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1.
Structural biology of bacterial iron uptake   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
To fulfill their nutritional requirement for iron, bacteria utilize various iron sources which include the host proteins transferrin and lactoferrin, heme, and low molecular weight iron chelators termed siderophores. The iron sources are transported into the Gram-negative bacterial cell via specific uptake pathways which include an outer membrane receptor, a periplasmic binding protein (PBP), and an inner membrane ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter. Over the past two decades, structures for the proteins involved in bacterial iron uptake have not only been solved, but their functions have begun to be understood at the molecular level. However, the elucidation of the three dimensional structures of all components of the iron uptake pathways is currently limited. Despite the low sequence homology between different bacterial species, the available three-dimensional structures of homologous proteins are strikingly similar. Examination of the current three-dimensional structures of the outer membrane receptors, PBPs, and ABC transporters provides an overview of the structural biology of iron uptake in bacteria.  相似文献   

2.
Bacteria are able to survive in low-iron environments by sequestering this metal ion from iron-containing proteins and other biomolecules such as transferrin, lactoferrin, heme, hemoglobin, or other heme-containing proteins. In addition, many bacteria secrete specific low molecular weight iron chelators termed siderophores. These iron sources are transported into the Gram-negative bacterial cell through an outer membrane receptor, a periplasmic binding protein (PBP), and an inner membrane ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter. In different strains the outer membrane receptors can bind and transport ferric siderophores, heme, or Fe3+ as well as vitamin B12, nickel complexes, and carbohydrates. The energy that is required for the active transport of these substrates through the outer membrane receptor is provided by the TonB/ExbB/ExbD complex, which is located in the cytoplasmic membrane. In this minireview, we will briefly examine the three-dimensional structure of TonB and the current models for the mechanism of TonB-dependent energy transduction. Additionally, the role of TonB in colicin transport will be discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Siderophores are biosynthetically produced and secreted by many bacteria, yeasts, fungi and plants, to scavenge for ferric iron (Fe3+). They are selective iron-chelators that have an extremely high affinity for binding this trivalent metal ion. The ferric ion is poorly soluble but it is the form of iron that is predominantly found in oxygenated environments. Siderophore uptake in bacteria has been extensively studied and over the last decade, detailed structural information for many of the proteins that are involved in their transport has become available. Specifically, numerous crystal structures for outer membrane siderophore transporters, as well as for soluble periplasmic siderophore-binding proteins, have been reported. Moreover, unique siderophore-binding proteins have recently been serendipitously discovered in humans, and the structures of some of their siderophore-complexes have been characterized. The binding pockets for different ferric-siderophores in these proteins have been described in great molecular detail. In addition to highlighting this structural information, in this review paper we will also briefly discuss the relevant chemical properties of iron, and provide a perspective on our current understanding of the human and bacterial iron uptake pathways. Potential clinical uses of siderophores will also be discussed. The emerging overall picture is that iron metabolism plays an extremely important role during bacterial infections. Because levels of free ferric iron in biological systems are always extremely low, there is serious competition for iron and for ferric-siderophores between pathogenic bacteria and the human or animal host.  相似文献   

4.
Recent insights into iron import by bacteria   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Bacteria are confronted with a low availability of iron owing to its insolubility in the Fe3+ form or its being bound to host proteins. The bacteria cope with the iron deficiency by using host heme or siderophores synthesized by themselves or other microbes. In contrast to most other nutrients, iron compounds are tightly bound to proteins at the cell surfaces, from which they are further translocated by highly specific proteins across the cell wall of gram-positive bacteria and the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria. Once heme and iron siderophores arrive at the cytoplasmic membrane, they are taken up across the cytoplasmic membrane by ABC transporters. Here we present an outline of bacterial heme and iron siderophore transport exemplified by a few selected cases in which recent progress in the understanding of the transport mechanisms has been achieved.  相似文献   

