Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry
2. Division of Infection and Immunity, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A variety of bacterial cellular responses to environmental signals are mediated by two-component signal transduction systems comprising a membrane-associated histidine protein kinase and a cytoplasmic response regulator (RR), which interpret specific stimuli and produce a measured physiological response. In RR activation, transient phosphorylation of a highly conserved aspartic acid residue drives the conformation changes needed for full activation of the protein. Sequence homology reveals that RR02 from
Streptococcus pneumoniae
belongs to the OmpR subfamily of RRs. The structures of the receiver domains from four members of this family, DrrB and DrrD from
Thermotoga maritima
, PhoB from
Escherichia coli
, and PhoP from
Bacillus subtilis
, have been elucidated. These domains are globally very similar in that they are composed of a doubly wound α
5
β
5
; however, they differ remarkably in the fine detail of the β4-α4 and α4 regions. The structures presented here reveal a further difference of the geometry in this region. RR02 is has been shown to be the essential RR in the gram-positive bacterium
S. pneumoniae
R. Lange, C. Wagner, A. de Saizieu, N. Flint, J. Molnos, M. Stieger, P. Caspers, M. Kamber, W. Keck, and K. E. Amrein, Gene 237:223-234, 1999; J. P. Throup, K. K. Koretke, A. P. Bryant, K. A. Ingraham, A. F. Chalker, Y. Ge, A. Marra, N. G. Wallis, J. R. Brown, D. J. Holmes, M. Rosenberg, and M. K. Burnham, Mol. Microbiol. 35:566-576, 2000). RR02 functions as part of a phosphotransfer system that ultimately controls the levels of competence within the bacteria. Here we report the native structure of the receiver domain of RR02 from serotype 4
S. pneumoniae
(as well as acetate- and phosphate-bound forms) at different pH levels. Two native structures at 2.3 Å, phased by single-wavelength anomalous diffraction (xenon SAD), and 1.85 Å and a third structure at pH 5.9 revealed the presence of a phosphate ion outside the active site. The fourth structure revealed the presence of an acetate molecule in the active site.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology