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Marcus Resch, Emile Schiltz, Fritz Titgemeyer, Yves A. Muller, Insight into the induction mechanism of the GntR/HutC bacterial transcription regulator YvoA, Nucleic Acids Research, Volume 38, Issue 7, 1 April 2010, Pages 2485–2497, https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkp1191
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ABSTRACT
YvoA is a GntR/HutC transcription regulator from Bacillus subtilis implicated in the regulation of genes from the N-acetylglucosamine-degrading pathway. Its 2.4-Å crystal structure reveals a homodimeric assembly with each monomer displaying a two-domain fold. The C-terminal domain, which binds the effector N-acetylglucosamine-6-phosphate, adopts a chorismate lyase fold, whereas the N-terminal domain contains a winged helix–turn–helix DNA-binding domain. Isothermal titration calorimetry and site-directed mutagenesis revealed that the effector-binding site in YvoA coincides with the active site of related chorismate lyase from Escherichia coli. The characterization of the DNA- and effector-binding properties of two disulfide-bridged mutants that lock YvoA in two distinct conformational states provides for the first time detailed insight into the allosteric mechanism through which effector binding modulates DNA binding and, thereby regulates transcription in a representative GntR/HutC family member. Central to this allosteric coupling mechanism is a loop-to-helix transition with the dipole of the newly formed helix pointing toward the phosphate of the effector. This transition goes in hand with the emergence of internal symmetry in the effector-binding domain and, in addition, leads to a 122° rotation of the DNA-binding domains that is best described as a jumping-jack-like motion.
INTRODUCTION
Bacteria are able to utilize a variety of different carbohydrates. The corresponding metabolic genes are tightly regulated by globally and specifically acting transcription factors (1,2). Catabolic enzymes are in general only synthesized when their substrate is present, and when otherwise preferred carbon sources are absent. The underlying regulatory mechanisms are referred to as induction, carbon catabolite repression and inducer exclusion (2).
N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) is a ubiquitous monosaccharide derivative of glucose and an essential molecule for all forms of life. GlcNAc is in addition a preferred carbon source for many microorganisms as it provides both carbon and nitrogen (3). YvoA is a bacterial repressor from Bacillus subtilis implicated in the control of the genes encoding GlcNAc degradative and biosynthetic enzymes (2,4). This implication is based on in silico analyses revealing that YvoA shares a sequence identity of 38% with the well-studied DasR regulator of the antibiotic-producing soil bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor (3,5). DasR represents a master switch in a signaling cascade from the nutrient GlcNAc to antibiotic production. It does this by controlling genes of GlcNAc and chitin metabolism as well as of transcription factors for antibiotic synthesis (5).
YvoA and DasR probably recognize identical operator sequences, the so-called dre (DasR responsive element) sites (6). Conserved dre sites are found in the genome of B. subtilis within the promoter regions of the nagA-nagB-yvoA and of the nagP gene locus [(7); Titgemeyer and Rigali, unpublished data]. nagP encodes for a putative permease for GlcNAc while nagA and nagB encode the metabolic enzymes N-acetylglucosamine-6-phosphate deacetylase (NagA) and glucosamine-6-phosphate deaminase (NagB), thus favoring the production of fructose-6-phosphate that can then be further metabolized through glycolysis (8,9). It has been shown that transcription of nagA and nagB is induced by GlcNAc (10). Hence, the genomic position and the above-described analogy to DasR suggest that YvoA controls nag gene expression in B. subtilis (7).
YvoA and DasR belong to the GntR/HutC family of bacterial transcriptional regulators. Members of this family control various biological processes, including antibiotic production, sensing of nutritional status, growth, proliferation and development (3,6). The GntR/HutC proteins can be considered as molecular chimeras of two domains. At their N-terminus they contain a winged helix–turn–helix domain (wHTH) responsible for DNA binding as a common feature of all members of the large and disperse GntR superfamily of repressors (6,11,12). The C-terminal part contains a chorismate lyase-type UTRA domain, which in combination with the wHTH domain is characteristic for the HutC subfamily of regulators (13). Whereas chorismate lyase contains an active site (14), HutC transcription regulators lack any enzymatic activity in the C-terminal domain. They contain a ligand-binding pocket instead that allows HutC transcription regulators to specifically recognize a variety of different effector molecules. This domain encompasses an allosteric mechanism that alters the affinity of the remote DNA-binding domains for DNA upon effector binding. Allosteric regulation is a hallmark of all bacterial repressor proteins and enables them to function as molecular switches that turn gene transcription on or off (15).
Several crystal structures of individual HutC effector-binding domains have been determined so far (16,17, K.Tan, C.Hatzos, J.Abdullah and A.Joachimiak, Midwest Center for Structural Genomics (MCSG), unpublished data), and, recently, a single structure of an entire HutC repressor has become available as part of the MCSG structural genomics initiative. However, whereas for numerous repressor families, the allosteric mechanism by which effector binding modulates DNA binding is understood in atomic detail, as for instance the lactose (18,19) and tetracycline repressor system (15,20), in case of the HutC family, none of the structures solved so far allowed for the identification of either the effector-binding site or the allosteric mechanism by which these repressors exert their function.
Here, we describe for the first time the crystal structure of full-length YvoA in what we consider to constitute the induced conformation. The effector-binding site has been identified by site-directed mutagenesis, and the characterization of disulfide-bridge-containing mutants that lock YvoA in either the DNA-bound or the effector-bound induced conformation allows us to propose a ‘jumping jack’ model for the allosteric induction of YvoA.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Protein cloning, mutagenesis, expression and purification
YvoA (BSU35030, UniProtKB/TrEMBL entry O34817) from B. subtilis and mutants thereof were expressed and purified as described (21). Amino acid exchanges were introduced by site-directed mutagenesis using the QuikChange site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA). The following YvoA single point mutants were generated: YvoA-I209E (using primers I209Eforw: GAGCGCCTGTCCTATTAGAAAAACGAACAACATATC, I209Erev: GATATGTTGTTCGTTTTTCTAATAGGACAGGCGCTC), I209L (I209Lforw: CGCCTGTCCTATTACTTAAACGAACAACATATC, I209Lrev: GATATGTTGTTCGTTTAAGTAATAGGACAGGCG), E222D (E222Dforw: GAACGGAACTGCTTTTAACCATGCAAAATCCG, E222Drev: CGGATTTTGCATGGTTAAAAGCAGTTCCGTTC), A224R (A224Rforw: CGGAACTGCTTTTGAGCATCGTAAATCCGTATACAGAGGC, A224Rrev: GCCTCTGTATACGGATTTACGATGCTCAAAAGCAGTTCCG).
