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ATP-binding cassette transporter and heme binding protein SiaA

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Title: ATP-binding cassette transporter and heme binding protein SiaA


1
ATP-binding cassette transporter and heme binding
protein SiaA
  • Yau Fong Chan (Kyle)
  • Chem8360

2
  • Intorduction of ABC transporter
  • BtuCDF complex and mechanism
  • Streptococcus pyogenes. Study of SiaA and related
    experiment

3
ATP-binding cassette transporter
  • Serve as channels to transport molecules across
    cell membranes.
  • Facilitate the import of nutrients into cells
    or export toxic products into the surrounding
    medium, which are essential for cellular
    homeostasis, cell growth, cell divisions, and
    bacterial immunity.
  • Hydrolyze ATP and use it to move molecules
    against the concentration gradient or transport
    substrates across lipid membranes.
  • Multi-domain structures that are comprised of
    two a-helical transmembrane domains (TMDs) and
    two nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs).
  • Understanding ABC transporters structure and
    mechanism may help design agents to control their
    function, which might be used to treat cancer and
    drug-resistant bacteria.

4
ATP-binding cassette transporter
  • ABC transporters transporter molecules such
    as
  • -ions, sugars, amino acids,
    vitamins, peptides, polysaccharides, hormones,
    lipids.
  • ABC transporters are involved in diverse
    cellular processes such as
  • - maintenance of osmotic homeostasis,
  • - nutrient uptake,
  • - antigen processing,
  • - cell division,
  • - bacterial immunity,
  • - pathogenesis

5
ATP-binding cassette transporter
  • The TMDs contain multiple hydrophobic segments,
    which form the transmembrane (TM) channel.
  • The primary sequences of TMDs are different from
    the NBDs,

http//www-dsv.cea.fr/art/images/devm_lems/abc3d.g
if
6
ATP-binding cassette transporter
  • NBDs contain the highly conserved Walker A and B
    consensus motifs for
  • nucleotide binding and the LSGGQ motif.
  • TM channel contain the substrate binding sites.

http//www.biologie.uni-regensburg.de/Mikrobio/Tho
mm/Buttons/reg_fig1.gif
7
nucleotide-binding domains
  • Three-dimensional structure of NBD.
  • B-strands are numbered and depicted as arrows and
    a-helices as coiled ribbons.
  • ATP is shown in stick form with carbon (yellow),
    nitrogen (blue), oxygen (orange) and phosphorous
    (magenta).
  • Regions proposed to form interfaces with the TMDs
    are labelled IR1 and IR2.

8
BtuCDF complex structure and transport mechaism
9
BtuCD Structure and Mechanism
  • BtuCD is the vitamin B12 importer of E.coli.
  • The crystal structure of BtuCD provides the high
    resolution visualization of an ABC transporter.
  • Bacterial ABC transporters use peri-plasmic
    binding proteins (PBPs) to capture substrate and
    present it to the membrane translocator units.
  • BtuF is an example of PBPs.
  • BtuF deliver vitamin B12 to BtuCD

10
BtuCD Structure and Mechanism
  • In BtuCD, two copies of BtuC subunit and two
    BtuD subunits assemble to form the functional
    heterotetramer, the BtuC2D2.
  • BtuCD structure revealed three features for ABC
    transporter function
  • the translocation pathway
  • the arrangement of ABC domains
  • the transmission interface.

11
Translocation Pathway of BtuCD
  • Present at interface of the two BtuC subunits
  • large cavity that opens to the peri-plasmic
    space.
  • Each BtuC subunits traverses the membrane 10
    times
  • 20 transmembrane helices in the transporter.
  • The interface between the two BtuC subunits is
    formed by anti-parallel packing of two pairs of
    helices.
  • It has no structural resemblance to the binding
    pockets of vitamin B12-dependent enzyme.

12
Arrangement of ABC Domain
  • The BtuD subunits are aligned such that two ATP
    hydrolysis sites are formed at the dimer
    interface between the ABC signature mofit and the
    P-loop of the other.
  • Nucleotide binding and hydrolysis is due to the
    specific structure dimer instead of an individual
    domain.
  • Physiological dimers could only be trapped under
    ATP-EDTA condition.
  • BtuCs keep the BtuDs properly aligned.

13
Transmission- BtuC-BtuD interface region
  • Architecturally conserved in ABC transporter
  • Q loop of BtuD involved in the interface with
    BtuC.
  • Act as a alpha-phosphate sensor that may change
    its conformation upon nucleotide binding and
    hydrolysis.
  • When the binding protein BtuF has docked with
    BtuC, it signals to the ATP hydrolysis sites to
    initiate ATP hydrolysis.
  • The mutation of residues located at the
    transmission interface either Interferes with
    protein folding or assembly, or affects the
    coupling of ATP hydrolysis to substrate
    translocation.
  • For example, point mutation of Arg659 in
    transporter severely affects coupling.

