Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Virology and Microbiology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA
2. Interdepartmental Program in Cell and Molecular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The metal iron is a limiting nutrient for bacteria during infection.
Bacillus anthracis
, the causative agent of anthrax and a potential weapon of bioterrorism, grows rapidly in mammalian hosts, which suggests that it efficiently attains iron during infection. Recent studies have uncovered both heme (
isd
) and siderophore-mediated (
asb
) iron transport pathways in this pathogen. Whereas deletion of the
asb
genes results in reduced virulence, the loss of three surface components from
isd
had no effect, thereby leaving open the question of what additional factors in
B. anthracis
are responsible for iron uptake from the most abundant iron source for mammals, heme. Here, we describe the first functional characterization of
bas0520
, a gene recently implicated in anthrax disease progression.
bas0520
encodes a single near-iron transporter (NEAT) domain and several leucine-rich repeats. The NEAT domain binds heme, despite lacking a stabilizing tyrosine common to the NEAT superfamily of hemoproteins. The NEAT domain also binds hemoglobin and can acquire heme from hemoglobin in solution. Finally, deletion of
bas0520
resulted in bacilli unable to grow efficiently on heme or hemoglobin as an iron source and yielded the most significant phenotype relative to that for other putative heme uptake systems, a result that suggests that this protein plays a prominent role in the replication of
B. anthracis
in hematogenous environments. Thus, we have assigned the name of Hal (
h
eme-
a
cquisition
l
eucine-rich repeat protein) to BAS0520. These studies advance our understanding of heme acquisition by this dangerous pathogen and justify efforts to determine the mechanistic function of this novel protein for vaccine or inhibitor development.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
33 articles.
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