In addition, the following double-mutants were generated: YvoA-K24C-G97C (using primers K24Cforw: GCAATTAAAAACCCAAATTTGCAACGGAGAGCTGCAGCCGG, K24Crev: CCGGCTGCAGCTCTCCGTTGCAAATTTGGGTTTTTAATTGC; G97Cforw: GGATATGAAAAGCCGCTGCATGACACCGGGCAGCAG, G97Crev: CTGCTGCCCGGTGTCATGCAGCGGCTTTTCATATCC), and YvoA-E61C-L242C (E61Cforw: GCGCTTTCTAATTTAGTTAATTGCGGCTTGCTCTATCGCCTGAAAG, E61Crev: CTTTCAGGCGATAGAGCAAGCCGCAATTAACTAAATTAGAAAGCGC; L242Cforw: CATTTGTCCACTATATGGATCGTTGCTCATAAAAAAAGCCTCCAACCC, L242Crev: GGGTTGGAGGCTTTTTTTATGAGCAACGATCCATATAGTGGACAAATG), performing two consecutive rounds of site-directed mutagenesis for each double mutant. After two-stage polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (22), the parent plasmid strands were digested with Dpn1 and the mutated strands chemically transformed into competent Escherichia coli XL10 Gold cells (Stratagene). Successful mutagenesis was confirmed by DNA sequence analysis.
For the production of selenomethionine substituted YvoA (SeMet-YvoA), cells were grown at 37°C to an OD600 of 0.5 in minimal medium M9 supplemented with 0.8% (v/v) glycerol, 100 μg ml−1 ampicillin, 10 μg ml−1 kanamycin and a feedback inhibition mix containing selenomethionine (23). After additional 15 min of shaking, the temperature was lowered to 20°C and protein expression induced with 1 mM IPTG. The purification protocol for SeMet-YvoA was the same as for the wild-type and mutant proteins except that the affinity chromatography buffers additionally contained 5 mM dithiothreitol. Protein concentrations were determined spectrophotometrically at 280 nm with a calculated molar extinction coefficient of 16 390 M−1 cm−1 and a molecular weight of 27.8 kDa. Typically, one litre of bacterial culture yielded about 50 mg of wild-type and SeMet-YvoA protein and about 10–40 mg of mutant protein.
Limited proteolysis assay
YvoA protein was incubated at 25°C at a concentration of 0.35 mg ml−1 (corresponding to 6 μM YvoA dimer) for time periods up to 3 h with the nonspecific serine protease subtilisin. The reaction buffer contained 20 mM Tris–HCl, pH 7.5, 0.15 M NaCl and a final amount of 0.014 U subtilisin per milligram YvoA. Digestion was performed in the presence or absence of 6 μM dsDNA (duplexed ATTGGTATAGATCACTAG). Likewise, digestion was performed in the presence or absence of 1.5 mM GlcNAc-6-P. After 0.5, 1, 5, 15, 30, 60 and 180 min samples were withdrawn, and digestion was stopped by adding equal volumes of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) sample buffer. Samples were immediately boiled and examined by SDS gel electrophoresis.
Isothermal titration calorimetry
Calorimetric titrations of YvoA with GlcNAc-6-P were performed with a VP-isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) microcalorimeter (MicroCal, Northampton, MA 01060, USA). Protein samples were extensively dialyzed against ITC buffer containing 20 mM sodium phosphate (pH 7.5) and 150 mM NaCl. All solutions were filtered using membrane filters (pore size 0.22 μm) and degassed for 30 min by gently stirring under vacuum. The 1.35-ml sample cell was filled with a 30 μM solution of protein (calculated for monomeric protein) and the 250 μl injection syringe with a 10 or 20 mM solution of the effector. Each titration typically consisted of an initial 2-μl injection followed by 25 consecutive 10-μl injections at 25°C. Calorimetric titration of dsDNA with wild-type YvoA was performed similarly. The 1.35-ml sample cell was filled with a 12-μM solution of duplex DNA (ATTGGTATAGATCACTAG) (7) and the 250-μl injection syringe with 125-μM wild-type YvoA (calculated for dimeric protein). Data for the initial injection, which are affected by diffusion of the solution from and into the injection syringe during the initial equilibration period, were discarded. Binding isotherms were generated by plotting the normalized reaction heats against the ratio of total injectant to total protein per injection. Integrated heat effects, after correction for heats of dilution, were analyzed by nonlinear regression with a one-site-binding model using the standard Microcal Origin 7.0 software package. Changes in free energy and entropy upon binding were calculated from the equilibrium parameters using the equation: ΔG°= −RT·lnK = ΔH° − T·ΔS°, where R is the universal gas constant, T the temperature, K the association constant, ΔG° the change in Gibbs free energy, ΔH° the change in enthalpy and ΔS° is the change in entropy (24) under standard conditions.
Protein crystallization, data collection, structure determination and refinement
Selenomethionine-substituted YvoA was crystallized in the absence of the effector GlcNAc-6-P as described for native YvoA (21). Two diffraction data sets [Se-multiple wavelength anomalous dispersion (MAD)] were collected from a single SeMet-YvoA crystal at 100 K at synchrotron beam line BL14.2 of Free University Berlin at BESSY (Berlin, Germany) to maximum resolution of 2.4 Å. Peak data were collected at a wavelength of 0.97965 Å in 0.5° oscillation steps covering a total rotation range of 125°. Inflection data were collected at a wavelength of 0.97979 Å, accordingly. Data were indexed and integrated with XDS and scaled with XSCALE (25). The structure was solved by the MAD method using program AUTOSHARP (26). A polyalanine model generated from the homolog PhnF C-terminal domain (PDB code: 2FA1) (16) was placed manually into the electron density using the program COOT (27). The orientation of the C-terminal domains was fitted by rigid body refinement using REFMAC5 (28). The model was completed and corrected manually using COOT and by alternating with automated cycles of restrained atom position and individual B-factor refinement with REFMAC5 (28). Noncrystallographic symmetry restraints were defined for two groups of residues (residues 1–77 and 78–242) and applied to all 10 copies in the asymmetric unit (chains A–J) during the refinement. Sulfate ions and water molecules were added in the final stages of the refinement. During the final stages of refinement, group atomic translation libration and skrew-rotation (TLS) displacement parameters were refined. The ten molecules in the asymmetric unit were divided into 70 TLS groups (Supplementary Data) as suggested by the TLS motion determination home page (30,31) (http://skuld.bmsc.washington.edu/∼tlsmd/). The resulting TLS tensors were analyzed using TLSANL (32). A summary of the crystallographic data collection and refinement statistics is presented in Table 1. All structure depictions were generated using the program PYMOL (33). Coordinates for the YvoA crystal structure have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank (PDB, ID code 2WV0).
Selenomethionine YvoA crystal | |||
Se peak | Se inflection | Se native | |
Data collection | |||
Beam line | BESSY-MX, BL14.2 | ||
Wavelength (Å) | 0.97965 | 0.97979 | 0.97965 |
Resolution (Å) | 45.00–2.40 (2.50–2.40) | 45.00–2.50 (2.60–2.50) | 45.00–2.40 (2.50–2.40) |
Space group | C2 | ||
Cell parameters | a = 208.41, b = 137.08, c = 120.19 Å, β = 94.97° | ||
No. of molecules in the ASU | 10 | ||
I/σ(I) | 9.2 (1.9) | 10.8 (1.7) | 6.5 (2.3) |
Rinta (%) | 4.4 (34.9) | 4.1 (41.0) | 8.4 (40.6) |
Rmeasb (%) | 6.2 (49.3) | 5.8 (57.9) | 10.6 (51.1) |
Rmrgd-Fb (%) | 13.2 (61.4) | 13.6 (75.6) | 15.2 (53.1) |
Unique reflections | 249 821 | 218 213 | 130 361 |
Redundancy | 1.4 | 1.4 | 2.6 |
Completeness (%) | 96.4 (96.6) | 95.2 (92.2) | 99.3 (100.0) |
Wilson B-value (Å2) | 63.4 | 67.3 | 55.4 |
Solvent content (%) | 59.9 | ||
Phasing statistics (45.0–2.4 Å) | |||
No. of sites | 81 (found) out of 90 (possible) | ||
Phasing power (ano, acentric) | 1.696 | ||
RCullisc (ano, acentric) | 0.662 | ||
FOM (acentric/centric) | 0.432/0.210 | ||
Refinement statistics (100.0–2.4 Å) | |||
Rwork/Rfree/Rtotald (%) | 19.9/25.6/20.5 | ||
Number of non-hydrogen atoms | 18 689 | ||
Number of residues | 2378 | ||
Number of solvent molecules | 769 | ||
Additional molecules | 15 SO42– | ||
No. of TLS groups used in refinement | 70 | ||
Overall mean B-value (Å2) | 64.5 | ||
Mean B-value of 10 protein chains (Å2) | 65.4 | ||
Mean B-value of sulfates (Å2) | 54.2 | ||
Mean B-value of water molecules (Å2) | 54.2 | ||
R.m.s.d. from ideal geometry | |||
Bond lengths (Å) | 0.014 | ||
Bond angles (°) | 1.251 | ||
Ramachandran statisticse (%) | 92.5/7.4/0.1/0.0 |
Selenomethionine YvoA crystal | |||
Se peak | Se inflection | Se native | |
Data collection | |||
Beam line | BESSY-MX, BL14.2 | ||
Wavelength (Å) | 0.97965 | 0.97979 | 0.97965 |
Resolution (Å) | 45.00–2.40 (2.50–2.40) | 45.00–2.50 (2.60–2.50) | 45.00–2.40 (2.50–2.40) |
Space group | C2 | ||
Cell parameters | a = 208.41, b = 137.08, c = 120.19 Å, β = 94.97° | ||
No. of molecules in the ASU | 10 | ||
I/σ(I) | 9.2 (1.9) | 10.8 (1.7) | 6.5 (2.3) |
Rinta (%) | 4.4 (34.9) | 4.1 (41.0) | 8.4 (40.6) |
Rmeasb (%) | 6.2 (49.3) | 5.8 (57.9) | 10.6 (51.1) |
Rmrgd-Fb (%) | 13.2 (61.4) | 13.6 (75.6) | 15.2 (53.1) |
Unique reflections | 249 821 | 218 213 | 130 361 |
Redundancy | 1.4 | 1.4 | 2.6 |
Completeness (%) | 96.4 (96.6) | 95.2 (92.2) | 99.3 (100.0) |
Wilson B-value (Å2) | 63.4 | 67.3 | 55.4 |
Solvent content (%) | 59.9 | ||
Phasing statistics (45.0–2.4 Å) | |||
No. of sites | 81 (found) out of 90 (possible) | ||
Phasing power (ano, acentric) | 1.696 | ||
RCullisc (ano, acentric) | 0.662 | ||
FOM (acentric/centric) | 0.432/0.210 | ||
Refinement statistics (100.0–2.4 Å) | |||
Rwork/Rfree/Rtotald (%) | 19.9/25.6/20.5 | ||
Number of non-hydrogen atoms | 18 689 | ||
Number of residues | 2378 | ||
Number of solvent molecules | 769 | ||
Additional molecules | 15 SO42– | ||
No. of TLS groups used in refinement | 70 | ||
Overall mean B-value (Å2) | 64.5 | ||
Mean B-value of 10 protein chains (Å2) | 65.4 | ||
Mean B-value of sulfates (Å2) | 54.2 | ||
Mean B-value of water molecules (Å2) | 54.2 | ||
R.m.s.d. from ideal geometry | |||
Bond lengths (Å) | 0.014 | ||
Bond angles (°) | 1.251 | ||
Ramachandran statisticse (%) | 92.5/7.4/0.1/0.0 |
Rint = Σhkl Σi |Ii(hkl) – <I(hkl)>| / Σhkl Σi Ii(hkl), where Ii(hkl) is the intensity measurement for reflection hkl, and <I(hkl)> is the mean intensity of crystallographically replicants and symmetry-related reflections.
Rmeas is the multiplicity weighted merging R-factor, and Rmrgd-F is an indicator for the quality of the reduced data (47).
RCullis = Σhkl || Δano, obs|–|<Δano, calc||/ Σhkl || Δano, obs|, where Δano, obs and Δano, calc are the observed and calculated anomalous differences (36).
Rwork/Rfree/Rtotal = 100 (Σhkl |Fo(hkl) – Fc(hkl)|/ Σhkl Fo(hkl)), where Fo and Fc are the observed and calculated structure factor amplitudes, respectively. Rfree is calculated for 10% of randomly selected reflections excluded from refinement.
The Ramachandran statistics were obtained with the program PROCHECK (48). Reported is the percentage of residues in the most favored, additionally allowed, generally allowed and disallowed areas of the Ramachandran plot.
