probed for interactions with immobilized protein in 10 mM phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) buffer pH 7.0 containing 0.1% Brij-35 and 5 mM DTT at 277 K. This test revealed a fivefold higher affinity for NADH and thus all further SPR measurements were performed with NADH. The short-term (∼6 h) pH-dependent (pH range 6.0–8.0 in increments of 0.25) strength of the NADHSaBADH interaction was analyzed using an SaBADH chip from the initial test and 333 µM NADH (threefold dilution series; each concentration was measured twice) at 277 K. The long-term test within the pH range 5.0–8.0 (in increments of 1.0) was conducted with 2 mM NADH (threefold dilution series; each concentration was measured twice) over 2 d starting with freshly immobilized SaBADH at 298 K. The pH dependence of NADH binding to SaBADH was compared with that of adenosine diphosphate (ADP; both ligands at 2 mM; pH range 5.0–8.0 at 298 K) using two-day-old immobilized SaBADH. Buffer-composition effects on the affinity of SaBADH for NADH were assayed in 10 mM buffers: (i) HEPES-buffered saline (HBS), (ii) potassium bisulfite (KBS) and (iii) 2-amino-2-hydroxymethyl-propane-1,3-diol (Tris)-buffered saline (TBS) at pH 7.0 and 298 K. Threefold dilution series starting at 2 mM NADH were used, with each concentration tested twice. Binding of betaine and BA (both 1 mM) to SaBADH was tested in 20 mM sodium phosphate buffer pH 7.0, 150 mM NaCl, 0.1% Brij-35, 2 mM DTT, 5% DMSO. The Salmonella typhimurium LT2 3-dehydroquinate dehydratase (AroD; Light et al., 2013 ▶) and its substrate dehydroquinic acid (DQA; 200 µM) were used as negative controls. Sodium malonate was probed for binding as a double-negative control for both AroD and SaBADH. Binding responses, measured as resonance units (RU), were double referenced and fitted with the Langmuir binding model using SCRUBBER2 available at http://www.biologic.com.au.

Size-exclusion chromatography with multi-angle laser-light scattering (SEC-MALS)

SaBADHBME(+) was run on a Superdex 200 10/300 GL column (GE Healthcare) to estimate its molecular mass and oligomerization state as described previously (Halavaty et al., 2012 ▶). SaBADHBME(+) (2 mg ml−1) was run in 10 mM TrisHCl pH 8.3, 500 mM NaCl, 5 mM BME on a the column pre-equilibrated with the same buffer at a flow rate of 0.4 ml min−1 at 295 K. Bovine serum albumin (BSA; Sigma–Aldrich, St Louis, Missouri, USA) was used as a control protein. The molecular weights of the proteins were determined using the ASTRA software (Wyatt Technology Europe, Dernbach, Germany).

Dynamic light scattering (DLS)

All solutions were centrifuged and filtered prior to DLS analysis of SaBADHBME(−). A Zetasizer Nano S instrument (Malvern Instruments Inc., Westborough, Massachusetts, USA) and Zetasizer software 7.01 were used to perform measurements and determine the Z-average hydrodynamic radius (R h), polydispersity index (PdI) and molecular weight (MW) using a globular polymer model. Data were acquired (ten acquisitions of 5 s each for each of the SaBADH concentrations) at 298 K using auto-attenuated He–Ne laser power (wavelength 663 nm) and a solvent refractive index of 1.33. SaBADH was tested at 10, 20, 30, 50, 80 and 100 µM in 10 mM TrisHCl buffer pH 8.3, 0.5 mM TCEP and supplemented with 0.0, 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0 or 2.5 M NaCl or KCl. The analyzed data are an average of triplicate measurements over all concentrations of NaCl or KCl.

Crystallization of SaBADH and G234S-SaBADH

Proteins were crystallized using the sitting-drop vapor-diffusion technique, a Phoenix protein crystallization robot (Art Robbins Instruments, Sunnyvale, California, USA) and crystallization screens from Qiagen (Valencia, California, USA) at 295 K. Apo SaBADHBME(+) (at 7.4 mg ml−1) and apo SaBADHBME(−) (at 7.0 mg ml−1) were crystallizaed using a condition from The JCSG+ Suite consisting of 200 mM MgCl2, 100 mM Tris pH 8.5, 20%(w/v) PEG 8000. Crystals of apo SaBADHBME(+) with a modeled PEG molecule at the NAD- and substrate-binding sites [apo SaBADHBME(+)PEG] was obtained from a condition from The Classics II Suite consisting of 100 mM citric acid pH 3.5, 25%(w/v) PEG 3350. NADSaBADHBME(+) (at 7.4 mg ml−1 in 10 mM TrisHCl pH 8.3, 250 mM NaCl, 5 mM BME plus 2 mM NAD+) was crystallized using a condition from The PEGs II Suite consisting of 200 mM sodium acetate, 100 mM Tris pH 8.5, 30%(w/v) PEG 4000. NADSaBADHBME(−) and NADG234S-SaBADHBME(−) (both at 7.0 mg ml−1 plus 2 mM NAD+) were crystallized using a condition from The JCSG+ Suite consisting of 100 mM potassium thiocyanate, 30%(w/v) PEG 2000 MME and a condition from The Classics II Suite consisting of 200 mM ammonium acetate, 100 mM Tris pH 8.5, 25%(w/v) PEG 3350, respectively. Apo G234S-SaBADHBME(−) (7.0 mg ml−1) and apo G234S-SaBADHBME(+) (at 7.3 mg ml−1) were crystallized using conditions from The PACT Suite consisting of 100 mM sodium propionate, sodium cacodylate and bis-tris propane (PCB) buffer pH 8.0, 25%(w/v) PEG 1500 and 100 mM succinic acid, sodium dihydrogen phosphate and glycine (SPG) buffer pH 8.0, 25%(w/v) PEG 1500, respectively. Crystals were soaked in the respective crystallization solutions for cryoprotection and flash-cooled in liquid nitrogen prior to X-ray data collection.