14
BtuF structure
  • BtuF is an peri-plasmic binding protein capture
    substrates, vitamin B12 and deliver them to
    BtuCD, ABC transporters.
  • They are selective and have high affinity for
    their substrates.
  • BtuF comprises two lobes separated by a deep
    cleft that harbors the substrate binding site.

15
Schematic Transport Mechanism of BtuC2D2F
proposed by Kaspar P Locher
  • BtuF serves as an additional gate that prevents
    the escape of substrate on the wrong side of the
    membrane
  • In the initial state, the central cavity of the
    translocation pathway is accessible to the
    peri-plasm and closed to the cytoplasm, and the
    two ABC domains have a relatively small shared
    interface.
  • When BtuF with bound vitamin B12 is dock on the
    BtuC2D2 complex, a signal will be send across the
    membrane and triggers ATP hydrolysis.

16
Schematic Transport Mechanism of BtuC2D2F
proposed by Kaspar P Locher
  • ATP hydrolysis force the cytoplasmic gate open,
    which allowing vitamin B12 escape into the
    cytoplasm.
  • At the same time, the new conformation makes the
    vitamin B12 binding protein BtuF detach from
    BtuC2D2 complex, and returns to the resting
    state.

17
Streptococcus pyogenes and the SiaA Protein
18
Streptococcus pyogenes
  • S. pyogenes exhibit beta hemolysis on blood
    agar.
  • They colonize in the respiratory tract, blood
    stream, or skin.
  • Utilizes heme of human host from hemoglobin,
    myoglobin and hemopexin hemoglobin complexes
  • Cause strep throat, toxic shock syndrome,
    necrotizing fasciitis (flesh eating)
  • Little information on heme uptake mechanism in S.
    pyogenes.
  • Control heme uptake might allow control of
    virulent infections of S.pyogenes.

19
Streptococcus pyogenes and the SiaA Protein
  • SiaA is a heme binding protein of ABC system in
    Streptococcus pyogenes.
  • SiaA also serves as initial studies of the heme
    binding pocket through homology modeling and site
    directed mutagenesis.
  • Targeting a heme transport protein, for example,
    SiaA, in bacterial ATP binding cassette systems
    may be advantageous, as mammalian ABC systems
    only export, while bacterial ABCs both import and
    export solutes.

20
Expression and Purification of SiaA
21
SiaA Enterokinase cleavage
22
Strong ion exchange FPLC
23
SiaA Enterokinase cleavage
  • EK is use to remove the 6 x His tag from the
    N-terminal
  • The mass spectrometry (MALDI) showed the observed
    mass of protein fragment is smaller than the
    predicted mass ( 280kD less than the predicted
    fragment).
  • It suggested that EK cleavage happened after Arg
    instead of Lys.

24
SiaA Enterokinase cleavage
  • Cleavage site is after DR instead of DK.
    Suggested that enterokinase is cleaving two
    residues beyond its normal recognition site.
  • Arg and Lys are positively charged amino acid

25
BtuF and SiaA
  • BtuF has high proportion of alpha helix sequence
  • Heme persumably fits on edge in the central
    pocket. It can be seen that Tyr, His, and Met/His
    are all possible axial ligands.
  • See if SiaA can fit into these models.

26
Showed the SiaA is predominately alpha helical.
This is expected its homology to BtuF.
27
Conclusion
  • ABC transporters
  • serve as channel to transport molecules across
    cell membrane and it is essential for cellular
    homeostasis and cell growth.
  • hydrolyzes ATP for its conformational change.
  • composed of two TMD and two NBD.
  • PBP is use to capture substrate and present it to
    ABC transporter
  • BtuF and SiaA are the examples of PBP
  • SiaA is a heme binding protein in gram positive
    bacteria Streptococcus pyogene.
  • Biophysical study of SiaA showed
  • SiaA is largely alpha helical, as expected from
    its homology BtuF.
  • Homology modeling of SiaA based on the homologous
    Btu and FhuD proteins allowed us to postulate
    that His, Met and Tyr are possible axial ligands.
  • Mass spec strongly suggests that enterokinase is
    cleaving two residue beyond its normal
    recognition site.

28
Reference
  • Locher, Strucutre and Mechanism of ABC
    transporters, Current opinion of Structural
    Biology, 2004,14-426,
  • Jones, The ABC transporter structure and
    mechanism perspective on resent research, CMLS,
    Cell. Mol. Life. Sci, 2004, 61-682-699, Jones
  • Locher, ABC transporter architecture and
    mechanism implications from the crystal
    structures of BtuCD and BtuF FEBS letters, 2004,
    264-268, Locher
  • Liu, Heme transfer from streptococcal cell
    surface protein Shp to HisA of transporter
    HtsABC, Infect. Immun. 73, 5086-5092
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