Cargando…

A Single Acidic Residue Can Guide Binding Site Selection but Does Not Govern QacR Cationic-Drug Affinity

Structures of the multidrug-binding repressor protein QacR with monovalent and bivalent cationic drugs revealed that the carboxylate side-chains of E90 and E120 were proximal to the positively charged nitrogens of the ligands ethidium, malachite green and rhodamine 6G, and therefore may contribute t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Peters, Kate M., Brooks, Benjamin E., Schumacher, Maria A., Skurray, Ronald A., Brennan, Richard G., Brown, Melissa H.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3022030/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21264225
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015974
_version_ 1782196456090763264
author Peters, Kate M.
Brooks, Benjamin E.
Schumacher, Maria A.
Skurray, Ronald A.
Brennan, Richard G.
Brown, Melissa H.
author_facet Peters, Kate M.
Brooks, Benjamin E.
Schumacher, Maria A.
Skurray, Ronald A.
Brennan, Richard G.
Brown, Melissa H.
author_sort Peters, Kate M.
collection PubMed
description Structures of the multidrug-binding repressor protein QacR with monovalent and bivalent cationic drugs revealed that the carboxylate side-chains of E90 and E120 were proximal to the positively charged nitrogens of the ligands ethidium, malachite green and rhodamine 6G, and therefore may contribute to drug neutralization and binding affinity. Here, we report structural, biochemical and in vivo effects of substituting these glutamate residues. Unexpectedly, substitutions had little impact on ligand affinity or in vivo induction capabilities. Structures of QacR(E90Q) and QacR(E120Q) with ethidium or malachite green took similar global conformations that differed significantly from all previously described QacR-drug complexes but still prohibited binding to cognate DNA. Strikingly, the QacR(E90Q)-rhodamine 6G complex revealed two mutually exclusive rhodamine 6G binding sites. Despite multiple structural changes, all drug binding was essentially isoenergetic. Thus, these data strongly suggest that rather than contributing significantly to ligand binding affinity, the role of acidic residues lining the QacR multidrug-binding pocket is primarily to attract and guide cationic drugs to the “best available” positions within the pocket that elicit QacR induction.
format Text
id pubmed-3022030
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-30220302011-01-24 A Single Acidic Residue Can Guide Binding Site Selection but Does Not Govern QacR Cationic-Drug Affinity Peters, Kate M. Brooks, Benjamin E. Schumacher, Maria A. Skurray, Ronald A. Brennan, Richard G. Brown, Melissa H. PLoS One Research Article Structures of the multidrug-binding repressor protein QacR with monovalent and bivalent cationic drugs revealed that the carboxylate side-chains of E90 and E120 were proximal to the positively charged nitrogens of the ligands ethidium, malachite green and rhodamine 6G, and therefore may contribute to drug neutralization and binding affinity. Here, we report structural, biochemical and in vivo effects of substituting these glutamate residues. Unexpectedly, substitutions had little impact on ligand affinity or in vivo induction capabilities. Structures of QacR(E90Q) and QacR(E120Q) with ethidium or malachite green took similar global conformations that differed significantly from all previously described QacR-drug complexes but still prohibited binding to cognate DNA. Strikingly, the QacR(E90Q)-rhodamine 6G complex revealed two mutually exclusive rhodamine 6G binding sites. Despite multiple structural changes, all drug binding was essentially isoenergetic. Thus, these data strongly suggest that rather than contributing significantly to ligand binding affinity, the role of acidic residues lining the QacR multidrug-binding pocket is primarily to attract and guide cationic drugs to the “best available” positions within the pocket that elicit QacR induction. Public Library of Science 2011-01-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3022030/ /pubmed/21264225 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015974 Text en Peters et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Peters, Kate M.
Brooks, Benjamin E.
Schumacher, Maria A.
Skurray, Ronald A.
Brennan, Richard G.
Brown, Melissa H.
A Single Acidic Residue Can Guide Binding Site Selection but Does Not Govern QacR Cationic-Drug Affinity
title A Single Acidic Residue Can Guide Binding Site Selection but Does Not Govern QacR Cationic-Drug Affinity
title_full A Single Acidic Residue Can Guide Binding Site Selection but Does Not Govern QacR Cationic-Drug Affinity
title_fullStr A Single Acidic Residue Can Guide Binding Site Selection but Does Not Govern QacR Cationic-Drug Affinity
title_full_unstemmed A Single Acidic Residue Can Guide Binding Site Selection but Does Not Govern QacR Cationic-Drug Affinity
title_short A Single Acidic Residue Can Guide Binding Site Selection but Does Not Govern QacR Cationic-Drug Affinity
title_sort single acidic residue can guide binding site selection but does not govern qacr cationic-drug affinity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3022030/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21264225
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015974
work_keys_str_mv AT peterskatem asingleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity
AT brooksbenjamine asingleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity
AT schumachermariaa asingleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity
AT skurrayronalda asingleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity
AT brennanrichardg asingleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity
AT brownmelissah asingleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity
AT peterskatem singleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity
AT brooksbenjamine singleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity
AT schumachermariaa singleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity
AT skurrayronalda singleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity
AT brennanrichardg singleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity
AT brownmelissah singleacidicresiduecanguidebindingsiteselectionbutdoesnotgovernqacrcationicdrugaffinity