Affiliation:
1. Infectious Diseases, Novartis Institute for Biomedical Research, Inc., 100 Technology Square, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
2. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6
3. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of British Columbia, 2146 Health Sciences Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z3
Abstract
ABSTRACT
nalC
multidrug-resistant mutants of
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
show enhanced expression of the
mexAB-oprM
multidrug efflux system as a direct result of the production of a ca. 6,100-Da protein, PA3719, in these mutants. Using a bacterial two-hybrid system, PA3719 was shown to interact in vivo with MexR, a repressor of
mexAB-oprM
expression. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) studies confirmed a high-affinity interaction (equilibrium dissociation constant [
K
D
], 158.0 ± 18.1 nM) of PA3719 with MexR in vitro. PA3719 binding to and formation of a complex with MexR obviated repressor binding to its operator, which overlaps the efflux operon promoter, suggesting that
mexAB-oprM
hyperexpression in
nalC
mutants results from PA3719 modulation of MexR repressor activity. Consistent with this, MexR repression of
mexA
transcription in an in vitro transcription assay was alleviated by PA3719. Mutations in MexR compromising its interaction with PA3719 in vivo were isolated and shown to be located internally and distributed throughout the protein, suggesting that they impacted PA3719 binding by altering MexR structure or conformation rather than by having residues interacting specifically with PA3719. Four of six mutant MexR proteins studied retained repressor activity even in a
nalC
strain producing PA3719. Again, this is consistent with a PA3719 interaction with MexR being necessary to obviate MexR repressor activity. The gene encoding PA3719 has thus been renamed
armR
(
a
nti
r
epressor for
M
ex
R
). A representative “noninteracting” mutant MexR protein, MexR
I104F
, was purified, and ITC confirmed that it bound PA3719 with reduced affinity (5.4-fold reduced;
K
D
, 853.2 ± 151.1 nM). Consistent with this, MexR
I104F
repressor activity, as assessed using the in vitro transcription assay, was only weakly compromised by PA3719. Finally, two mutations (L36P and W45A) in ArmR compromising its interaction with MexR have been isolated and mapped to a putative C-terminal α-helix of the protein that alone is sufficient for interaction with MexR.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology