| Literature DB >> 28821763 |
Roberto Benoni1,2, Christina M Beck3,4, Fernando Garza-Sánchez3, Stefano Bettati1,5, Andrea Mozzarelli5,6, Christopher S Hayes7,8, Barbara Campanini9.
Abstract
Contact-dependent growth inhibition (CDI) is a wide-spread mechanism of inter-bacterial competition. CDI+ bacteria deliver CdiA-CT toxins into neighboring bacteria and produce specific immunity proteins that protect against self-intoxication. The CdiA-CT toxin from uropathogenic Escherichia coli 536 is a latent tRNase that is only active when bound to the cysteine biosynthetic enzyme CysK. Remarkably, the CysK:CdiA-CT binding interaction mimics the 'cysteine synthase' complex of CysK:CysE. The C-terminal tails of CysE and CdiA-CT each insert into the CysK active-site cleft to anchor the respective complexes. The dissociation constant for CysK:CdiA-CT (K d ~ 11 nM) is comparable to that of the E. coli cysteine synthase complex (K d ~ 6 nM), and both complexes bind through a two-step mechanism with a slow isomerization phase after the initial encounter. However, the second-order rate constant for CysK:CdiA-CT binding is two orders of magnitude slower than that of the cysteine synthase complex, suggesting that CysE should outcompete the toxin for CysK occupancy. However, we find that CdiA-CT can effectively displace CysE from pre-formed cysteine synthase complexes, enabling toxin activation even in the presence of excess competing CysE. This adventitious binding, coupled with the very slow rate of CysK:CdiA-CT dissociation, ensures robust nuclease activity in target bacteria.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28821763 PMCID: PMC5562914 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-09022-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1EcCysK:CdiA-CT complex formation. (A) Fluorescence emission spectra of EcCysK excited at 412 nm. Spectra were collected with EcCysK (1.15 µM) in the presence of the indicated concentrations of CdiA-CT. (B) Stoichiometry of the EcCysK:CdiA-CT complex. 1 μM EcCysK was titrated with CdiA-CT to saturation. The intersection of the lines corresponds to a CdiA-CT:EcCysK ratio of 1.1:1 (dashed line). (C) Determination of the EcCysK:CdiA-CT dissociation constant. EcCysK (80 nM) was titrated with increasing concentrations of CdiA-CT, and fluorescence emission at 500 nm monitored at the indicated times. The solid line indicates the Eq. 2 fit to the 20 min data set, with K d = 10 ± 11 nM and [CysK] = 134 ± 33 nM. (D) CdiA-CT inhibits EcCysK sulfhydrylase activity. EcCysK (6 nM) was titrated with CdiA-CT and sulfhydrylase activity measured as described in the Methods. Eq. 3 was fitted to the dependence of vi/v0 on CdiA-CT concentration, yielding an apparent IC50 that was used to calculate a K i of 11.0 ± 0.4 nM (closed circles). A K i of 6.4 ± 0.5 nM was calculated under the same conditions in the presence of 2.4 µM CdiI (open squares).
Figure 2Pre-steady state kinetics of EcCysK:CdiA-CT assembly. (A,B) Representative time courses for the interaction of CdiA-CT (1 µM and 10 µM) with EcCysK (200 nM) (panel A) and EcCysK (1.7 µM and 16 µM) with CdiA-CT (270 nM) (panel B) as monitored by fluorescence emission intensity upon excitation at 412 nm. Individual traces are presented in grey, and the dashed black lines represent Eq. 5 fits to the time-course binding data. (C) Dependence of the observed kinetic constant (kobs) on EcCysK and CdiA-CT concentrations. The lines represent linear equation fits with slopes of 0.019 ± 0.007 µM−1·s−1 and 0.017 ± 0.007 µM−1·s−1. (D) Observed kinetic constant as a function of CysK concentration and temperature. Solid lines represent linear equation fits with slopes of 0.099 ± 0.019 µM−1·s−1 (37 °C), 0.017 ± 0.007 µM−1·s−1 (20 °C) and 0.005 ± 0.0003 µM−1·s−1 (5 °C). (E) Two-step model for EcCysK:CdiA-CT complex formation including a slow conformational change. CysK:CdiA-CT is the encounter complex, and CysK:CdiA-CT* corresponds to the isomerized, nucleolytic complex.