X-ray data collection, structure determination and validation

X-ray diffraction data were collected on beamlines 21-ID-F, 21-ID-G and 21-ID-D at the Life Science Collaborative Access Team (LS-CAT), Advanced Photon Source (APS), Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) (Tables 1 ▶ and 2 ▶). Data sets were processed with HKL-2000 (Otwinowski & Minor, 1997 ▶) and HKL-3000 (Minor et al., 2006 ▶). The crystal structure of apo SaBADHBME(+) was determined by molecular replacement using a single chain of the human mitochondrial ALDH (PDB entry 1cw3; Ni et al., 1999 ▶) as a model and Phaser (McCoy et al., 2007 ▶) from the CCP4 package (Winn et al., 2011 ▶). The initial structure solution was rebuilt with ARP/wARP (Morris et al., 2003 ▶), manually modified in Coot (Emsley & Cowtan, 2004 ▶; Emsley et al., 2010 ▶) and refined with REFMAC v.5.7 (Murshudov et al., 2011 ▶). The other SaBADH and G234S-SaBADH crystal structures were determined by molecular replacement using the apo SaBADHBME(+) structure (PDB entry 4mpb) as a model. Translation–libration–screw (TLS) groups were obtained from the TLS Motion Determination (TLSMD) server (Painter & Merritt, 2006 ▶; http://skuld.bmsc.washington.edu/~tlsmd/) and introduced at the final stages of refinement. The quality of the structures was checked with the PDB validation server (http://deposit.pdb.org/validate/) and MolProbity (Chen et al., 2010 ▶; Davis et al., 2007 ▶; http://molprobity.biochem.duke.edu/). Diffraction images for the deposited structures are available at the Center for Structural Genomics of Infectious Diseases (CSGID) website (http://www.csgid.org/csgid/pages/home). The pairwise structural alignments were produced with the DaliLite server (Holm & Park, 2000 ▶; http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/structure/dalilite/). The total buried surface area of the SaBADH assemblies was determined using the Protein Interfaces, Surfaces and Assemblies (PISA) service at the European Bioinformatics Institute (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/pdbe/prot_int/pistart.html; Krissinel & Henrick, 2007 ▶). Structural figures were generated with PyMOL (Schrödinger) and LigPlot+ v.1.4 (Laskowski & Swindells, 2011 ▶). Data-collection and structure-determination statistics are given in Table 1 ▶ for SaBADH and in Table 2 ▶ for G234S-SaBADH. The coordination geometries of modeled Na+, K+ and Mg2+ were validated with the CheckMyMetal (CMM) server (http://csgid.org/csgid/metal_sites/; Zheng et al., 2014 ▶). The identity of K+ was also confirmed by calculating an anomalous difference Fourier map.
Table 1

Data-collection and refinement statistics for the wild-type SaBADH structures

Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell.

 Apo SaBADHBME(+) NADSaBADHBME(+) Apo SaBADHBME() NADSaBADHBME() Apo SaBADHBME(+)PEG
PDB entry 4mpb 4mpy 4nu9 4nea 4qto
Data collection
Wavelength ()0.978720.91840.978720.978560.97856
Data-collection temperature (K)100100100100100
Space group P21212 P21 P21212 P212121 C2
Unit-cell parameters
a ()106.399.8106.686.7224.3
b ()118.6159.1118.4142.1102.5
c ()87.9122.988.5163.1118.2
()90.090.090.090.090.0
()90.094.890.090.0104.5
()90.090.090.090.090.0
Resolution range ()88.051.70 (1.761.70)25.001.85 (1.881.85)30.002.30 (2.342.30)30.001.90 (1.931.90)30.001.65 (1.681.65)
No. of reflections122661 (12121)324147 (16115)48647 (2474)155760 (7884)307248 (15078)
R merge (%)7.4 (52.6)9.6 (43.1)10.7 (50.1)8.2 (44.6)8.2 (63.1)
Completeness (%)100.0 (100.0)100.0 (100.0)96.9 (100.0)97.9 (100.0)98.6 (97.5)
I/(I)19.9 (2.5)12.8 (3.2)18.4 (4.4)22.7 (4.6)16.7 (2.5)
Multiplicity5.9 (4.2)4.1 (4.0)7.3 (7.5)7.2 (7.2)4.3 (4.3)
Wilson B factor (2)27.725.630.424.417.0
Refinement
Resolution range ()19.791.70 (1.741.70)24.981.85 (1.891.85)29.872.30 (2.342.30)29.851.90 (1.951.90)29.711.65 (1691.65)
No. of reflections116223 (8449)314222 (22471)46132 (3244)147578 (7781)290362 (21045)
R work/R free (%)13.8/17.5 (25.5/28.9)12.5/16.6 (17.0/21.7)15.9/21.5 (19.4/25.8)13.9/18.8 (19.2/23.0)13.6/15.6 (21.0/24.5)
Protein molecules28244
Protein atoms85053220078071648816509
Solvent atoms1385472261019962742
Heterogen atoms63714368129
Mean temperature factor (2)
Overall23.919.925.627.219.7
Protein21.918.525.226.017.3
Solvent atoms35.830.130.736.332.8
Heterogen atoms41.320.325.431.747.9
Coordinate deviation
R.m.s.d., bonds ()0.0140.0130.0140.0140.011
R.m.s.d., angles ()1.6941.7221.7051.6981.643
Ramachandran plot
Most favored (%)92.993.592.193.293.6
Allowed (%)6.35.97.16.25.7
Generously allowed (%)0.60.50.50.30.5
Disallowed (%)0.20.10.30.30.2

Statistics are based on PROCHECK (Laskowski et al., 1993 ▶).

Table 2

Data-collection and refinement statistics for the G234S-SaBADH mutant structures

Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell.

 Apo G234S-SaBADHBME() Apo G234S-SaBADHBME(+) NADG234S-SaBADHBME()
PDB entry 4qje 4q92 4qn2
Data collection
Wavelength ()0.978720.978720.97872
Data-collection temperature (K)100100100
Space group C2 C2 P21
Unit-cell parameters
a ()218.7157.488.6
b ()102.9156.4168.4
c ()118.188.4144.5
()101.4110.0104.9
Resolution range ()30.001.85 (1.881.85)30.001.90 (1.931.90)30.002.60 (2.642.60)
No. of reflections217702 (10794)155391 (7680)117959 (6068)
R merge (%)10.0 (63.4)10.4 (58.5)10.4 (60.7)
Completeness (%)99.9 (99.6)98.8 (97.9)93.7 (97.1)
I/(I)15.9 (2.3)17.43 (2.4)12.8 (2.34)
Multiplicity3.8 (3.6)3.9 (3.9)3.9 (3.8)
Wilson B factor (2)17.621.051.9
Refinement
Resolution range ()29.831.85 (1.891.85)29.501.90 (1.951.90)29.782.60 (2.602.67)
No. of reflections206767 (14864)147596 (10678)111581 (8480)
R work/R free (%)14.9/17.5 (23.8/26.6)19.3/22.3 (25.8/30.5)18.4/21.9 (27.0/31.4)
Protein molecules448
Protein atoms163481606930871
Solvent atoms25111614707
Heterogen atoms/12620356
Mean temperature factor (2)
Overall21.925.142.4
Protein20.124.742.7
Solvent atoms32.928.834.5
Heterogen atoms46.428.638.4
Coordinate deviation
R.m.s.d., bonds ()0.0100.0120.012
R.m.s.d., angles ()1.5371.5131.587
Ramachandran plot
Most favored (%)92.793.791.6
Allowed (%)6.55.57.7
Generously allowed (%)0.60.50.4
Disallowed (%)0.20.20.3

Statistics are based on PROCHECK (Laskowski et al., 1993 ▶).

Results

Enzymatic activity of SaBADH

Based on its sequence, the uncharacterized protein SACOL2628 from S. aureus was annotated as a BADH (SaBADH; UniProtKB entry Q5HCU0). The purified recombinant protein was highly specific for BA (Fig. 1 ▶) and showed negligible activity against other aldehyde substrates (Chen et al., 2014 ▶). SaBADH was also active with NAD(P)+, but the NAD-supported activity was at least ten times higher (Fig. 1 ▶, Table 3 ▶). The protein exhibited maximal activity at 500 mM NaCl/KCl and pH 8.0 and was fairly resistant to increasing ionic strength (Fig. 1 ▶). SaBADH had negligibly slower kinetics in the presence of NAD+/K+ versus NAD+/Na+ (Fig. 1 ▶ b), suggesting a functional preference for sodium. SaBADH was strongly inhibited by BA at concentrations of higher than 0.15 mM (Fig. 1 ▶ d, Table 3 ▶), similarly to other BADHs (Velasco-García et al., 1999 ▶, 2000 ▶; Falkenberg & Strøm, 1990 ▶; Valenzuela-Soto & Muñoz-Clares, 1994 ▶; Boch et al., 1997 ▶). Detailed kinetic and inhibition studies of SaBADH have been published elsewhere (Chen et al., 2014 ▶).
Figure 1

BADH activity of SaBADH. (a) pH dependence of the SaBADH activity. (b) Ionic strength dependence of the SaBADH activity. (c, d) The Michaelis–Menten kinetics of SaBADH. BA, betaine aldehyde.

Table 3

SaBADH kinetic parameters

 NAD+ NADP+ Betaine aldehyde
K m (mM)0.43 0.032.26 0.350.17 0.03
K i (mM)N/A N/A0.34 0.06
V max (molmin1mg1)6.78 0.160.66 0.0812.1 1.5
k cat (s1)6.18 0.140.56 0.0711.0 1.4

SPR: SaBADH binds NAD+(H) in a pH-dependent manner

NADH was chosen as an indicator of specific binding because of its higher affinity for SaBADHBME(+) (K d = 4.50 µM) versus NAD+ (K d = 19.30 µM) (Fig. 2 ▶ a) at pH 7.0. The same immobilized SaBADH was further assayed to determine the strength of the NADHSaBADH interactions in a 6 h pH-dependent experiment at 277 K (Fig. 2 ▶ b). From this experiment, a K d value of 11.4 µM was obtained at pH 7.0, suggesting that the K d differences may be attributed to variations in the experimental setups (see §2). The K d for NADH at 298 K is higher than at 277 K at pH 7.0 (Figs. 2 ▶ a and 2 ▶ c), while no differences in the NADH binding were detected at pH 5.0, 6.0 and 7.0 with freshly made and two-day-old SaBADH surfaces at 298 K. However, a slight decrease in RU was observed at pH 8.0 with a two-day-old chip (not shown). Subjecting freshly immobilized SaBADH (tested with 1 mM NADH) to a 12 h stability evaluation at pH 8.0, we observed a ∼10 RU decrease from the zero-hour measurement (Fig. 3 ▶ a, inset in the pH 8.0 graph). SaBADH and the S. typhimurium LT2 3-dehydroquinate dehydratase AroD interacted with sodium malonate (double-negative control; data not shown) nonselectively, while each of the proteins selectively responded to its natural ligand, NADH and DQA, respectively (Fig. 2 ▶ c). The two enzymes had very weak affinity or no affinity for both 1 mM BA and betaine, as indicated by comparable low-level to noise-level RU signals, respectively (Fig. 2 ▶ d). The pH-dependent strength of the NADHSaBADH interaction was further compared with that between ADP and SaBADH (Fig. 3 ▶ b). An acidic pH favored the ADPSaBADH interaction (Fig. 4 ▶ d), while NADH bound more strongly at pH 7.0 and more weakly at pH 8.0 (Fig. 3 ▶ a). A moderate decrease in the NADH affinity was observed in the HEPES buffer and was likely to be caused by HEPES binding at the NAD-binding site (Fig. 3 ▶ c), as has been observed with other proteins that bind nucleotide-based ligands (Majorek et al., 2014 ▶).
Figure 2

The affinity of SaBADH for ligands as studied by SPR. (a) Relative response and single binding isotherm fitting for NAD+ and NADH binding to the enzyme at pH 7.0 and 277 K. (b) Response and data fitting of the NADH–SaBADH interactions in the pH range 6.0–8.0 at 277 K. (c) Single binding isotherm fitting of the affinity of 3-dehydroquinic acid and NADH for SaBADH (green) and S. typhimurium LT2 3-dehydroquinate dehydratase (red) at 298 K and pH 7.0. (d) Affinity of immobilized SaBADH (green) and S. typhimurium LT2 3-dehydroquinate dehydratase (red) for the betaine aldehyde and betaine at 298 K and pH 7.0.