5.
The outer membrane protects Gram-negative bacteria against a harsh environment. At the same time, the embedded proteins fulfil a number of tasks that are crucial to the bacterial cell, such as solute and protein translocation, as well as signal transduction. Unlike membrane proteins from all other sources, integral outer membrane proteins do not consist of transmembrane alpha-helices, but instead fold into antiparallel beta-barrels. Over recent years, the atomic structures of several outer membrane proteins, belonging to six families, have been determined. They include the OmpA membrane domain, the OmpX protein, phospholipase A, general porins (OmpF, PhoE), substrate-specific porins (LamB, ScrY) and the TonB-dependent iron siderophore transporters FhuA and FepA. These crystallographic studies have yielded invaluable insight into and decisively advanced the understanding of the functions of these intriguing proteins. Our review is aimed at discussing their common principles and peculiarities as well as open questions associated with them.  相似文献   

6.
The MotA/MotB proteins serve as the motor that drives bacterial flagellar rotation in response to the proton motive force (pmf). They have been shown to comprise a transmembrane proton pathway. The ExbB/ExbD/TonB protein complex serves to energize transport of iron siderophores and vitamin B12 across the outer membrane of the Gram-negative bacterial cell using the pmf. These two protein complexes have the same topology and are homologous. Based on molecular data for the MotA/MotB proteins, we propose simple three-dimensional channel structures for both MotA/MotB and ExbB/ExbD/TonB using modeling methods. Features of the derived channels are discussed, and two possible proton transfer pathways for the ExbBD/TonB system are proposed. These analyses provide a guide for molecular studies aimed at elucidating the mechanism by which chemiosmotic energy can be transferred either between two adjacent membranes to energize outer membrane transport or to the bacterial flagellum to generate torque.  相似文献   

7.
The MotA/MotB proteins serve as the motor that drives bacterial flagellar rotation in response to the proton motive force (pmf). They have been shown to comprise a transmembrane proton pathway. The ExbB/ExbD/TonB protein complex serves to energize transport of iron siderophores and vitamin B12 across the outer membrane of the Gram-negative bacterial cell using the pmf. These two protein complexes have the same topology and are homologous. Based on molecular data for the MotA/MotB proteins, we propose simple three-dimensional channel structures for both MotA/MotB and ExbB/ExbD/TonB using modeling methods. Features of the derived channels are discussed, and two possible proton transfer pathways for the ExbBD/TonB system are proposed. These analyses provide a guide for molecular studies aimed at elucidating the mechanism by which chemiosmotic energy can be transferred either between two adjacent membranes to energize outer membrane transport or to the bacterial flagellum to generate torque.  相似文献   

8.
Iron and heme are essential nutrients for most pathogenic microorganisms and play a pivotal role in microbial pathogenesis. To survive within the iron-limited environment of the host, bacteria utilize iron-siderophore complexes, iron-binding proteins (transferrin, lactoferrin), free heme and heme bound to hemoproteins (hemoglobin, haptoglobin, hemopexin). A mechanism of iron and heme transport depends on the structures of Gram-negative bacterial membranes. Siderophores, hemophores and outer membrane receptors take part in iron or heme binding. The transport of these ligands across the outer membrane involves outer membrane receptors. The energy for this transport is delivered from the inner membrane by a TonB-ExbB-ExbD complex. The transport across the cytoplasmic membrane involves periplasmic and inner membrane proteins comprising the ABC systems, which utilize the energy derived from ATP hydrolysis. The major regulatory role in iron homeostasis plays a Fur-Fe2+ repressor.  相似文献   

9.
Siderophore production and utilization is one of the major strategies deployed by bacteria to get access to iron, a key nutrient for bacterial growth. The biological function of siderophores is to solubilize iron in the bacterial environment and to shuttle it back to the cytoplasm of the microorganisms. This uptake process for Gram-negative species involves TonB-dependent transporters for translocation across the outer membranes. In Escherichia coli and many other Gram-negative bacteria, ABC transporters associated with periplasmic binding proteins import ferrisiderophores across cytoplasmic membranes. Recent data reveal that in some siderophore pathways, this step can also be carried out by proton-motive force-dependent permeases, for example the ferrichrome and ferripyochelin pathways in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Iron is then released from the siderophores in the bacterial cytoplasm by different enzymatic mechanisms depending on the nature of the siderophore. Another strategy has been reported for the pyoverdine pathway in P. aeruginosa: iron is released from the siderophore in the periplasm and only siderophore-free iron is transported into the cytoplasm by an ABC transporter having two atypical periplasmic binding proteins. This review presents recent findings concerning both ferrisiderophore and siderophore-free iron transport across bacterial cytoplasmic membranes and considers current knowledge about the mechanisms involved in iron release from siderophores.  相似文献   