Figure 3EcCysE and CdiA-CT compete for binding to CysK. (A) CdiA-CT blocks formation of the cysteine synthase complex. Increasing concentrations of CdiA-CT were pre-incubated with EcCysK (19 nM) for 20 min prior to the addition of L-Ser (20 mM) and EcCysE (28 nM). Reactions were then initiated by addition of 0.3 mM acetyl-CoA and acetyltransferase activity measured by monitoring the decrease in acetyl-CoA absorption at 232 nm as described in the Methods. The activities of isolated CysE and CysE in the CS complex are shown by horizontal reference lines. (B) EcCysE inhibits CdiA-CT toxin activation in vivo. Inhibitor and target cells were co-cultured as described in the Methods. Total RNA and protein were isolated upon initial mixing and after 1 h, and analyzed by Northern blot (top panel) and SDS-PAGE (bottom panel). Where indicated, target cells over-produced EcCysE (+) or truncated EcCysE lacking the C-terminal tail (no tail). Target cells carried a deletion of the cysK gene (∆) where indicated. Asterisks (*) in the bottom panel indicate over-produced EcCysE proteins. (C) EcCysE inhibits CdiA-CT toxin activation in vitro. EcCysK and EcCysE were pre-incubated at the indicated concentrations (µM) prior to addition of CdiA-CT and RNA substrate as described in the Methods. Reactions were quenched after 10 min at 37 °C, then run on 8 M urea-polyacrylamide gels and visualized by ethidium bromide staining. The migration positions of 5 S rRNA and tRNA are indicated.
Figure 4EcCysE and CdiA-CT compete for binding to CysK. (A) Affinity purification of EcCysK:CdiA-CT complexes. EcCysK, EcCysE and His6-tagged CdiA-CT were mixed at the indicated concentrations and subjected to Ni2+-affinity chromatography. The initial protein mixture (input), the column flow-through fraction (free) and the elution fraction (bound) were analyzed by SDS-PAGE. (B,C) Native PAGE analysis of EcCysK:EcCysE and EcCysK:CdiA-CT complexes. Proteins were mixed and run on non-denaturing polyacrylamide gels as described in the Methods. Proteins within parentheses were pre-incubated for 10, 20 or 40 min (as indicated by subscript) prior to native PAGE analysis. The migration positions of EcCysE, EcCysK and CdiA-CT are indicated on the left of panel B, and the migration positions of the cysteine synthase (CS) and EcCysK:CdiA-CT (CTox) complexes are indicated on the right.
Figure 5Heterologous CysK promotes CdiA-CT toxicity. (A) Activation of internally expressed CdiA-CT toxin. Plasmids encoding CdiA-CT and CysK proteins were introduced into E. coli ∆cysK cells, and transformants isolated on selective media supplemented with D-glucose or L-arabinose as indicated. To control for transformation efficiency, a plasmid encoding catalytically inactive CdiA-CT(H178A) was also tested. (B) CDI competition co-cultures. Inhibitor cells that deploy CdiA-CT were incubated with E. coli ∆cysK target bacteria that express CysK-His6 from the indicated bacterial species. Viable target bacteria were quantified as colony forming units per mL upon mixing and after 3 h of co-culture. Presented data are averages ± standard errors for four independent experiments. (C) Immunoblot analysis of heterologous CysK-His6. Total protein was isolated from the target-cell strains in panel B and analyzed by immunoblotting using antibodies to the His6 epitope. 10 μg of total protein was loaded in each lane.