Figure 3

Long-term stability and pH-dependent affinity of SaBADH (BetB) for NADH at 298 K. (a) SPR signal showing the pH dependence of NADH binding to a fresh SaBADH surface. No changes in RU were detected using two-day-old immobilized SaBADH at any of the pH values except pH 8.0. The inset illustrates the loss of affinity over 12 h using freshly immobilized SaBADH at pH 8.0 and 298 K. (b) pH effect on the interaction of SaBADH with ADP assayed on a two-day-old SaBADH surface at 298 K. (c) Relative response and single binding isotherm fitting of NADH (2 mM) binding to SaBADH in 10 mM HBS, KBS, PBS and TBS buffers at pH 7.0 and 298 K.

Figure 4

Structure of SaBADH. (a) Ribbon representation of the NAD–SaBADHBME(+) structure. NAD and the catalytic Cys289 are shown in stick representation. The insets show key structural differences between the apo structures (gray ribbons) and the NAD-bound structures. (b) The quaternary structure of SaBADH. (c) SEC-MALS elution profiles of BSA (black) and apo SaBADHBME(+) (red). Molecular-mass distribution curves at 500 mM NaCl [BSA, horizontal short black; apo SaBADHBME(+), red] are shown. (d) The surface electrostatic potentials (−4.0kT e−1, red; +4.0kT e−1, blue) at the NAD-binding site.

Crystal structure of wild-type SaBADH and G234S-SaBADH

We previously showed (Chen et al., 2014 ▶) that the substitution of Gly234, which is located in the NAD-binding area, by a serine residue increased the affinity of SaBADH for NAD+ and made the mutant more active than the wild type. The mutation also reduced the substrate inhibition. To fully understand the kinetic and inhibition mechanisms of G234S-SaBADH, we determined its crystal structures in apo and holo forms and in the presence/absence of BME and compared them with the wild-type structures. All eight structures of SaBADH are similar to each other (r.m.s.d. of 0.2–0.8 Å over 496 Cα atoms) and the homologous ALDH/BADH (Fig. 4 ▶ a). DALI (Holm & Rosenström, 2010 ▶) analysis found a putative ALDH from Burkholderia cenocepacia (PDB entry 4o6r; Seattle Structural Genomics Center for Infectious Disease, unpublished work) to be the closest structural homolog of SaBADH (Z-score of 59.6; r.m.s.d. of 1.3 Å; 38% sequence homology). Consistent with the high overall similarity, obvious differences between the eight SaBADH structures are confined to residues Ala212Glu217 (helix αF) and Val288Ser290 (insets in Fig. 4 ▶ a). The first peptide stretch adopts a helical conformation extending helix αF in the presence of NAD+ and interacts with the adenine ring of the cofactor. Although this segment is unwound in apo SaBADHBME(+/−), it forms a similar helix turn in apo G234S-SaBADHBME(+/−) and apo SaBADHBME(+)PEG. NAD+ binding results in displacement of the Cα atoms of the second area by ∼1.6–1.9 Å. However, in apo G234S-SaBADHBME(−) and apo SaBADHBME(+)PEG Val288Ser290 is also repositioned in an NAD-dependent manner. In the crystal, SaBADH forms a tetramer (∼21 400 Å2 buried surface area) that is composed of two dimers with ∼7900 Å2 buried surface area each (Fig. 4 ▶ b). Hydrogen-bond and van der Waals interactions stabilize the tetramer. SEC-MALS analysis revealed two SaBADH peaks (theoretical monomer mass of 57 360.7 Da with the purification tag) with apparent molecular masses of ∼60 and ∼215 kDa, approximately corresponding to a monomer and tetramer, respectively (Fig. 4 ▶ c). DLS analysis was performed to assess the oligomerization state of SaBADH in the presence of 0.5–2.5 M NaCl/KCl. In the absence of each salt, SaBADH appears to be predominantly dimeric, with an estimated molecular mass of 168.1 ± 0.2 kDa (R h of 5.32 ± 0.27 nm and PdI of 0.25 ± 0.03). An average R h of 6.58 ± 1.47 nm (PdI of 0.23 ± 0.14) with an estimated molecular mass of 279.0 ± 8.7 kDa and an average R h of 5.27 ± 0.65 nm (PdI of 0.14 ± 0.08) and molecular mass of 164.5 ± 1.2 kDa were obtained for all tested NaCl and KCl concentrations, respectively. Compared with the results obtained with no added salt, SaBADH exhibited a higher activity at both 500 mM NaCl and 500 mM KCl, at which the enzyme has an average R h of 5.55 ± 0.50 nm (molecular mass of 185.6 ± 0.7 kDa and PdI of 0.17 ± 0.07) and an average R h of 5.05 ± 0.31 nm (molecular mass of 148.8 ± 0.2 kDa and PdI of 0.10 ± 0.06), respectively. Thus, the SEC-MALS and DLS data are consistent with the crystal structure, showing that the enzyme is predominantly tetrameric in the presence of NaCl, while more of the SaBADH is dimeric in the presence of KCl.