10.
Iron is an essential nutrient for bacterial growth but poorly bioavailable. Bacteria scavenge ferric iron by synthesizing and secreting siderophores, small compounds with a high affinity for iron. Pyochelin (PCH) is one of the two siderophores produced by the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. After capturing a ferric iron molecule, PCH-Fe is imported back into bacteria first by the outer membrane transporter FptA and then by the inner membrane permease FptX. Here, using molecular biology, 55Fe uptake assays, and LC–MS/MS quantification, we first find a role for PchHI as the heterodimeric ABC transporter involved in the siderophore-free iron uptake into the bacterial cytoplasm. We also provide the first evidence that PCH is able to reach the bacterial periplasm and cytoplasm when both FptA and FptX are expressed. Finally, we detected an interaction between PchH and FptX, linking the ABC transporter PchHI with the inner permease FptX in the PCH-Fe uptake pathway. These results pave the way for a better understanding of the PCH siderophore pathway, giving future directions to tackle P. aeruginosa infections.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of iron deprivation on the expression of outer membrane proteins and the ability to use heme as an iron source by uropathogenic Proteus mirabilis , Pr 6515, was studied. Examination of iron-restricted bacteria showed three outer membrane proteins ranging from 66 to 75 kDa to be affected by iron restriction, as well as a newly expressed 64-kDa protein. These proteins were induced within 15 minutes of iron-deprivation. The strain grew in the presence of ferric citrate, hemin and hemoglobin as iron sources, but could not use transferrin, lactoferrin or siderophores from exogenous sources. The 64- and 66-kDa proteins showed hemin-binding activity by affinity chromatography, and both reacted in Western blots with sera from mice transurethrally infected with the same strain. We suggest that P. mirabilis expresses iron-regulated outer membrane proteins that could be involved in heme uptake and may have a role in pathogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B and Escherichia coli K1 bacteria produce a capsular polysaccharide (CPS) that is composed of α2,8-linked polysialic acid (PSA). Biosynthesis of PSA in these bacteria occurs via an ABC (ATP-binding cassette) transporter-dependent pathway. In N. meningitidis, export of PSA to the surface of the bacterium requires two proteins that form an ABC transporter (CtrC and CtrD) and two additional proteins, CtrA and CtrB, that are proposed to form a cell envelope-spanning export complex. CtrA is a member of the outer membrane polysaccharide export (OPX) family of proteins, which are proposed to form a pore to mediate export of CPSs across the outer membrane. CtrB is an inner membrane protein belonging to the polysaccharide co-polymerase (PCP) family. PCP proteins involved in other bacterial polysaccharide assembly systems form structures that extend into the periplasm from the inner membrane. There is currently no structural information available for PCP or OPX proteins involved in an ABC transporter-dependent CPS biosynthesis pathway to support their proposed roles in polysaccharide export. Here, we report cryo-EM images of purified CtrB reconstituted into lipid bilayers. These images contained molecular top and side views of CtrB and showed that it formed a conical oligomer that extended ∼125 Å from the membrane. This structure is consistent with CtrB functioning as a component of an envelope-spanning complex. Cross-complementation of CtrA and CtrB in E. coli mutants with defects in genes encoding the corresponding PCP and OPX proteins show that PCP-OPX pairs require interactions with their cognate partners to export polysaccharide. These experiments add further support for the model of an ABC transporter-PCP-OPX multiprotein complex that functions to export CPS across the cell envelope.  相似文献   