Selenomethionine YvoA crystal | |||
Se peak | Se inflection | Se native | |
Data collection | |||
Beam line | BESSY-MX, BL14.2 | ||
Wavelength (Å) | 0.97965 | 0.97979 | 0.97965 |
Resolution (Å) | 45.00–2.40 (2.50–2.40) | 45.00–2.50 (2.60–2.50) | 45.00–2.40 (2.50–2.40) |
Space group | C2 | ||
Cell parameters | a = 208.41, b = 137.08, c = 120.19 Å, β = 94.97° | ||
No. of molecules in the ASU | 10 | ||
I/σ(I) | 9.2 (1.9) | 10.8 (1.7) | 6.5 (2.3) |
Rinta (%) | 4.4 (34.9) | 4.1 (41.0) | 8.4 (40.6) |
Rmeasb (%) | 6.2 (49.3) | 5.8 (57.9) | 10.6 (51.1) |
Rmrgd-Fb (%) | 13.2 (61.4) | 13.6 (75.6) | 15.2 (53.1) |
Unique reflections | 249 821 | 218 213 | 130 361 |
Redundancy | 1.4 | 1.4 | 2.6 |
Completeness (%) | 96.4 (96.6) | 95.2 (92.2) | 99.3 (100.0) |
Wilson B-value (Å2) | 63.4 | 67.3 | 55.4 |
Solvent content (%) | 59.9 | ||
Phasing statistics (45.0–2.4 Å) | |||
No. of sites | 81 (found) out of 90 (possible) | ||
Phasing power (ano, acentric) | 1.696 | ||
RCullisc (ano, acentric) | 0.662 | ||
FOM (acentric/centric) | 0.432/0.210 | ||
Refinement statistics (100.0–2.4 Å) | |||
Rwork/Rfree/Rtotald (%) | 19.9/25.6/20.5 | ||
Number of non-hydrogen atoms | 18 689 | ||
Number of residues | 2378 | ||
Number of solvent molecules | 769 | ||
Additional molecules | 15 SO42– | ||
No. of TLS groups used in refinement | 70 | ||
Overall mean B-value (Å2) | 64.5 | ||
Mean B-value of 10 protein chains (Å2) | 65.4 | ||
Mean B-value of sulfates (Å2) | 54.2 | ||
Mean B-value of water molecules (Å2) | 54.2 | ||
R.m.s.d. from ideal geometry | |||
Bond lengths (Å) | 0.014 | ||
Bond angles (°) | 1.251 | ||
Ramachandran statisticse (%) | 92.5/7.4/0.1/0.0 |
Selenomethionine YvoA crystal | |||
Se peak | Se inflection | Se native | |
Data collection | |||
Beam line | BESSY-MX, BL14.2 | ||
Wavelength (Å) | 0.97965 | 0.97979 | 0.97965 |
Resolution (Å) | 45.00–2.40 (2.50–2.40) | 45.00–2.50 (2.60–2.50) | 45.00–2.40 (2.50–2.40) |
Space group | C2 | ||
Cell parameters | a = 208.41, b = 137.08, c = 120.19 Å, β = 94.97° | ||
No. of molecules in the ASU | 10 | ||
I/σ(I) | 9.2 (1.9) | 10.8 (1.7) | 6.5 (2.3) |
Rinta (%) | 4.4 (34.9) | 4.1 (41.0) | 8.4 (40.6) |
Rmeasb (%) | 6.2 (49.3) | 5.8 (57.9) | 10.6 (51.1) |
Rmrgd-Fb (%) | 13.2 (61.4) | 13.6 (75.6) | 15.2 (53.1) |
Unique reflections | 249 821 | 218 213 | 130 361 |
Redundancy | 1.4 | 1.4 | 2.6 |
Completeness (%) | 96.4 (96.6) | 95.2 (92.2) | 99.3 (100.0) |
Wilson B-value (Å2) | 63.4 | 67.3 | 55.4 |
Solvent content (%) | 59.9 | ||
Phasing statistics (45.0–2.4 Å) | |||
No. of sites | 81 (found) out of 90 (possible) | ||
Phasing power (ano, acentric) | 1.696 | ||
RCullisc (ano, acentric) | 0.662 | ||
FOM (acentric/centric) | 0.432/0.210 | ||
Refinement statistics (100.0–2.4 Å) | |||
Rwork/Rfree/Rtotald (%) | 19.9/25.6/20.5 | ||
Number of non-hydrogen atoms | 18 689 | ||
Number of residues | 2378 | ||
Number of solvent molecules | 769 | ||
Additional molecules | 15 SO42– | ||
No. of TLS groups used in refinement | 70 | ||
Overall mean B-value (Å2) | 64.5 | ||
Mean B-value of 10 protein chains (Å2) | 65.4 | ||
Mean B-value of sulfates (Å2) | 54.2 | ||
Mean B-value of water molecules (Å2) | 54.2 | ||
R.m.s.d. from ideal geometry | |||
Bond lengths (Å) | 0.014 | ||
Bond angles (°) | 1.251 | ||
Ramachandran statisticse (%) | 92.5/7.4/0.1/0.0 |
Rint = Σhkl Σi |Ii(hkl) – <I(hkl)>| / Σhkl Σi Ii(hkl), where Ii(hkl) is the intensity measurement for reflection hkl, and <I(hkl)> is the mean intensity of crystallographically replicants and symmetry-related reflections.
Rmeas is the multiplicity weighted merging R-factor, and Rmrgd-F is an indicator for the quality of the reduced data (47).
RCullis = Σhkl || Δano, obs|–|<Δano, calc||/ Σhkl || Δano, obs|, where Δano, obs and Δano, calc are the observed and calculated anomalous differences (36).
Rwork/Rfree/Rtotal = 100 (Σhkl |Fo(hkl) – Fc(hkl)|/ Σhkl Fo(hkl)), where Fo and Fc are the observed and calculated structure factor amplitudes, respectively. Rfree is calculated for 10% of randomly selected reflections excluded from refinement.
The Ramachandran statistics were obtained with the program PROCHECK (48). Reported is the percentage of residues in the most favored, additionally allowed, generally allowed and disallowed areas of the Ramachandran plot.
Homology modeling
YvoA in the DNA-bound conformation was modeled using the ESyPred3D (34) web server 1.0 (http://www.fundp.ac.be/sciences/biologie/urbm/bioinfo/esypred/). Chain A from the crystal structure of the putative transcriptional regulator YydK from B. subtilis (PDB code: 3BWG) (K.Tan, M.Zhou, J.Abdullah and A.Joachimiak, Midwest Center for Structural Genomics (MCSG), unpublished data) was identified as the best template for modeling. Superposition of the DNA-binding domains of the model obtained above onto the homologous DNA-binding domains from FadR bound to DNA (PDB code: 1HW2) (35) was calculated with the program LSQKAB (36).
RESULTS
Overall structure of YvoA
The crystal structure of YvoA was solved at 2.4 Å by MAD using selenomethionine substituted YvoA (Table 1). The crystals contain 10 molecules in the asymmetric unit. Intriguingly, these form five crystallographic dimers and are arranged along a 51 screw axis creating a left-handed helix with a pitch of ∼160 Å and a ∼25 Å diameter pore at its centre (Supplementary Data A and B). Of the 10 molecules (A–J), molecules A–F and I are defined best by their electron density, whereas molecules G, H and J lack density for some segments and display particularly high B-values in several surface exposed regions.
The N-terminal part of the protein (residues 1–76) contains a canonical wHTH DNA-binding domain with α1–β1–α2–α3–β2–β3 topology and is attached to the C-terminal domain via a 21 residue-long linker (residues 77–97; Figure 1A and B). The C-terminal effector-binding domain displays a chorismate lyase fold and contains a six-stranded antiparallel β-sheet in its core (β4–9), which is extended on one side by β-strand β10 from a second monomer. The C-terminal domain displays a remarkable topology as it contains a 2-fold internal repeat comprising one-half of the central β-sheet and one-half of all flanking helices. The repeats are related by a pseudo 2-fold symmetry axis that intersects with a bound sulfate ion (sulfate-binding site 1, Figure 1C). This sulfate is located on top of the central β-sheet flanked by the helices α5 and α9 and occurs in all YvoA monomers with the exception of monomers H and J that display overall poorer density. An additional sulfate-binding site (sulfate-binding site 2) could be identified at the N-terminal end of helix α1 (Figure 1B). Again, this site is not occupied in all of the 10 molecules, and in total, the model contains 15 sulfates. The N- to C-terminal inter-domain orientation is highly conserved in all copies of YvoA in the crystal (Supplementary Data). The average root-mean-square deviation (r.m.s.d.) for the pairwise superposition of the Cα atoms of all 10 monomers is 1.02 Å, suggesting that this orientation corresponds to a low-energy conformation in YvoA.
The YvoA molecules dimerize via their effector-binding domains (Figure 1A) burying an average interface area of 1700 Å2 per monomer. Dimerization is achieved via hydrogen bonds formed between β-strands β7 and β10′ and via salt bridges (between residues R241-E91′, D240-R180′, E171-R241′). Dimer formation can also be monitored in solution, namely by gel filtration (21) and chemical cross-linking employing formaldehyde and glutardialdehyde (data not shown). The YvoA dimerization mode is identical to that observed in crystal structures of individual effector-binding domains of GntR/HutC family members such as in PhnF (PDB code: 2FA1) (16), TreR (PDB code: 2OGG) (17) and YurK from B. subtilis (PDB code: 2IKK) (K.Tan, C.Hatzos, J.Abdullah and A.Joachimiak, Midwest Center for Structural Genomics (MCSG), unpublished data) as well as in full-length YydK (PDB code: 3BWG) (K.Tan, M.Zhou, J.Abdullah and A.Joachimiak, Midwest Center for Structural Genomics (MCSG), unpublished data), which suggests that the observed dimerization mode is characteristic for the GntR/HutC family of bacterial repressors.
The program DaliLite (http://ekhidna.biocenter.helsinki.fi/dali_server) (37) reported 27 different entries with Z-scores >10 as close structural neighbors of YvoA. The nearest neighbor was identified as the uncharacterized gene product SA0254 from Staphylococcus aureus (PDB code: 2OOI) [R. Zhang, E.Duggan, M.Gu, and A.Joachimiak, Midwest Center for Structural Genomics (MCSG), unpublished data] (r.m.s.d. = 1.8 Å, sequence identity = 22%) and the second closest neighbor as YydK from B. subtilis (PDB code: 3BWG) (PDB code: 2OOI) (r.m.s.d. = 2.0 Å, sequence identity = 27%). The E. coli enzyme chorismate lyase (PDB code: 1G1B) (14) was identified at position 21 (r.m.s.d. of 3.0 Å and a global sequence identity of 14%; for a superposition see Figure 1D). All entries corroborate the observation that the occurrence of the fold of the effector-binding domain is restricted to either enzymes or to the GntR/HutC family, of which YvoA appears to be a representative member (13,14,38).
The YvoA effector-binding site coincides with the active site of chorismate lyase
HutC family members are expected to bind a variety of different effector molecules but until now no structural insight is available on any such complexes. In chorismate lyase, eponymous for the fold of the effector-binding domain, the active site is located on top of the central β-sheet near the geometric centre of the enzyme (13,14). In YvoA, we observe a sulfate ion bound at an equivalent position (Figure 1C). The sulfate is bound via the N-termini of helices α5 and α9, by the guanidinium groups of R133 and R135, by the hydroxyl groups of T90 and S165, and by the backbone amides of F89, S165, I166 and Y167 (Figure 2).
We hypothesized that this sulfate ion occupies the position at which low-molecular-weight effectors interact with YvoA. As glucosamine-6-phosphate (GlcN-6-P) has been identified as the effector of the YvoA homolog DasR (3), and because both proteins are implicated in the regulation of the GlcNAc metabolism, we reasoned that GlcN-6-P might also be the effector of YvoA. Therefore, we probed wild-type YvoA for binding GlcN-6-P as well as the related molecule N-acetylglucosamine-6-phosphate (GlcNAc-6-P). Only for the latter, we were able to obtain interpretable ITC-binding curves yielding a dissociation constant of 1 mM (Kd) (Table 2, Figure 2A). This represents a relatively weak binding affinity and could indicate that yet unknown YvoA effectors with higher affinities exist. On the other hand, when considering that the intracellular concentrations of GlcNAc-6-P lie in the range of 1–10 mM under GlcNAc catabolizing conditions (Fritz Titgemeyer, personal communication), a high occupancy of the effector-binding site can be achieved despite the low overall affinity of GlcNAc-6-P.
Kd (M) | n | ΔH°a | ΔG°a | TΔS°a | |
GlcNAc-6-P was titrated to | |||||
Wild-type YvoA | 1.0·10−3 | 1b | –18.9 | –17.1 | –1.8 |
YvoA-E222D | 1.1·10−3 | 1b | –21.2 | –17.0 | –4.2 |
YvoA-I209L | 3.3·10−3 | 1b | –35.9 | –14.2 | –21.7 |
YvoA-I209E | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-A224R | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-E61C-L242C | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-K24C-G97C | 1.8·10−3 | 1b | –16.8 | –15.6 | –1.2 |
Wild-type YvoA was titrated to | |||||
dsDNA (18mer) | 131.2·10−9 | 1c | 26.9 | –39.3 | 66.2 |
dsDNA was titrated to | |||||
Wild-type YvoA | 2.9·10−9 (Kd1) | n1 0.47c | ΔH°1–26.4 | ΔG°1 −48.7 | TΔS°1 22.3 |
0.5·10−6 (Kd2) | n2 0.44c | ΔH°2 70.0 | ΔG°2 −36.1 | TΔS°2 106.1 |
Kd (M) | n | ΔH°a | ΔG°a | TΔS°a | |
GlcNAc-6-P was titrated to | |||||
Wild-type YvoA | 1.0·10−3 | 1b | –18.9 | –17.1 | –1.8 |
YvoA-E222D | 1.1·10−3 | 1b | –21.2 | –17.0 | –4.2 |
YvoA-I209L | 3.3·10−3 | 1b | –35.9 | –14.2 | –21.7 |
YvoA-I209E | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-A224R | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-E61C-L242C | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-K24C-G97C | 1.8·10−3 | 1b | –16.8 | –15.6 | –1.2 |
Wild-type YvoA was titrated to | |||||
dsDNA (18mer) | 131.2·10−9 | 1c | 26.9 | –39.3 | 66.2 |
dsDNA was titrated to | |||||
Wild-type YvoA | 2.9·10−9 (Kd1) | n1 0.47c | ΔH°1–26.4 | ΔG°1 −48.7 | TΔS°1 22.3 |
0.5·10−6 (Kd2) | n2 0.44c | ΔH°2 70.0 | ΔG°2 −36.1 | TΔS°2 106.1 |
Units are in kJ mol−1.