The NAD-binding mode in SaBADH and G234S-SaBADH

NAD+ makes similar interactions with SaBADH and G234S-SaBADH (Supplementary Figs. S1a, S1b and S1c); PROPKA (Bas et al., 2008 ▶; Li et al., 2005 ▶) was used to estimate the pK a values of the residues within the NAD-binding and substrate-binding sites in the presence/absence of NAD+ (Supplementary Table S1). A positively charged surface of the NAD-binding site accommodates the adenosine monophos­phate (AMP) moiety of the cofactor (Fig. 4 ▶ d). The adenine ring is positioned in a cleft between helix αF and helix αG (residues Gly236Ile241), while the ribose of AMP and the pyrophosphate group are solvent-oriented (Fig. 4 ▶ a). The nicotinamide nucleotide (NMN) moiety is turned towards a negatively charged pocket in which the catalytic Cys289 is located (Figs. 4 ▶ a and 4 ▶ d). SaBADHBME(+/−) binds NAD+ in an orientation similar to the ‘hydrolysis’ conformation (Muñoz-Clares et al., 2010 ▶) of the cofactor. Two alternative NAD+ conformations that differ in the orientation of the nicotinamide ring were modeled in NADSaBADHBME(−) to interpret the additional electron density (Figs. 5 ▶ a and 5 ▶ b). One of these NAD+ conformations aligns well with that in NADSaBADHBME(+). In NADG234S-SaBADHBME(−), the dinucleotide is in the ‘hydride-transfer’ position (Muñoz-Clares et al., 2010 ▶), in which the amide group of NMN displaces the γ-carboxyl group of the catalytic base Glu255 towards its single ‘intermediate’ conformation. The C4N atom of the cofactor is ∼2.5 Å from the Sγ atom of the ‘attacking’ rotamer (González-Segura et al., 2009 ▶) of Cys289 (Fig. 5 ▶ c). The wild-type apo and holo SaBADH structures had Glu255 in the ‘inside’ and/or ‘intermediate’ but not the ‘outside’ conformations [as, for example, observed in human ALDH2; PDB entries 1zum (Larson et al., 2005 ▶) and 2onp (Larson et al., 2007 ▶)]. Structural comparison of all SaBADH structures revealed that the Leu256-Gly257 peptide bond may undergo a conformational switch to secure the ‘hydride-transfer’ position of NAD+ or support the ‘inside’ position (González-Segura et al., 2009 ▶) of Glu255 (Fig. 5 ▶ c).
Figure 5

The NAD-binding site. (a) The ‘hydrolysis’ [NAD–SaBADHBME(+/−); C atoms in yellow/gray] and ‘hydride-transfer’ [NAD–G234S-SaBADHBME(−); C atoms in magenta] positions of NAD+. (b) The 3.0σ OMIT map (green mesh) of NAD+ in the NAD–(G234S-)SaBADH structures [chains A are displayed and colored as in (a)]. (c) The catalytic and nicotinamide ring-binding sites in the SaBADH structures: apo SaBADHBME(+)PEG (C atoms in black), apo SaBADHBME(+) (C atoms in green), apo SaBADHBME(−) (C atoms in pink), NAD–SaBADHBME(+) (C atoms in yellow), NAD–SaBADHBME(−) (C atoms in light gray), NAD–G234S-SaBADHBME(−) (C atoms in magenta), apo G234S-SaBADHBME(−) (C atoms in cyan) and apo G234S-SaBADHBME(+) (C atoms in orange). Cys289 and NAD+ in NAD–G234S-SaBADHBME(−) and NAD+ in NAD–SaBADHBME(+) are only shown for clarity. ‘Intermediate’ and ‘inside’ refer to the corresponding positions of the catalytic base Glu255. The bound PEG molecule at the NAD-binding site is not shown for clarity. The inset shows alternative conformations of the Leu256-Gly257 peptide bond and its possible role in supporting the ‘inside’ conformation of Glu255 and the ‘hydride-transfer’ position of NAD+; selected structures are shown and atoms are colored as in the main panel. (d) Attacking (A) and resting (R) conformations of Cys289 within all SaBADH structures [chains A are displayed; C atoms are colored as in (c)].

Substrate-binding site of SaBADH and G234S-SaBADH

The catalytic nucleophile Cys289 and the catalytic base Glu255 of SaBADH were identified based on multiple sequence alignment with other BADHs. In all SaBADH structures the side chain of Cys289 adopts two alternative conformations denoted ‘resting’ and ‘attacking’ (González-Segura et al., 2009 ▶), but NADG234S-SaBADHBME(−), apo G234S-SaBADHBME(+) and NADSaBADHBME(+) only have the ‘attacking’ rotamer (Fig. 5 ▶ d). All (G234S-)SaBADHBME(+) structures have the ‘attacking’ conformer oxidized with BME, while both Cys289 conformers of apo SaBADHBME(+)PEG are BME-modified. Bulky electron density at the Sγ atom in NADSaBADHBME(+) (chains B, C, E, G and H) was interpreted as two alternative conformations of the BMECys289 adduct. The hydroxyl group of BME interacts with the Asn157 side chain and/or a water molecule. Both Cys289 rotamers in apo G234S-SaBADHBME(−) were modeled as cysteine-S-dioxide to explain the outsized electron density at the Sγ atom (Fig. 5 ▶ d). Superposition of all eight SaBADH structures revealed additional residues close to Cys289, Glu255 and the NMN-binding and substrate-binding areas for which the conformations varied depending on whether (G234S-)SaBADH was in the apo or holo form (Fig. 5 ▶ c). Noticeable side-chain motions of Tyr158 and Tyr450 in apo G234S-SaBADHBME(−), NADG234S-SaBADHBME(−) and apo SaBADHBME(+)PEG (Fig. 5 ▶ c) may be functionally important for BA binding. Asn157 and Gln162 exhibited comparable smaller side-chain movements that may facilitate association/release of the cofactor/substrate/product (Fig. 5 and Supplementary Fig. S1b).

Cation-binding sites in SaBADH

Fig. 6 ▶ shows binding sites for Na+, K+ and Mg2+ at the dimerization interface of the protein and in the vicinity of the NAD-binding site. Binding of cations at similar sites have been reported previously (Muñoz-Clares et al., 2010 ▶) and were shown to activate BADH/ALDH through facilitation of NAD(P)+ association and to affect the tertiary and quaternary structures of the enzymes (Falkenberg & Strøm, 1990 ▶; Valenzuela-Soto & Muñoz-Clares, 1994 ▶; Muñoz-Clares et al., 2010 ▶; Velasco-García et al., 1999 ▶; Valenzuela-Soto et al., 2003 ▶; González-Segura et al., 2013 ▶; Garza-Ramos et al., 2013 ▶). Mg2+ (Fig. 6 ▶ b), Na+ (Fig. 6 ▶ c) and K+ (Fig. 6 ▶ f) bind at the dimerization interface and have one ligand in common, Val249; however, their modeled positions differ owing to their different coordination spheres. Alignment of the corresponding SaBADH structures revealed that the aforementioned K+ and Na+ ions are just ∼0.8 Å apart, while Mg2+ is ∼2.4 and ∼2.7 Å from Na+ and K+, respectively. NADSaBADHBME(−) has an additional K+-binding site (Fig. 6 ▶ g) that is 6.1 Å away from that shown in Fig. 6 ▶(f). The modeled positions of Na+ (Fig. 6 ▶ d) and K+ (Fig. 6 ▶ e) are just ∼0.3 Å apart and are located near the NAD+-binding site between the NAD-binding domain and the catalytic domain.
Figure 6