13.
铁是大多数生物包括细菌生存的必需营养元素.对于感染宿主的致病细菌,血红素(heme/haem)可作为一种主要的铁来源.血红素转运系统在革兰氏阴性菌和革兰氏阳性菌中均有发现和鉴定,其转运机制在革兰氏阴性菌中有较为深入研究.革兰氏阴性菌血红素转运系统主要由分泌于细胞外的血红素载体(hemophore)、血红素受体、TonB ExbB ExbD复合物、ABC转运体、血红素降解蛋白和调控蛋白等结构单元组成.对参与该系统的各个蛋白结构特点以及它们之间的相互作用机制的讨论,有助于对病原菌致病机制的深入研究和抗菌新药的研发.  相似文献   

14.
TonB is a key protein in active transport of essential nutrients like vitamin B12 and metal sources through the outer membrane transporters of Gram-negative bacteria. This inner membrane protein spans the periplasm, contacts the outer membrane receptor by its periplasmic domain and transduces energy from the cytoplasmic membrane pmf to the receptor allowing nutrient internalization. Whereas generally a single TonB protein allows the acquisition of several nutrients through their cognate receptor, in some species one particular TonB is dedicated to a specific system. Despite a considerable amount of data available, the molecular mechanism of TonB-dependent active transport is still poorly understood. In this work, we present a structural study of a TonB-like protein, HasB dedicated to the HasR receptor. HasR acquires heme either free or via an extracellular heme transporter, the hemophore HasA. Heme is used as an iron source by bacteria. We have solved the structure of the HasB periplasmic domain of Serratia marcescens and describe its interaction with a critical region of HasR. Some important differences are observed between HasB and TonB structures. The HasB fold reveals a new structural class of TonB-like proteins. Furthermore, we have identified the structural features that explain the functional specificity of HasB. These results give a new insight into the molecular mechanism of nutrient active transport through the bacterial outer membrane and present the first detailed structural study of a specific TonB-like protein and its interaction with the receptor.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Yu F  Anaya C  Lewis JP 《Proteomics》2007,7(3):403-412
Although hemin is an indispensable nutrient for the oral pathogen Prevotella intermedia, not much is known regarding the molecular mechanisms of hemin acquisition. The availability of the genomic sequence of the bacterium allowed us to apply proteomic approaches to identify proteins that may be mediating the hemin acquisition process. As hemin acquisition mechanisms have been shown to be induced in iron-depleted conditions, we applied proteomic approaches to detect those proteins whose expressions were affected by iron. We analyzed 40 protein spots and identified 19 such proteins. Interestingly, two proteins drastically upregulated in iron-depleted conditions, PIN0009 and PINA0611, are homologs of hemin uptake receptors in other bacteria. PIN0009 is predicted to be an outer membrane lipoprotein. It is encoded by a gene that is the first of a seven-gene genomic locus encoding proteins of a novel hemin acquisition system. The second protein, PINA0611, is a homolog of numerous TonB-dependent outer membrane receptors including outer membrane iron uptake receptors of various Gram-negative bacteria. There was also another protein, regulated by iron, that was previously demonstrated to bind hemoglobin in P. intermedia. Finally, we identified a thioredoxin-like protein that has a novel outer membrane location.  相似文献   

17.

Background

Iron is an important nutrient required by all forms of life.In the case of human hosts,the free iron availability is 10-18M,which is far less than what is needed for the survival of the invading bacterial pathogen.To survive in such conditions, bacteria express new proteins in their outer membrane and also secrete iron chelators called siderophores.

Results/ Discussion

Acinetobacter baumanniiATCC 19606, a nosocomial pathogen which grows under iron restricted conditions, expresses four new outer membrane proteins,with molecular weight ranging from 77 kDa to 88 kDa, that are called Iron Regulated Outer Membrane Proteins (IROMPs). We studied the functional and immunological properties of IROMPs expressed by A.baumaniiATCC 19606.The bands corresponding to IROMPs were eluted from SDS-PAGE and were used to immunize BALB/c mice for the production of monoclonal antibodies. Hybridomas secreting specific antibodies against these IROMPs were selected after screening by ELISA and their reactivity was confirmed by Western Blot. The antibodies then generated belonged to IgM isotype and showed bactericidical and opsonising activities against A.baumanii in vitro.These antibodies also blocked siderophore mediated iron uptake via IROMPs in bacteria.