Figure 6In vitro activation of CdiA-CT by heterologous CysK. (A) Affinity purification of CysK:CdiA-CT complexes. His6-tagged CysK proteins from the indicated species were incubated with untagged CdiA-CT and the mixture subjected to Ni2+-affinity chromatography. The initial protein mixture (input), the column flow-through fraction (free) and the elution fraction (bound) were analyzed by SDS-PAGE. (B) Determination of the CysK:CdiA-CT dissociation constants. HiCysK (300 nM) and NlCysK (860 nM) were titrated with increasing concentrations of CdiA-CT, and fluorescence emission at 500 nm monitored after 20 min. Eq. 1 was fitted to the binding data to obtain K d = 3.3 ± 0.3 µM for HiCysK and K d = 6.4 ± 0.6 µM for NlCysK. (C) Heterologous CysK promotes CdiA-CT nuclease activity. Proteins were incubated at the indicated concentrations (µM) for 20 min prior to the addition of RNA substrate. Reactions were quenched after 1 h at 37 °C, then run on 8 M urea-polyacrylamide gels and visualized by ethidium bromide staining. The migration position of full-length tRNA is indicated.
Figure 7Formation of CS and CysK:CdiA-CT complexes. CysK exists in two conformations: an open, inactive conformation and a closed one that was isolated as a complex with substrate analog[31]. Structural data[42] demonstrate that CdiA-CT binds to the open conformation of CysK. Binding is slow and is limited by a large conformational change, which likely corresponds to CdiA-CT folding to its active conformation. Here, we propose that CysE preferentially binds to CysK in the closed active-site conformation.
Bacterial strains and plasmids.
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| BL21 TunerTM (DE3) |
| Novagen |
| EPI100 | F−
| Epicentre |
| CH2016 | X90 (DE3) ∆ |
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| CH7076 | MG1655 (DE3) | This study |
| CH7718 | X90 (DE3) | This study |
| CH8804 | X90 (DE3) |
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| CH10028 | JCM158 ∆ | This study |
| CH10801 | JCM158 ∆ | This study |
| CH13316 | MG1655 (DE3) ∆ | This study |
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| pTrc99a | IPTG-inducible expression plasmid, AmpR | GE Healthcare |
| pET21P | T7 RNA polymerase expression plasmid, AmpR |
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| pCP20 | Heat-inducible expression of FLP recombinase, CmR AmpR |
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| pDAL866 | Arabinose-inducible expression of the |
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| pCH450 | pACYC184 derivative with |
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| pCH1043 | pCH405∆:: |
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| pCH6190 | pET21P:: |
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| pCH6478 | pTrc99A:: |
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| pCH6505 | pET21S:: |
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| pCH7086 | pCH450:: |
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| pCH8215 | pET21S:: |
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| pCH8936 | pET21S:: | This study |
| pCH8937 | pET21S:: | This study |
| pCH8639 | pET21S:: | This study |
| pCH9280 | pTrc99A:: |
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| pCH9320 | pCH450:: |
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| pCH9764 | pSH21:: | This study |
| pCH10068 | pSH21:: |
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| pCH11846 | pET28a(+):: |
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| pCH11860 | pTrc99A:: | This study |
| pCH12028 | pET21P:: | This study |
| pCH12113 | pTrc99A:: | This study |
| pCH12114 | pET21S:: | This study |
| pCH12146 | pET21S:: | This study |
| pCH12286 | pTrc99A:: | This study |
| pCH12287 | pTrc99A:: | This study |
| pCH12288 | pTrc99A:: | This study |
| pCH10673 | Expresses chimeric CdiAEC93-CTEC536, CmR |
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| pCH12618 | pSH21:: | This study |
| pCH13129 | pET21:: |
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| pCH13299 | pET21P:: | This study |
aAbbreviations: AmpR, ampicillin-resistant; CmR, chloramphenicol-resistant; KanR, kanamycin-resistant; RifR, rifampicin-resistant; StrR, streptomycin-resistant; TetR, tetracycline-resistant.