Binding of monovalent/divalent cations. (a) Localization of the metal-binding sites within SaBADH (yellow ribbon). Positions of K+ were validated by anomalous difference Fourier maps (insets; red mesh; contoured at 5σ). NAD+ is shown in space-filling representation with atoms colored as follows: C, yellow; O, red; N, blue; P, orange. (b)–(g) Coordination geometries of the metal-binding sites within apo SaBADHBME(+) (b), NAD–SaBADHBME(+) (c, d) and NAD–SaBADHBME(−) (e, f, g). Water molecules are shown as red spheres.

Discussion

The annotated SaBADH is a functional BADH

The putative S. aureus betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase enzyme SACOL2628 is indeed a functional BADH that utilizes NAD+ and BA as the primary cofactor and substrate, respectively (Fig. 1 ▶, Table 3 ▶). The activity is inhibited by high concentrations of BA. Kinetic data also show that SaBADH is slightly more active in the presence of Na+ than in the presence of K+. DLS data suggest that Na+-induced tetramerization of SaBADH may account for the observed higher activity compared with SaBADH in the presence of K+. SaBADH has maximal activity at 500 mM NaCl or KCl, and a further increase in the ionic strength may slightly reduce the activity by weakening the interactions required for NAD+ and BA binding without significantly affecting the oligomerization state. NAD+ and NADH bind SaBADH in a pH-dependent manner, with NADH having higher affinity for SaBADH at pH 7.0 and 277 K (Fig. 2 ▶ a). Although the pH-dependence of NAD+ binding was not tested in SPR, SaBADH activity and its co-crystallization with NAD+ at pH 8.0 suggest that the oxidized form of the cofactor binds more strongly at the alkaline pH. As suggested by our previously published mutagenesis (Chen et al., 2014 ▶) and shown by the crystallo­graphic data presented here, initial NAD+ binding causes structural changes within the substrate-binding pocket that facilitate BA binding. Thus, the weak binding of BA to immobilized apo SaBADH (Fig. 2 ▶ d) may be explained by the lack of these structural changes. BME modification of Cys289 may further affect the affinity of BA for the enzyme (right inset in Fig. 4 ▶ a, and Figs. 5 ▶ c and 5 ▶ d). Overall, we showed that immobilized SaBADH remained stable and binds its cofactor and substrate over 2 d of SPR analysis. The empirically derived K d values, however, need further careful re-quantification, since SaBADH was tested in the presence of BME and DTT, which may affect the binding of NAD+/NADH and BA.

Structural–functional link between the NAD-binding and substrate-binding sites

The highly conserved residues of the cofactor-binding site govern the NAD+SaBADH interactions similarly to other BADH/ALDHs (Figs. 4 ▶ a and 7 ▶ a and Supplementary Fig. S1). Comprehensive structural analysis of SaBADH elaborates on how NAD+ binding traps the enzyme in a conformational state that facilitates the catalysis. Firstly, the adenine ring of NAD+ imposes structural changes on helix αF that were also observed in apo G234S-SaBADHBME(+/−) and apo SaBADHBME(+)PEG. Difference electron-density peaks around the Ala212Glu215 segment of the helix of these apo structures suggest that this region might be flexible in general and that NAD+ binding selects or induces the favorable conformational state. The atoms of residues Ala212Glu215 exhibit higher B factors than those of the adjacent residues. Secondly, with NAD+ in either the ‘hydrolysis’ or the ‘hydride-transfer’ position, the Val288Ser290 loop that bears the catalytic Cys289 is displaced from its apo position (Figs. 5 ▶ a and 5 ▶ c). As a result of this relocation, an internal cavity around Cys289 expands and can be utilized for proper positioning of BA (Fig. 7 ▶ b). Oxidation of Cys289 to a sulfinic acid in apo G234S-SaBADHBME(−) and chemical mimicry of the PEG molecules in apo SaBADHBME(+)PEG at the NAD-binding and substrate-binding sites may prompt the loop to retreat (Figs. 4 ▶ b and 5 ▶ d). The Val288Ser290 loop in apo G234S-SaBADHBME(−) and all NAD-bound SaBADH structures is structurally aligned with an equivalent Asp279Thr281 loop in the apo/holo structures of the E. coli BADH YdcW (PDB entries 1wnd and 1wnb; Gruez et al., 2004 ▶). YdcW contains Ser225 instead of Gly234 (SaBADH) and its catalytic Cys280 is reduced. Thus, the G234S substitution in SaBADH may also contribute to the repositioning of the loop. A possible effect of the BMECys289 adduct on the loop repositioning in apo SaBADHBME(+)PEG is excluded because the loop is in the apo conformation in apo SaBADHBME(+).
Figure 7