This stoichiometry factor refers to an YvoA monomer.
This stoichiometry factor refers to dimeric YvoA.
Kd (M) | n | ΔH°a | ΔG°a | TΔS°a | |
GlcNAc-6-P was titrated to | |||||
Wild-type YvoA | 1.0·10−3 | 1b | –18.9 | –17.1 | –1.8 |
YvoA-E222D | 1.1·10−3 | 1b | –21.2 | –17.0 | –4.2 |
YvoA-I209L | 3.3·10−3 | 1b | –35.9 | –14.2 | –21.7 |
YvoA-I209E | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-A224R | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-E61C-L242C | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-K24C-G97C | 1.8·10−3 | 1b | –16.8 | –15.6 | –1.2 |
Wild-type YvoA was titrated to | |||||
dsDNA (18mer) | 131.2·10−9 | 1c | 26.9 | –39.3 | 66.2 |
dsDNA was titrated to | |||||
Wild-type YvoA | 2.9·10−9 (Kd1) | n1 0.47c | ΔH°1–26.4 | ΔG°1 −48.7 | TΔS°1 22.3 |
0.5·10−6 (Kd2) | n2 0.44c | ΔH°2 70.0 | ΔG°2 −36.1 | TΔS°2 106.1 |
Kd (M) | n | ΔH°a | ΔG°a | TΔS°a | |
GlcNAc-6-P was titrated to | |||||
Wild-type YvoA | 1.0·10−3 | 1b | –18.9 | –17.1 | –1.8 |
YvoA-E222D | 1.1·10−3 | 1b | –21.2 | –17.0 | –4.2 |
YvoA-I209L | 3.3·10−3 | 1b | –35.9 | –14.2 | –21.7 |
YvoA-I209E | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-A224R | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-E61C-L242C | No binding observed | – | – | – | – |
YvoA-K24C-G97C | 1.8·10−3 | 1b | –16.8 | –15.6 | –1.2 |
Wild-type YvoA was titrated to | |||||
dsDNA (18mer) | 131.2·10−9 | 1c | 26.9 | –39.3 | 66.2 |
dsDNA was titrated to | |||||
Wild-type YvoA | 2.9·10−9 (Kd1) | n1 0.47c | ΔH°1–26.4 | ΔG°1 −48.7 | TΔS°1 22.3 |
0.5·10−6 (Kd2) | n2 0.44c | ΔH°2 70.0 | ΔG°2 −36.1 | TΔS°2 106.1 |
Units are in kJ mol−1.
This stoichiometry factor refers to an YvoA monomer.
This stoichiometry factor refers to dimeric YvoA.
To unambiguously identify the GlcNAc-6-P-binding site, we generated several point mutants and tested their ability to bind GlcNAc-6-P (Table 2). Proper folding of each mutant was confirmed by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy (Supplementary Data A and B). Introducing small changes in the side-chains near the bound sulfate ion caused no or little effects on GlcNAc-6-P binding (mutants E222D and I209L, Supplementary Data A and B). Introduction of bulky and charged side-chains abolished GlcNAc-6-P binding completely (mutants I209E and A224R, Figure 2B and C).
An additional clue that the sulfate and effector-binding sites coincide can be derived from residual electron density in the initial MAD-phased experimental density map near monomer B that cannot be ascribed to the protein (Figure 2D). Guided by this density, GlcNAc-6-P could be docked into the binding site without any steric clashes. In addition to the interactions of the phosphoryl group of GlcNAc-6-P, which are identical to those of the sulfate molecule, GlcNAc-6-P is able to establish numerous hydrogen bonds, mainly via side-chain atoms, together with a few hydrophobic contacts such as that found between Y167 and C6 of the glucose moiety (Figure 2D and E). Close inspection of the proposed binding mode also reveals striking similarity to the binding mode of GlcNAc-6-P in N-acetylglucosamine-phosphate mutase (PDB code: 2DKC; (39); Supplementary Data), despite the fact that the folds of the two proteins are unrelated. Any trial calculations aiming at including GlcNAc-6-P into the crystallographic refinement remained unsuccessful and no unambiguous electron density was obtained for the glucose moiety of the ligand after refinement. Therefore, only the bound sulfate molecule was included in the final structure. Any attempts to obtain a GlcNAc-6-P-bound structure of YvoA failed so far.
Interestingly, the crystal structures of the related HutC members trehalose repressor TreR of B. subtilis (PDB code: 2OGG) (17) and YurK from B. subtilis (PDB code: 2IKK) contain also a sulfate ion at the same position. Even the corresponding residues R128 and R130 are conserved in TreR and YurK (R130 is replaced by a histidine in YurK). In TreR it has been proposed that the sulfate mimics the phosphoryl group of the effector trehalose-6-phosphate (17). From a structural point of view, it is not uncommon that an anion binds to the N-termini of two α-helices as it is well known that α-helices are able to favor the binding of negatively charged ligands at this position either via the helix dipole or/and via direct hydrogen-bond donation (40–42). It is quite likely that the high sulfate concentration used during crystallization (21) led to the occupancy of the GlcNAc-6-P-binding site by sulfate ions. Moreover, since effector binding leads to the induction of YvoA, the possibility must be considered that the observed structure of YvoA represents the induced conformation with impaired DNA operator-binding capability.
YvoA binds DNA in a two-step mechanism
YvoA has been proposed to recognize the natural occurring operator sequence ATTGGTATAGATCACTAG from B. subtilis (7), which is highly similar to the common dre sites found in S coelicolor (43). We investigated DNA binding of YvoA using this double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) and analytical gel filtration chromatography (Figure 3A). When dimeric wild-type YvoA is added in equimolar amounts to dsDNA, the YvoA–DNA complex elutes as a DNA-bound YvoA dimer. In contrast, when YvoA is added in 3.5-fold molar excess over dsDNA, a tetrameric state is observed (two YvoA dimers bind to one dsDNA, Figure 3A). The oligomeric states were determined by linear regression employing a calibration curve. In order to further characterize DNA binding, ITC was conducted with the same dsDNA by titrating YvoA to DNA (Supplementary Data, Table 2). The binding revealed an apparent Kd of 131.2 nM. Inversely, when dsDNA was titrated to YvoA, a biphasic isotherm was observed with two different Kd values revealing negative co-operativity (Supplementary Data, Table 2). This suggests a two-step-binding mechanism for YvoA. In the first step and in the presence of excessive YvoA, two YvoA dimers bind to one molecule of dsDNA via only one of the two DNA-binding domains present in each dimer. In the subsequent step, and upon increasing the DNA concentrations, one YvoA dimer dissociates from the complex and the remaining dimer now contacts the dsDNA with both binding domains. In case when dsDNA is present in excess, the complex of a YvoA dimer bound to dsDNA is formed from the onset.
It is not possible to explain the formation of a 1: 1 complex between dimeric YvoA and dsDNA on the basis of the YvoA crystal structure since in the structure the DNA-binding domains are splayed apart so that they cannot contact both half-sites of a single operator site simultaneously. To obtain a structural model of YvoA that would allow for the formation of such a complex, we considered the structure of the homolog transcriptional regulator YydK from B. subtilis (PDB code: 3BWG). YydK exhibits 27% sequence identity to YvoA, and its DNA-binding domains are oriented differently than in YvoA. They are paired together at the dimer interface and in this conformation the DNA recognition helices α3 and α3′ appear at the correct distance to bind into neighboring major grooves of dsDNA. This possibility is supported by a comparison of YydK with the crystal structure showing how the DNA-binding domains of FadR from E. coli interact with dsDNA (35,44). The DNA-binding domain dimer of FadR can be superimposed with the corresponding domains of YydK with an r.m.s.d. of 5.3 Å for all Cα atoms. The deviations between single DNA-binding domains are significantly lower (1.6 Å). Although a Cα r.m.s.d. of 5.3 Å suggests notable differences in the dimer assembly, the overall orientation of the DNA-binding domains is very similar in both proteins. Any differences could originate either from the fact that YydK was crystallized in the absence of DNA or from the observation that the two operator half sites are separated by a different number of nucleotides in the operators of YydK/YvoA and FadR (Table 3). Consequently, a slightly different positioning of the DNA-binding domains could be necessary for optimal DNA-binding in these repressors. The overall similarity, however, allows for the construction of a composite model for the DNA-bound conformation of YvoA in which the two DNA-binding domains display a similar orientation than in YydK and FadR (Figure 3B).
Source | DNA sequence |
YvoA operator from B. subtilis (7) | TGGTATAGATCA |
YvoA/DasR consensus dre, palindrome (43) | TGGTCTAGACCA |
FadR operator from E. coli, palindrome (35) | TGGTCC-GACCA |
FadR operator consensus, palindrome (35) | TGGTNN-NACCA |
Source | DNA sequence |
YvoA operator from B. subtilis (7) | TGGTATAGATCA |
YvoA/DasR consensus dre, palindrome (43) | TGGTCTAGACCA |
FadR operator from E. coli, palindrome (35) | TGGTCC-GACCA |
FadR operator consensus, palindrome (35) | TGGTNN-NACCA |
Conserved bases in the YvoA/FadR operator sequences are underlined.
Source | DNA sequence |
YvoA operator from B. subtilis (7) | TGGTATAGATCA |
YvoA/DasR consensus dre, palindrome (43) | TGGTCTAGACCA |
FadR operator from E. coli, palindrome (35) | TGGTCC-GACCA |
FadR operator consensus, palindrome (35) | TGGTNN-NACCA |
Source | DNA sequence |
YvoA operator from B. subtilis (7) | TGGTATAGATCA |
YvoA/DasR consensus dre, palindrome (43) | TGGTCTAGACCA |
FadR operator from E. coli, palindrome (35) | TGGTCC-GACCA |
FadR operator consensus, palindrome (35) | TGGTNN-NACCA |
Conserved bases in the YvoA/FadR operator sequences are underlined.
Analysis of the composite model and of the protein sequences shows that the wHTH domain in YvoA is even more similar to FadR (35% sequence identity) than to YydK (30% identity; Figure 3C). Two of three residues that are known to specifically recognize the operator sequence in FadR (R35, R45 and H65; FadR numbering) (35,44) are conserved in YvoA (Figure 3C). Moreover, key residues which are suggested to form salt bridge interactions with phosphate groups or to stabilize the positions of the aforementioned arginines in FadR (35) are conserved in YvoA, namely residues E37, S47, T50, R52 and G69 (YvoA numbering, Figure 3C). At the same time, the operator sequence of FadR shows significant similarity to that of YvoA (Table 3) (7,35). In summary, the sequence similarities between FadR and YvoA suggest that the DNA-binding mode of YvoA resembles that of FadR despite the fact that FadR is a member of a different subfamily of GntRs. Therefore, the FadR/YydK-derived composite model represents a likely conformation of a 1: 1 complex between dimeric YvoA and dsDNA.
DNA and effector binding require two distinct conformations
The above considerations suggest that YvoA adopts two distinct conformations when bound either to a small molecule effector or to DNA. To investigate the binding properties of these two conformations, we designed two disulfide-bridged mutants that lock YvoA either in the modeled DNA-bound conformation (YvoA-E61C-L242C) or in the conformation that we observe in the crystal structure (resembling the effector-bound induced conformation, YvoA-K24C-G97C) (Figure 4A and B).
The successful production and characterization of the disulfide-bridged mutant YvoA-E61C-L242C (Figure 4A) provides strong evidence that YvoA is able to adopt the inferred DNA-binding conformation. The successful formation of the intermolecular disulfide bridges could be confirmed by nonreducing SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) (data not shown). Isothermal titration of YvoA-E61C-L242C demonstrated its inability to bind GlcNAc-6-P, as anticipated for a non-inducible locked mutant (Table 2, Supplementary Data). CD spectroscopy and gel filtration experiments showed that the impaired effector binding is not due to a loss of structural integrity (Figure 4C, Supplementary Data). According to our model, this mutant is expected to bind DNA exclusively in a one-to-one complex (one YvoA dimer bound to dsDNA). Indeed, even with a 3.5-fold molar excess of YvoA-E61C-L242C over dsDNA, the protein–DNA complex eluted in a gel filtration experiment as expected for a one-to-one complex in support of the validity of the DNA-bound YvoA model (Figure 4C).
Gel filtration chromatography was also performed with a second YvoA mutant locked in the disulfide-bridged induced conformation (Figure 4B). Again, CD spectroscopy and gel filtration experiments confirmed the structural integrity of this mutant (Figure 4C, Supplementary Data). As anticipated, the mutant YvoA-K24C-G97C was still able to bind GlcNAc-6-P (Table 2, Supplementary Data). The slightly reduced binding efficiency possibly stems from a reduced accessibility of the effector-binding site in this mutant. Unexpectedly, the mutant YvoA-K24C-G97C was also able to bind DNA (Figure 4C). However, in contrast to wild-type YvoA, the YvoA-K24C-G97C–DNA complex did not elute as a complex of dimeric YvoA plus dsDNA but in the void volume of the column instead, irrespective of whether YvoA was present in excess over DNA (data not shown) or in equimolar concentration (Figure 4C). In this mutant, in which the DNA-binding domains are splayed apart, YvoA appears to bind to two different dsDNA molecules and at the same time the two operator half-sites interact with two different YvoA dimers. As a result, a linear polymer is formed composed of alternating YvoA dimers and dsDNA building blocks. Obviously, in this disulfide-bridged conformation, no complex can be formed in which one YvoA dimer binds to a single operator dsDNA.