Conclusion

This proves that iron uptake via IROMPs,which is mediated through siderophores,may have an important role in the survival of A.baumaniiinside the host,and helps establishing the infection.  相似文献   

18.
Bacterial zinc transporters and regulators   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Klaus Hantke 《Biometals》2001,14(3-4):239-249
Zn2+ homeostasis in bacteria is achieved by export systems and uptake systems which are separately regulated by their own regulators. Three types of Zn2+ export systems that protect cells from high toxic concentrations of Zn2+ have been identified: RND multi-drug efflux transporters, P-type ATPases, and cation-diffusion facilitators. The RND type exporters for Zn2+ are only found in a few gram-negative bacteria; they allow a very efficient export across the cytoplasmic membrane and the outer membrane of the cell. P-type ATPases and cation-diffusion facilitators belong to protein families that are also found in eukaryotes. The exporters are regulated in bacteria by MerR-like repressor/activators or by ArsR-like repressors. For the high-affinity uptake of Zn2+, several binding-protein-dependent ABC transporters belonging to one class have been identified in different bacteria. Zn2+ ABC transporters are regulated by Zur repressors, which belong to the Fur protein family of iron regulators. Little is known about low-affinity Zn2+ uptake under zinc-replete conditions. One known example is the phosphate uptake system Pit, which may cotransport Zn2+ in Escherichia coli. Similarly, the citrate-metal cotransporter CitM in Bacillus subtilis may help to supply Zn2+.  相似文献   

19.
Microbial bioemulsifiers are secreted by many bacteria and are important for bacterial interactions with hydrophobic substrates or nutrients and for a variety of biotechnological applications. We have recently shown that the OmpA protein in several members of the Acinetobacter family has emulsifying properties. These properties of OmpA depend on the amino acid composition of four putative extra-membrane loops, which in various strains of Acinetobacter, but not in E. coli, are highly hydrophobic. As many Acinetobacter strains can utilize hydrophobic carbon sources, such as oil, the emulsifying activity of their OmpA may be important for the utilization and uptake of hydrocarbons. We assumed that if outer membrane proteins with emulsifying activity are physiologically important, they may exist in additional oil degrading bacteria. In order to identify such proteins, it was necessary to obtain bioinformatics-based predictions for hydrophobic extra-membrane loops. Here we describe a method for using protein sequence data for predicting the hydrophobic properties of the extra-membrane loops of outer membrane proteins. The feasibility of this method is demonstrated by its use to identify a new microbial bioemulsifier - OprG - an outer membrane protein of the oil degrading Pseudomonas putida KT2440.  相似文献   

20.
Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria have evolved novel strategies to obtain iron from host haem-sequestering proteins. These include the production of specific outer membrane receptors that bind directly to host haem-sequestering proteins, secreted haem-binding proteins (haemophores) that bind haem/haemoglobin/haemopexin and deliver the complex to a bacterial cell surface receptor and bacterial proteases that degrade haem-sequestering proteins. Once removed from haem-sequestering proteins, haem may be transported via the bacterial outer membrane receptor into the cell. Recent studies have begun to define the steps by which haem is removed from bacterial haem proteins and transported into the cell. This review describes recent work on the discovery and characterization of these systems. Reference is also made to the transport of haem in serum (via haemoglobin, haemoglobin/haptoglobin, haemopexin, albumin and lipoproteins) and to mechanisms of iron removal from the haem itself (probably via a haem oxygenase pathway in which the protoporphyrin ring is degraded). Haem protein-receptor interactions are discussed in terms of the criteria that govern protein-protein interactions in general, and connections between haem transport and the emerging field of metal transport via metallochaperones are outlined.  相似文献   

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