Affiliation:
1. Section of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02118
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The gram-negative pathogen
Porphyromonas gingivalis
requires hemin for growth. Hemoglobin bound to haptoglobin and hemin complexed to hemopexin can be used as heme sources, indicating that
P. gingivalis
must have a means to remove the hemin from these host iron-binding proteins. However, the specific mechanisms utilized by
P. gingivalis
for the extraction of heme from heme-binding proteins and for iron transport are poorly understood. In this study we have determined that a newly identified TonB-dependent hemoglobin-hemin receptor (HmuR) is involved in hemoglobin binding and utilization in
P. gingivalis
A7436. HmuR shares amino acid homology with TonB-dependent outer membrane receptors of gram-negative bacteria involved in the acquisition of iron from hemin and hemoglobin, including HemR of
Yersinia enterocolitica
, ShuA of
Shigella dysenteriae
, HpuB of
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
and
N. meningitidis
, HmbR of
N. meningitidis
, HgbA of
Haemophilus ducreyi
, and HgpB of
H. influenzae
. Southern blot analysis confirmed the presence of the
hmuR
gene and revealed genetic variability in the carboxy terminus of
hmuR
in
P. gingivalis
strains 33277, 381, W50, and 53977. We also identified directly upstream of the
hmuR
gene a gene which we designated
hmuY
. Upstream of the
hmuY
start codon, a region with homology to the Fur binding consensus sequence was identified. Reverse transcription-PCR analysis revealed that
hmuR
and
hmuY
were cotranscribed and that transcription was negatively regulated by iron. Inactivation of
hmuR
resulted in a decreased ability of
P. gingivalis
to bind hemoglobin and to grow with hemoglobin or hemin as sole iron sources.
Escherichia coli
cells expressing recombinant HmuR were shown to bind hemoglobin and hemin. Furthermore, purified recombinant HmuR was demonstrated to bind hemoglobin. Taken together, these results indicate that HmuR serves as the major TonB-dependent outer membrane receptor involved in the utilization of both hemin and hemoglobin in
P. gingivalis
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
120 articles.
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