Further indications that YvoA adopts distinct conformations upon binding to either small molecule effectors or to DNA are obtained with limited proteolysis experiments. When exposed to small amounts of the unspecific serine protease subtilisin, different proteolytic products are observed depending on whether no ligand, dsDNA or GlcNAc-6-P is present (Figure 5, Supplementary Data). In the absence of both dsDNA and GlcNAc-6-P, three stable fragments can be observed in SDS gels. These start with amino acid residues K5, R96 and L86 (residues C-terminal to the scissile bond; marked ‘double dagger’, ‘dagger’ and ‘asterisk’ in Figure 5). The latter two lie in the interdomain region between the DNA-binding domain and the effector-binding domain (α4-L86-α5-R96-β4). In the presence of dsDNA, the fragments that start at L86 and R96 re-occur with R96 becoming the most abundant. In contrast, when GlcNAc-6-P is present, a fourth band starting with residue R70 emerges. R70 is located in the loop connecting strand β2 to β3 within the DNA-binding domain of YvoA (marked by ‘section’ in Figure 5, see also Figure 1A).
Two plausible explanations exist for the emergence of the R70 fragment upon GlcNAc-6-P addition. It is possible that R70 is protected in the ligand-free and in the DNA-bound structure so that no cleavage can occur at this position. Likewise, cleavage at R70 could occur rapidly in all samples but subsequent cleavage at residues R96 and L89 could be slowed down in the presence of the inducer so that the R70 fragment emerges as a stable fragment. The second explanation seems likely since the accessibility of residue R70 should vary considerably in the ligand-free and DNA-bound structure without this being reflected in the observed fragmentation pattern. Moreover, we observe that in the DNA-bound model as well as in the YydK template, from which the model was derived, the interdomain segment containing residues R96 and L89 is disordered and might therefore be preferentially cleaved. In contrast, in the sulfate-bound crystal structure, which we propose to mimic the GlcNAc-6-P-bound structure, the region 77–97 is ordered in agreement with a reduced susceptibility to proteolytic cleavage.
DISCUSSION
Allosteric mechanism of induction
Bacterial repressors function as molecular switches and binding of low-molecular-weight effectors modulate their ability to interact with operator DNA. Following the characterization of two distinct conformational states in YvoA that we propose to describe either effector- or operator-bound YvoA, the question arises: what is the nature of the mechanism that triggers the transition between both conformations? Comparison of the DNA-bound YvoA model and the crystal structure shows major differences in the region that connects the DNA-binding domain to the effector-binding domain (residues 77–97). In the DNA-bound model, these residues form a partially disordered loop, as apparent from the observed susceptibility of the residues within this loop for proteolysis and the observation that the corresponding YydK residues 82–89 are not visible in the electron density of YydK (PDB code: 3BWG) (Figure 6A). Upon effector binding, these residues undergo a conformational transition that can be described as a loop-to-helix transition. In particular, residues 80–84 and 89–95 switch their conformation and form helices α4 and α5 in the induced-like YvoA crystal structure.
We propose that the negatively charged phosphate group of GlcNAc-6-P (or the sulfate molecule in the crystal structure) triggers this transition. Binding of GlcNAc-6-P to the N-terminus of helix α9 might not just stabilize the dipole moment of this helix but might at the same time induce the formation of helix α5. Upon helix α5 formation, the phosphate becomes sandwiched between the N-termini of both helices with both helix dipoles pointing toward the phosphate (Figures 2B and 6B). Helix α5 formation might concomitantly induce cooperative folding of neighboring helix α4 as a key step in the propagation of the allosteric signal toward the DNA-binding domains. An interesting feature of this mechanism is that formation of helices α4 and α5 generates internal symmetry within the effector-binding domain (Figure 1B and C) with the 2-fold symmetry axis intersecting with the phosphate/sulfate group bound in the effector-bound conformation. Concurrently with this gain in symmetry, the DNA-binding domains are reoriented and forced apart in a ‘jumping jack’-like motion (Figure 6C). The observation that many of the HutC/GntR family members bind phosphate-containing effector molecules suggests that this allosteric induction mechanism may be common to the members of the HutC/GntR family.
Regulatory implications for gene transcription in vivo
In analogy to other repressors, such as the tetracycline and lac repressor (15,18), we expected the effector-bound induced conformation to be incompatible with DNA binding. However, this is not the case. This discovery is remarkable when viewed in the context of dual transcription regulators that act as both repressors and activators. This appears to hold true for several regulators implicated in both the transcription of anabolic and catabolic genes such as the E. coli FadR regulator and B. subtilis arginine repressor/activator AhrC (35,45,46). When FadR binds downstream of the RNA polymerase-binding site within the promoter, it blocks the polymerase and acts as a repressor (35). Conversely, when bound upstream, it promotes binding of the RNA polymerase (35) and acts as an activator. In case of YvoA, one could speculate that yet another mechanism might apply. In addition to blocking transcription through binding to dre-operator sites in the above characterized DNA-bound conformation, it is conceivable that YvoA, through binding to two different dre sites in the splayed induced conformation, brings two operons together, like for example the nagAB and the nagP operon located in different regions of the genome, possibly facilitating concomitant transcription of these genes. Thus, YvoA could switch between repressor and activator and thereby rapidly respond to cellular requirements. A clearer picture, however, will have to await additional experimental evidence.
ACCESSION NUMBER
2WV0.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We thank Uwe Müller from BESSY synchrotron (Berlin, Germany) for help with data collection. We are grateful to Caroline Kisker, Hermann Schindelin (RVZ, University of Würzburg) and Norbert Sträter (Center for Biotechnology and Biomedicine, University of Leipzig) for providing access to the spectropolarimeter and ITC equipment. We thank Christian Schmidt for help with the limited proteolysis assays and Madhumati Sevvana for valuable advice during the crystallographic refinement of the structure.
FUNDING
Elitenetzwerk Bayern, BIGSS; and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG (grant Mu1477/6-1). Funding for open access charge: DFG (grant Mu1477/6-1).
Conflict of interest statement. None declared.
REFERENCES
Author notes
Present address: Fritz Titgemeyer, Fachbereich Oecotrophologie, Fachhochschule Muenster, Corrensstr. 25, D-48149 Muenster, Germany.
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