BADH enzymes. (a) Conservation of residues among SaBADH (UniProtKB entry Q5HCU0), the human mitochondrial ALDH (UniProtKB entry P05091; PDB entry 1cw3; Ni et al., 1999 ▶), EcBADH (UniProtKB entry P77674; PDB entry 1wnb; Gruez et al., 2004 ▶), PaBADH (UniProtKB entry Q9HTJ1; PDB entry 2wme; González-Segura et al., 2009 ▶), SoBADH (UniProtKB entry P17202; PDB entry 4a0m; Díaz-Sánchez et al., 2012 ▶), AtBADH (UniProtKB entry Q8UH56; PDB entry 3r31; New York Structural Genomics Research Consortium, unpublished work) and GmBADH (UniProtKB entry P56533; PDB entry 1bpw; Johansson et al., 1998 ▶). Residues are colored from blue (variable) to red (100% conserved) and the SaBADH structure is displayed. (b) NAD+ binding imposes structural changes on the substrate-binding site, creating a solvent-accessible channel between the NAD-binding and substrate-binding sites [surface representations (the C atoms) colored as in Fig. 5 ▶ c]. The large insets show whether the channel is open or closed. A solvent-accessible pocket (white ‘HOH’; composed of residues Gly257–Pro261, Gly281–Arg294 and Ile386–Thr397) may serve as a ‘buffer’ for the additional structural changes required for substrate binding. The small insets show whether the channel is open (O) or closed (C) at the substrate-binding site. Val288 (gray), Tyr158 (blue) and Tyr450 (red) may determine the size of the opening, which depends on the presence/absence of NAD+ and/or a small molecule, i.e. a substrate. (c) Local structural features/changes that may favor binding of the 2′-P group of NADP+ in PaBADH (light green) and impede binding in SaBADH [NAD–SaBADHBME(+), yellow; NAD–SaBADHBME(−), light gray]. The presence of Ile28 (SaBADH) instead of the equivalent Thr26 (PaBADH) may change the coordination geometry of a metal (shown as spheres; K+1493, light green, PaBADH; Na+/K+, light gray, SaBADH; see Figs. 6 ▶ d and 6 ▶ e) and thus possibly affect the lower affinity of SaBADH for NADP+. (d) Merged model based on multiple structural superposition showing NAD+ and Cys289 from NAD–G234S-SaBADHBME(−) and residues Val288 (gray), Try158 (blue) and Tyr450 (red) from apo SaBADHBME(+)PEG and betaine aldehyde (BA; carbon, yellow; nitrogen, blue; oxygen, red) from human mitochondrial ALDH.

Thirdly, the observed main-chain/side-chain flexibility of the active-site residues Asn157, Gln162, Glu255, Leu256 and Gly257 might facilitate cofactor and substrate binding (Fig. 5 ▶ c and Supplementary Fig. S1). Fourthly, the NAD-dependent repositioning of the Val288Ser290 loop may also cause changes in the main-chain/side-chain torsional angles of Asp111, Tyr158, His448 and Tyr450 located near the substrate-binding site (Figs. 5 ▶ c and 7 ▶ a). Based on our structural analysis, we propose that Asp111 and His448 may assist in BA binding by, for example, stabilizing the side chains of Tyr158 and Tyr450, which would in turn precisely guide/position BA in the vicinity of Cys289. Although the two tyrosine residues showed modest dihedral angle variations in the presence of NAD+ and substrate-mimicking molecules (Figs. 5 ▶ c and 5 ▶ d), their rotational freedom may still be limited by the neighboring Pro159, Trp165, Pro449 and Trp456. Further, intermolecular interactions at the tetramerization interface could reduce the conformational freedom of the loop (residues Ile444Tyr459) that contains Tyr450. Thus, upon NAD+ binding structural changes at the cofactor-docking site are further transmitted to the BA-binding area, facilitating recognition and binding of the substrate within a distance suitable for nucleophilic attack by Cys289.

The NAD-binding mode in SaBADH

The BMECys289 adduct and the G234S mutation determine the NAD-binding mode in SaBADH. The adduct may mimic the intermediate enzyme–substrate complex and thus promote NAD+ binding in the ‘hydrolysis’ position in NADSaBADHBME(+). With the reduced Cys289, the two ‘hydrolysis’ positions were modeled in NADSaBADHBME(−), yet ambiguous electron density at the NAD-binding site may also indicate a mixture of the ‘hydrolysis’ and ‘hydride-transfer’ positions (Fig. 5 ▶ b). Traces of aldehydes in PEG-based crystallization conditions have been proposed to account for the dehydrogenase activity of human ALDH (PDB entry 1o00; Perez-Miller & Hurley, 2003 ▶). Since SaBADHBME(−) was purified and co-crystallized with NAD+ from PEG at a pH of ∼8.0, at which it exhibited maximum activity (Fig. 1 ▶ a), it is possible that SaBADHBME(−) was turning over in the crystal. The lack of a serine residue at position 234, which stabilizes the ‘hydride-transfer’ position of NAD+ in NADG234S-SaBADHBME(−), may also account for the observed flexibility of NAD+ in NADSaBADHBME(−). When the NADG234S-SaBADHBME(−) and NADSaBADHBME(−) structures were superimposed, the NAD+ ‘hydride-transfer’ conformer of the former structure fitted the aforementioned uncertain electron density of the latter structure. An alternative interpretation is that NAD+ and SaBADHBME(−) may form a covalent adduct similar to that between NADP+ and PaBADH (PDB entry 2wox; Díaz-Sánchez et al., 2011 ▶). However, such a covalent adduct could not explain the observed NAD+ electron-density peaks. Furthermore, the conformations of Cys289 and Glu255 of NADSaBADHBME(−) would not allow dinucleotide–Cys adduct formation. Thus, BME oxidation of Cys289 and the G234S mutation helped to trap the ‘hydrolysis’ and ‘hydride-transfer’ positions of the cofactor, respectively, allowing analysis of these binding modes in SaBADH.

Preference for NAD+ over NADP+ in SaBADH

BADHs efficiently use NAD+/NADP+ (Mori et al., 1992 ▶; Velasco-García et al., 2000 ▶), while SaBADH prefers NAD+ (Table 3 ▶). Comparison of the NADPPaBADH (PDB entry 2wme; González-Segura et al., 2009 ▶) and NADSaBADH structures suggested a rationale for preferential NAD+ binding in SaBADH. In NADPPaBADH, Lys176, Ser178, Glu179, Gly207 and Gly209 (Lys180, Ser182, Glu183, Gly211 and Gly213 in SaBADH) coordinate the 2′-phosphate group (2′-P) of NADP+ (Fig. 7 ▶ c and Supplementary Fig. S1d). The 2′-P displaces the side chain of Glu179 (Glu183 in SaBADH) and makes a salt bridge with Arg40 (Glu42 in SaBADH). Similar contacts and rearrangements within SaBADH would be expected in the presence of NADP+. However, sequence variations at the 2′-P docking area and metal-binding site ∼11 Å away from the 2′-P binding area may selectively favor the binding of one form of the cofactor over another. K+ (K+1493 in PaBADH) and Na+/K+ (SaBADH) (Figs. 6 ▶ d, 6 ▶ e and 7 ▶ c) occupy the referred metal-binding site, yet their coordination geometries differ in the two structures. The hydroxyl group of Thr26 of PaBADH (Ile28 in SaBADH) binds K+1493, while a water molecule substitutes for the OH group of Thr26 in SaBADH. Differences in the metal-coordination spheres seem to influence the position of the Ser178Val180 loop of PaBADH (residues Ser182Ile184 in SaBADH), which is closer to the 2′-P binding site in PaBADH than in SaBADH (Fig. 7 ▶ b and Supplementary Fig. S1d), hence making the 2′-PPaBADH interactions stronger. Based on this observation, the weaker affinity of SaBADH for NADP+ may then be a consequence of the Thr26-to-Ile28 substitution and sequence variations within the 2′-P binding pocket.

Conclusions

The high osmolarity burden in S. aureus can be handled by (i) the accumulation of the exogenous osmolyte betaine and (ii) its biosynthesis from choline. The second pathway generates a toxic BA intermediate that is oxidized by BADH to betaine. Increasing experimental evidence suggests an important role for BADHs in the survival of pathogenic bacteria, which in turn emphasizes the need for a detailed evaluation of the structure and function of the enzymes. We studied a putative BADH from an early MRSA COL isolate, denoted SaBADH, and showed that it is a functional NAD+-dependent BADH that utilizes BA as the primary substrate. The affinity of SaBADH for NAD+/NADH/BA depends on pH, temperature and buffer composition, although it was also affected by BME/DTT oxidation of the catalytic Cys289. The enzymatic activity is quite tolerant to high ionic strength, yet may be attenuated at high ionic strength. The solution data are supported by the structural analysis and emphasize the importance of the NAD+-driven structural rearrangements at the cofactor-binding and substrate-binding sites for enzymatic activity. The Val288Ser290 loop that contains the catalytic Cys289 repositions in the presence of NAD+, creating room for the nucleophilic reaction. While NAD+ is bound, Tyr158 and Try450 at the substrate-binding site may play the role of active-site ‘gatekeepers’ and help to position the substrate at a distance suitable for nucleophilic attack. Overall, extensive structural analysis and preliminary ligand-binding data support our previously published comprehensive structure-based mutagenesis data on the ordered bi-bi kinetic mechanism, substrate inhibition and existence of a structural–functional link between the NAD-binding and substrate-binding sites (Chen et al., 2014 ▶). PDB reference: betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase, 4mpb PDB reference: complex with NAD PDB reference: complex with NAD PDB reference: with BME-free Cys289, 4nu9 PDB reference: with BME-modified Cys289 and PEG molecule in active site, 4qto PDB reference: G234S mutant, in complex with NAD PDB reference: G234S mutant, with BME-modified Cys289, 4q92 PDB reference: G234S mutant, with BME-free sulfinic acid form of Cys289, 4qje Supporting Information.. DOI: 10.1107/S1399004715004228/mn5083sup2.pdf
  80 in total

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Review 8.  Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus: a food-borne pathogen?

Authors:  Sarah Wendlandt; Stefan Schwarz; Peter Silley
Journal:  Annu Rev Food Sci Technol       Date:  2012-11-26

9.  MolProbity: all-atom structure validation for macromolecular crystallography.

Authors:  Vincent B Chen; W Bryan Arendall; Jeffrey J Headd; Daniel A Keedy; Robert M Immormino; Gary J Kapral; Laura W Murray; Jane S Richardson; David C Richardson
Journal:  Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr       Date:  2009-12-21

10.  Phaser crystallographic software.

Authors:  Airlie J McCoy; Ralf W Grosse-Kunstleve; Paul D Adams; Martyn D Winn; Laurent C Storoni; Randy J Read
Journal:  J Appl Crystallogr       Date:  2007-07-13       Impact factor: 3.304

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  6 in total

1.  Role of potassium levels in pkBADH heterogeneity of NAD+ binding site.

Authors:  César Muñoz-Bacasehua; Jesus A Rosas-Rodríguez; Aldo A Arvizu-Flores; Elisa M Valenzuela-Soto
Journal:  J Bioenerg Biomembr       Date:  2020-03-03       Impact factor: 2.945

2.  The aldehyde dehydrogenase AldA contributes to the hypochlorite defense and is redox-controlled by protein S-bacillithiolation in Staphylococcus aureus.

Authors:  Marcel Imber; Vu Van Loi; Sylvia Reznikov; Verena Nadin Fritsch; Agnieszka J Pietrzyk-Brzezinska; Janek Prehn; Chris Hamilton; Markus C Wahl; Agnieszka K Bronowska; Haike Antelmann
Journal:  Redox Biol       Date:  2018-02-05       Impact factor: 11.799

3.  Structural insights into betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase (BADH2) from Oryza sativa explored by modeling and simulations.

Authors:  Apisara Baicharoen; Ranjit Vijayan; Prapasiri Pongprayoon
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-08-27       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  An expansin-like protein expands forage cell walls and synergistically increases hydrolysis, digestibility and fermentation of livestock feeds by fibrolytic enzymes.

Authors:  Andres A Pech-Cervantes; Ibukun M Ogunade; Yun Jiang; Muhammad Irfan; Kathy G Arriola; Felipe X Amaro; Claudio F Gonzalez; Nicolas DiLorenzo; John J Bromfield; Diwakar Vyas; Adegbola T Adesogan
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-11-05       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Antarctic aldehyde dehydrogenase from Flavobacterium PL002 as a potent catalyst for acetaldehyde determination in wine.

Authors:  V I Paun; R M Banciu; P Lavin; A Vasilescu; P Fanjul-Bolado; C Purcarea
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-10-15       Impact factor: 4.996

Review 6.  Redox regulation by reversible protein S-thiolation in Gram-positive bacteria.

Authors:  Marcel Imber; Agnieszka J Pietrzyk-Brzezinska; Haike Antelmann
Journal:  Redox Biol       Date:  2018-08-24       Impact factor: 11.799

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