Cargando…

Role of Cysteines in the Stability and DNA-Binding Activity of the Hypochlorite-Specific Transcription Factor HypT

Reactive oxygen species are important components of the immune response. Hypochlorite (HOCl) is produced by neutrophils to kill invading microorganisms. The bactericidal activity of HOCl is due to proteome-wide unfolding and oxidation of proteins at cysteine and methionine residues. Escherichia coli...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Drazic, Adrian, Tsoutsoulopoulos, Amelie, Peschek, Jirka, Gundlach, Jasmin, Krause, Maike, Bach, Nina C., Gebendorfer, Katharina M., Winter, Jeannette
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3792123/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24116067
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075683
_version_ 1782286808798724096
author Drazic, Adrian
Tsoutsoulopoulos, Amelie
Peschek, Jirka
Gundlach, Jasmin
Krause, Maike
Bach, Nina C.
Gebendorfer, Katharina M.
Winter, Jeannette
author_facet Drazic, Adrian
Tsoutsoulopoulos, Amelie
Peschek, Jirka
Gundlach, Jasmin
Krause, Maike
Bach, Nina C.
Gebendorfer, Katharina M.
Winter, Jeannette
author_sort Drazic, Adrian
collection PubMed
description Reactive oxygen species are important components of the immune response. Hypochlorite (HOCl) is produced by neutrophils to kill invading microorganisms. The bactericidal activity of HOCl is due to proteome-wide unfolding and oxidation of proteins at cysteine and methionine residues. Escherichia coli cells are protected from HOCl-killing by the previously identified dodecameric transcription factor HypT (YjiE). Here, we aimed to unravel whether HOCl activates HypT directly or via a reaction product of HOCl with a cellular component. Bacterial viability assays and analysis of target gene regulation indicate that HypT is highly specific to activation by HOCl and that no reaction products of HOCl such as monochloramine, hydroxyl radicals, or methionine sulfoxide activate HypT in vivo. Surprisingly, purified HypT lost its DNA-binding activity upon incubation with HOCl or reaction products that oxidize HypT to form a disulfide-linked dimer, and regained DNA-binding activity upon reduction. Thus, we postulate that the cysteines in HypT contribute to control the DNA-binding activity of HypT in vitro. HypT contains five cysteine residues; a HypT mutant with all cysteines substituted by serine is aggregation-prone and forms tetramers in addition to the typical dodecamers. Using single and multiple cysteine-to-serine mutants, we identified Cys150 to be required for stability and Cys4 being important for oligomerization of HypT to dodecamers. Further, oxidation of Cys4 is responsible for the loss of DNA-binding of HypT upon oxidation in vitro. It appears that Cys4 oxidation upon conditions that are insufficient to stimulate the DNA-binding activity of HypT prevents unproductive interactions of HypT with DNA. Thus, Cys4 oxidation may be a check point in the activation process of HypT.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3792123
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-37921232013-10-10 Role of Cysteines in the Stability and DNA-Binding Activity of the Hypochlorite-Specific Transcription Factor HypT Drazic, Adrian Tsoutsoulopoulos, Amelie Peschek, Jirka Gundlach, Jasmin Krause, Maike Bach, Nina C. Gebendorfer, Katharina M. Winter, Jeannette PLoS One Research Article Reactive oxygen species are important components of the immune response. Hypochlorite (HOCl) is produced by neutrophils to kill invading microorganisms. The bactericidal activity of HOCl is due to proteome-wide unfolding and oxidation of proteins at cysteine and methionine residues. Escherichia coli cells are protected from HOCl-killing by the previously identified dodecameric transcription factor HypT (YjiE). Here, we aimed to unravel whether HOCl activates HypT directly or via a reaction product of HOCl with a cellular component. Bacterial viability assays and analysis of target gene regulation indicate that HypT is highly specific to activation by HOCl and that no reaction products of HOCl such as monochloramine, hydroxyl radicals, or methionine sulfoxide activate HypT in vivo. Surprisingly, purified HypT lost its DNA-binding activity upon incubation with HOCl or reaction products that oxidize HypT to form a disulfide-linked dimer, and regained DNA-binding activity upon reduction. Thus, we postulate that the cysteines in HypT contribute to control the DNA-binding activity of HypT in vitro. HypT contains five cysteine residues; a HypT mutant with all cysteines substituted by serine is aggregation-prone and forms tetramers in addition to the typical dodecamers. Using single and multiple cysteine-to-serine mutants, we identified Cys150 to be required for stability and Cys4 being important for oligomerization of HypT to dodecamers. Further, oxidation of Cys4 is responsible for the loss of DNA-binding of HypT upon oxidation in vitro. It appears that Cys4 oxidation upon conditions that are insufficient to stimulate the DNA-binding activity of HypT prevents unproductive interactions of HypT with DNA. Thus, Cys4 oxidation may be a check point in the activation process of HypT. Public Library of Science 2013-10-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3792123/ /pubmed/24116067 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075683 Text en © 2013 Drazic 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
Drazic, Adrian
Tsoutsoulopoulos, Amelie
Peschek, Jirka
Gundlach, Jasmin
Krause, Maike
Bach, Nina C.
Gebendorfer, Katharina M.
Winter, Jeannette
Role of Cysteines in the Stability and DNA-Binding Activity of the Hypochlorite-Specific Transcription Factor HypT
title Role of Cysteines in the Stability and DNA-Binding Activity of the Hypochlorite-Specific Transcription Factor HypT
title_full Role of Cysteines in the Stability and DNA-Binding Activity of the Hypochlorite-Specific Transcription Factor HypT
title_fullStr Role of Cysteines in the Stability and DNA-Binding Activity of the Hypochlorite-Specific Transcription Factor HypT
title_full_unstemmed Role of Cysteines in the Stability and DNA-Binding Activity of the Hypochlorite-Specific Transcription Factor HypT
title_short Role of Cysteines in the Stability and DNA-Binding Activity of the Hypochlorite-Specific Transcription Factor HypT
title_sort role of cysteines in the stability and dna-binding activity of the hypochlorite-specific transcription factor hypt
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3792123/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24116067
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075683
work_keys_str_mv AT drazicadrian roleofcysteinesinthestabilityanddnabindingactivityofthehypochloritespecifictranscriptionfactorhypt
AT tsoutsoulopoulosamelie roleofcysteinesinthestabilityanddnabindingactivityofthehypochloritespecifictranscriptionfactorhypt
AT peschekjirka roleofcysteinesinthestabilityanddnabindingactivityofthehypochloritespecifictranscriptionfactorhypt
AT gundlachjasmin roleofcysteinesinthestabilityanddnabindingactivityofthehypochloritespecifictranscriptionfactorhypt
AT krausemaike roleofcysteinesinthestabilityanddnabindingactivityofthehypochloritespecifictranscriptionfactorhypt
AT bachninac roleofcysteinesinthestabilityanddnabindingactivityofthehypochloritespecifictranscriptionfactorhypt
AT gebendorferkatharinam roleofcysteinesinthestabilityanddnabindingactivityofthehypochloritespecifictranscriptionfactorhypt
AT winterjeannette roleofcysteinesinthestabilityanddnabindingactivityofthehypochloritespecifictranscriptionfactorhypt