The Crystal Structure of the C-Terminal Domain of the Salmonella enterica PduO Protein: An Old Fold with a New Heme-Binding Mode

Autor(en): Lucana, Dario Ortiz de Orue
Hickey, Neal
Hensel, Michael 
Klare, Johann P.
Geremia, Silvano
Tufiakova, Tatiana
Torda, Andrew E.
Stichwörter: 1,2-PROPANEDIOL; ATP-COB(I)ALAMIN ADENOSYLTRANSFERASE; CCP4 SUITE; cobalamin; CYTOCHROME-C; DATABASE; DRIVEN; GENE; HBPS; heme binding; MECHANISM; Microbiology; protein structure and evolution; redox co-factor; REFINEMENT; Salmonella
Erscheinungsdatum: 2016
Herausgeber: FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Journal: FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volumen: 7
Zusammenfassung: 
The two-domain protein PduO, involved in 1,2-propanediol utilization in the pathogenic Gram-negative bacterium Salmonella enterica is an ATP:Cob(I)alamin adenosyltransferase, but this is a function of the N-terminal domain alone. The role of its C-terminal domain (PduOC) is, however, unknown. In this study, comparative growth assays with a set of Salmonella mutant strains showed that this domain is necessary for effective in vivo catabolism of 1,2-propanediol. It was also shown that isolated, recombinantly-expressed PduOC binds heme in vivo. The structure of PduOC co-crystallized with heme was solved (1.9 angstrom resolution) showing an octameric assembly with four heme moieities. The four heme groups are highly solvent-exposed and the heme iron is hexa-coordinated with bis-His ligation by histidines from different monomers. Static light scattering confirmed the octameric assembly in solution, but a mutation of the heme-coordinating histidine caused dissociation into dimers. Isothermal titration calorimetry using the PduOC apoprotein showed strong heme binding (K-d = 1.6 x 10(-7) M). Biochemical experiments showed that the absence of the C-terminal domain in PduO did not affect adenosyltransferase activity in vitro. The evidence suggests that PduOC:heme plays an important role in the set of cobalamin transformations required for effective catabolism of 1,2-propanediol. Salmonella PduO is one of the rare proteins which binds the redox-active metabolites heme and cobalamin, and the heme-binding mode of the C-terminal domain differs from that in other members of this protein family.
ISSN: 1664302X
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.01010

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