| Literature DB >> 31997467 |
Ramon Hochstrasser1, Cedric A J Hutter1, Fabian M Arnold1, Kevin Bärlocher1, Markus A Seeger1, Hubert Hilbi1.
Abstract
The water-borne bacterium Legionella pneumophila replicates in environmental protozoa and upon inhalation destroys alveolar macrophages, thus causing a potentially fatal pneumonia termed 'Legionnaires' disease'. L. pneumophila employs the Legionella quorum sensing (Lqs) system to control its life cycle, pathogen-host cell interactions, motility and natural competence. Signaling through the Lqs system occurs through the α-hydroxyketone compound Legionella autoinducer-1 (LAI-1) and converges on the prototypic response regulator LqsR, which dimerizes upon phosphorylation of the conserved aspartate, D108 . In this study, we determine the high-resolution structure of monomeric LqsR. The structure reveals a receiver domain adopting a canonical (βα)5 fold, which is connected through an additional sixth helix and an extended α5-helix to a novel output domain. The two domains delineate a mainly positively charged groove, and the output domain adopts a five-stranded antiparallel β-sheet fold similar to nucleotide-binding proteins. Structure-based mutagenesis identified amino acids critical for LqsR phosphorylation and dimerization. Upon phosphorylation, the LqsRD172A and LqsRD302N/E303Q mutant proteins dimerized even more readily than wild-type LqsR, and no evidence for semi-phosphorylated heterodimers was obtained. Taken together, the high-resolution structure of LqsR reveals functionally relevant amino acid residues implicated in signal transduction of the prototypic response regulator.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Legionellazzm321990; autoinducer; bacterial pathogenesis; c-di-GMP; cell-cell signaling; oligomerization; phospho-transfer; quorum sensing; response regulator; sensor kinase; α-hydroxyketone
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31997467 DOI: 10.1111/mmi.14477
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Microbiol ISSN: 0950-382X Impact factor: 3.501