Iron is an essential nutrient for the survival of organisms. Bacterial pathogens possess specialized pathways to acquire heme from their human hosts. In this review, we present recent structural and biochemical data that provide mechanistic insights into several bacterial heme uptake pathways, encompassing the sequestration of heme from human hemoproteins to secreted or membrane-associated bacterial proteins, the transport of heme across bacterial membranes, and the degradation of heme within the bacterial cytosol to liberate iron. The pathways for heme transport into the bacterial cytosol are divergent, harboring non-homologous protein sequences, novel structures, varying numbers of proteins, and different mechanisms. Congruously, the breakdown of heme within the bacterial cytosol by sequence-divergent proteins releases iron and distinct degradation products.
The 8-17 deoxyribozyme is a small DNA catalyst of significant applicative interest. We have analyzed the kinetic features of a well behaved 8-17 construct and determined the influence of several reaction conditions on such features, providing a basis for further exploration of the deoxyribozyme mechanism. The 8-17 bound its substrate with a rate constant approximately 10-fold lower than those typical for the annealing of short complementary oligonucleotides. The observed free energy of substrate binding indicates that an energetic penalty near to +7 kcal/mol is attributable to the deoxyribozyme core. Substrate cleavage required divalent metal ion cofactors, and the dependence of activity on the concentration of Mg2+, Ca2+ or Mn2+ suggests the occurrence of a single, low-specificity binding site for activating ions. The efficiency of activation correlated with the Lewis acidity of the ion cofactor, compatible with a metal-assisted deprotonation of the reactive 2'-hydroxyl group. However, alternative roles of the metal ions cannot be excluded, because those ions that are stronger Lewis acids are also capable of forming stronger interactions with ligands such as the phosphate oxygens. The apparent enthalpy of activation for the 8-17 reaction was close to the values observed for hydroxide-catalyzed and hammerhead ribozyme-catalyzed RNA cleavage.
The molecular features responsible for the existence in plants of K+-dependent asparaginases have been investigated. For this purpose, two different cDNAs were isolated in Lotus japonicus, encoding for K+-dependent (LjNSE1) or K+-independent (LjNSE2) asparaginases. Recombinant proteins encoded by these cDNAs have been purified and characterized. Both types of asparaginases are composed by two different subunits, α (20 kDa) and β (17 kDa), disposed as (αβ)₂ quaternary structure. Major differences were found in the catalytic efficiency of both enzymes, due to the fact that K+ is able to increase by tenfold the enzyme activity and lowers the K(m) for asparagine specifically in LjNSE1 but not in LjNSE2 isoform. Optimum LjNSE1 activity was found at 5-50 mM K+, with a K(m) for K+ of 0.25 mM. Na+ and Rb+ can, to some extent, substitute for K+ on the activating effect of LjNSE1 more efficiently than Cs+ and Li+ does. In addition, K+ is able to stabilize LjNSE1 against thermal inactivation. Protein homology modelling and molecular dynamics studies, complemented with site-directed mutagenesis, revealed the key importance of E248, D285 and E286 residues for the catalytic activity and K+ dependence of LjNSE1, as well as the crucial relevance of K+ for the proper orientation of asparagine substrate within the enzyme molecule. On the other hand, LjNSE2 but not LjNSE1 showed β-aspartyl-hydrolase activity (K(m) = 0.54 mM for β-Asp-His). These results are discussed in terms of the different physiological significance of these isoenzymes in plants.
Contact-dependent growth inhibition (CDI) is a widespread mechanism of inter-bacterial competition mediated by the CdiB/CdiA family of two-partner secretion proteins. CdiA effectors carry diverse C-terminal toxin domains (CdiA-CT), which are delivered into neighboring target cells to inhibit growth. CDI+ bacteria also produce CdiI immunity proteins that bind specifically to cognate CdiA-CT toxins and protect the cell from auto-inhibition. Here, we compare the structures of homologous CdiA-CT/CdiI complexes from Escherichia coli EC869 and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis YPIII to explore the evolution of CDI toxin/immunity protein interactions. Both complexes share an unusual β-augmentation interaction, in which the toxin domain extends a β-hairpin into the immunity protein to complete a six-stranded anti-parallel sheet. However, the specific contacts differ substantially between the two complexes. The EC869 β-hairpin interacts mainly through direct H-bond and ion-pair interactions, whereas the YPIII β-hairpin pocket contains more hydrophobic contacts and a network of bridging water molecules. In accord with these differences, we find that each CdiI protein only protects target bacteria from its cognate CdiA-CT toxin. The compact β-hairpin binding pocket within the immunity protein represents a tractable system for the rationale design of small molecules to block CdiA-CT/ CdiI complex formation. We synthesized a macrocyclic peptide mimic of the β-hairpin from EC869 toxin and solved its structure in complex with cognate immunity protein. These latter studies suggest that small molecules could potentially be used to disrupt CDI toxin/immunity complexes.
Glutamine synthetase (GS) is the key enzyme involved in the assimilation of ammonia derived either from nitrate reduction, N 2 fixation, photorespiration or asparagine breakdown. A small gene family is encoding for different cytosolic (GS1) or plastidic (GS2) isoforms in legumes. We summarize here the recent advances carried out concerning the quaternary structure of GS, as well as the functional relationship existing between GS2 and processes such as nodulation, photorespiration and water stress, in this latter case by means of proline production. Functional genomic analysis using GS2-minus mutant reveals the key role of GS2 in the metabolic control of the plants and, more particularly, in carbon metabolism.
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