| Literature DB >> 30655545 |
Suguru Yamasaki1, Ryosuke Nakashima2, Keisuke Sakurai2, Sylvie Baucheron3,4, Etienne Giraud3,4, Benoît Doublet3,4, Axel Cloeckaert3,4, Kunihiko Nishino5,6.
Abstract
During infection, Salmonella senses and responds to harsh environments within the host. Persistence in a bile-rich environment is important for Salmonella to infect the small intestine or gallbladder and the multidrug efflux system AcrAB-TolC is required for bile resistance. The genes encoding this system are mainly regulated by the ramRA locus, which is composed of the divergently transcribed ramA and ramR genes. The acrAB and tolC genes are transcriptionally activated by RamA, whose encoding gene is itself transcriptionally repressed by RamR. RamR recognizes multiple drugs; however, the identity of the environmental signals to which it responds is unclear. Here, we describe the crystal structures of RamR in complexes with bile components, including cholic acid and chenodeoxycholic acid, determined at resolutions of 2.0 and 1.8 Å, respectively. Both cholic and chenodeoxycholic acids form four hydrogen bonds with Tyr59, Thr85, Ser137 and Asp152 of RamR, instead of π-π interactions with Phe155, a residue that is important for the recognition of multiple compounds including berberine, crystal violet, dequalinium, ethidium bromide and rhodamine 6 G. Binding of these compounds to RamR reduces its DNA-binding affinity, resulting in the increased transcription of ramA and acrAB-tolC. Our results reveal that Salmonella senses bile acid components through RamR and then upregulates the expression of RamA, which can lead to induction of acrAB-tolC expression with resulting tolerance to bile-rich environments.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30655545 PMCID: PMC6336783 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-36025-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Chenodeoxycholic and cholic acids activate the ramA gene in a RamR-dependent manner. (a) Model for gene regulation pathway by RamR. RamR represses the ramA gene encoding the activator protein for the acrAB drug efflux pump genes. RamR binds to the region between the ramR and ramA genes, while RamA binds to the upstream region to acrAB. (b) The chemical structures of chenodeoxycholic, cholic and deoxycholic acids. (c) Effect of bile and chenodeoxycholic, cholic and deoxycholic acids on the expression of ramA in wild-type and ∆ramR Salmonella strains, as assessed by qRT-PCR. Cells were grown in LB broth supplemented with 25.6 mg/ml bile, or 5 mM of chenodeoxycholic, cholic or deoxycholic acids. Values above the bars indicate the fold difference in ramA mRNA levels relative to the control in the same strain (wild-type or ∆ramR). In the right panel (expression in ∆ramR), the horizontal broken lines represents ramA mRNA levels in the wild-type control. The error bars indicate the standard deviation from three independent replicates. A.U., arbitrary units. (d) Binding of chenodeoxycholic and cholic acids to RamR detected by SPR analysis. RamR was immobilized onto a sensor chip and then the chenodeoxycholic or cholic acid was passed over the sensor surface at the various concentrations indicated. A representative result from one of three experiments that produced similar data is shown. SPR, surface plasmon resonance.
Figure 2Co-crystal structures of RamR with cholic and chenodeoxycholic acids. (a) Full structure of the RamR dimer bound to two molecules of cholic or chenodeoxycholic acid. The α helices in RamR are indicated as α1, α2, α3, α4, α5, α6, α7a, α7b, α8a, α8b and α9. α7b and α8a are uncoiled upon the binding of cholic or chenodeoxycholic acid. 2Fo − Fc electron densities for cholic and chenodeoxycholic acids are show as a blue mesh contoured at 1.2σ. The carbon atoms of cholic or chenodeoxycholic acid are shown in cyan and oxygen atoms are shown in red. (b) Close-up view of the ligand binding site. Electron density map of the protein moiety (red mesh) and cholic and chenodeoxycholic acids (blue mesh) are contoured at 1.2σ. Carbon atoms of bile acid components and RamR are shown in cyan and green, respectively. Nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur atoms are shown in blue, red and yellow, respectively. The presence of a 12-hydroxyl group in cholic acid and its absence in chenodeoxycholic acid are indicated by red arrows. (c) Comparison of the unligated RamR structure (indicated as a red ribbon, PDB ID: 3VVX) with the ligated (cholic acid: 6IE8 or chenodeoxycholic acid: 6IE9) structures (indicated as green ribbons). 2Fo − Fc electron density for cholic acid and chenodeoxycholic acid is shown as a blue mesh, contoured at 1.2σ. Carbon atoms of cholic or chenodeoxycholic acids are shown in cyan, and oxygen atoms are shown in red. Superimposed structures indicate that binding of cholic acid or chenodeoxycholic acid triggers uncoiling of helices α7b and α8a. (d) The superposition of the RamR ligands determined in previous studies and this study. Carbon atoms of cholic acid (PDB ID: 6IE8), chenodeoxycholic acid (6IE9), ethidium bromide (3VVY), rhodamine 6G (3VVZ), dequalinium (3VW0), berberine (3VW2) and crystal violet (3VW1) are shown in gray, light green, pink, blue, yellow, light blue and purple, respectively. Other objects are colored as in (b). The imposed image indicates that the carboxyl groups of cholic and chenodeoxycholic acids are extended in the direction of the α7b helix. The binding locations of cholic and chenodeoxycholic acids are different from those observed for the five antimicrobial compounds.
Figure 3Recognition of bile acids by RamR. (a) The substrate-binding site of RamR with bound cholic and chenodeoxycholic acid molecules. Key residues that are involved in forming hydrogen bonds with cholic or chenodeoxycholic acid are shown, including Tyr59, Thr85, Ser137 and Asp152 (indicated by red characters). Objects are colored as in Fig. 2. (b) Close-up view of the substrate-binding site of RamR containing cholic acid or chenodeoxycholic acid. Objects are colored as in Fig. 2, and key residues are colored as in Fig. 2a. Hydrogen bonds are indicated by dotted red lines.
Figure 4Inhibitory effects of bile acids on the DNA affinity of RamR. (a) Inhibitory effects of cholic or chenodeoxycholic acid on the DNA-binding affinity of RamR analyzed by SPR. DNA was immobilized onto a sensor chip and purified RamR protein was passed over the sensor surface in the presence or absence of bile acids at the various concentrations indicated. (b) Inhibitory effects were calculated from the results of SPR analysis. Percentage binding was calculated relative to the amount of RamR-binding to DNA in the absence of bile acids, which was assigned as 100%. The result of one of three experiments that produced similar data is shown. SPR, surface plasmon resonance.