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1.
Staphylococcus aureus can utilize ferric hydroxamates as a source of iron under iron-restricted growth conditions. Proteins involved in this transport process are: FhuCBG, which encodes a traffic ATPase; FhuD2, a post-translationally modified lipoprotein that acts as a high affinity receptor at the cytoplasmic membrane for the efficient capture of ferric hydroxamates; and FhuD1, a protein with similarity to FhuD2. Gene duplication likely gave rise to fhuD1 and fhuD2. While the genomic locations of fhuCBG and fhuD2 in S. aureus strains are conserved, both the presence and the location of fhuD1 are variable. The apparent redundancy of FhuD1 led us to examine the role of this protein. We demonstrate that FhuD1 is expressed only under conditions of iron limitation through the regulatory activity of Fur. FhuD1 fractions with the cell membrane and binds hydroxamate siderophores but with lower affinity than FhuD2. Using small angle x-ray scattering, the solution structure of FhuD1 resembles that of FhuD2, and only a small conformational change is associated with ferrichrome binding. FhuD1, therefore, appears to be a receptor for ferric hydroxamates, like FhuD2. Our data to date suggest, however, that FhuD1 is redundant to FhuD2 and plays a minor role in hydroxamate transport. However, given the very real possibility that we have not yet identified the proper conditions where FhuD1 does provide an advantage over FhuD2, we anticipate that FhuD1 serves an enhanced role in the transport of untested hydroxamate siderophores and that it may play a prominent role during the growth of S. aureus in its natural environments.  相似文献   

2.
In Staphylococcus aureus, fhuCBG encodes an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter that is required for the transport of iron(III)-hydroxamates; mutation of either fhuB or fhuG eliminates transport. In this paper, we describe construction and characterization of an S. aureus fhuCBG deletion strain. The delta fhuCBG::ermC mutation not only resulted in a strain that was incapable of growth on iron(III)-hydroxamates as a sole source of iron but also resulted in a strain which had a profound growth defect in iron-restricted laboratory media. The growth defect was not a result of the inability to transport iron(III)-hydroxamates since S. aureus fhuG::Tn917 and S. aureus fhuD1::Km fhuD2::Tet mutants, which are also unable to transport iron(III)-hydroxamates, do not have similar iron-restricted growth defects. Complementation experiments demonstrated that the growth defect of the delta fhuCBG::ermC mutant was the result of the inability to express FhuC and that this was the result of an inability to transport iron complexed to the S. aureus siderophore staphylobactin. Transport of iron(III)-staphylobactin is dependent upon SirA (binding protein), SirB (permease), and SirC (permease). S. aureus expressing FhuC with a Walker A K42N mutation could not utilize iron(III)-hydroxamates or iron(III)-staphylobactin as a sole source of iron, supporting the conclusion that FhuC, as expected, functions with FhuB, FhuG, and FhuD1 or FhuD2 to transport iron(III)-hydroxamates and is the "genetically unlinked" ABC-ATPase that functions with SirA, SirB, and SirC to transport iron(III)-staphylobactin. Finally, we demonstrated that the delta fhuCBG::ermC strain had decreased virulence in a murine kidney abscess model.  相似文献   

3.
Mutagenesis of group B streptococcus (GBS) with TnphoZ, a transposon designed to identify secreted protein genes, identified the gene homologues fhuD and fhuG. The encoded proteins participate in siderophore (hydroxamate)-dependent iron(III) transport in other bacterial species. Sequence analysis of the genome determined that fhuD and fhuG are members of a polycistronic operon comprised of four genes, fhuCDBG, that encode a putative ATPase, cell surface receptor and two transmembrane proteins respectively. We hypothesized that FhuD was a siderophore receptor. Western analysis of cell extracts localized FhuD to the bacterial cell membrane. Fluorescence quenching experiments determined that purified FhuD bound hydroxamate-type siderophores. FhuD displayed highest affinity for iron(III)-desferroxamine, with a K(D) (microM) = 0.05, identical to that described for FhuD2 from Staphylococcus aureus. The role of Fhu in siderophore-iron transport was also characterized. A fhu mutant, ACFhu1, was equally sensitive to the iron-dependent antibiotic streptonigrin as the wild-type strain, suggesting that ACFhu1 was not reduced for intracellular iron concentrations in the absence of exogenous siderophore. However, ACFhu1 transported significantly less siderophore-bound iron in (55)Fe accumulation assays. These data provide the first evidence of siderophore-mediated iron acquisition by GBS.  相似文献   

4.
The nucleotide sequence for a 1,900-base-pair region of the Escherichia coli chromosome that includes the genes fhuC and fhuD was determined. Within this sequence are two open reading frames: nucleotides 127 to 921 and nucleotides 924 to 1811. These coding regions specify a FhuC protein with an Mr of 28,423 and a mature FhuD protein with an Mr of 29,610. The deduced amino acid sequence of FhuC shows extensive homology with those of components of some bacterial transport systems which are peripheral proteins of the cytoplasmic membrane. Because the FhuD protein contains a typical signal sequence of 30 amino acids at the amino terminus and displays characteristics of a soluble protein, it may be exported into the periplasm.  相似文献   

5.
The fhuD2 gene encodes a lipoprotein that has previously been shown to be important for the utilization of iron(III)-hydroxamates by Staphylococcus aureus. We have studied the function of the FhuD2 protein in greater detail, and demonstrate here that the protein binds several iron(III)-hydroxamates. Mutagenesis of FhuD2 identified several residues that were important for the ability of the protein to function in iron(III)-hydroxamate transport. Several residues, notably Tyr-191, Trp-197, and Glu-202, were found to be critical for ligand binding. Moreover, mutation of two highly conserved glutamate residues, Glu-97 and Glu-231, had no affect on ligand binding, but did impair iron(III)-hydroxamate transport. Interestingly, the transport defect was not equivalent for all iron(III)-hydroxamates. We modeled FhuD2 against the high resolution structures of Escherichia coli FhuD and BtuF, two structurally related proteins, and showed that the three proteins share a similar overall structure. FhuD2 Glu-97 and Glu-231 were positioned on the surface of the N and C domains, respectively. Characterization of E97A, E231A, or E97A/E231A mutants suggests that these residues, along with the ligand itself, play a cumulative role in recognition by the ABC transporter FhuBGC2. In addition, small angle x-ray scattering was used to demonstrate that, in solution, FhuD2 does not undergo a detectable change in conformation upon binding iron(III)-hydroxamates. Therefore, the mechanism of binding and transport of ligands for binding proteins within this family is significantly different from that of other well studied binding protein families, such as that represented by maltose-binding protein.  相似文献   

6.
The antibiotic albomycin is highly effective against Streptococcus pneumoniae, with an MIC of 10 ng/ml. The reason for the high efficacy was studied by measuring the uptake of albomycin into S. pneumoniae. Albomycin was transported via the system that transports the ferric hydroxamates ferrichrome and ferrioxamine B. These two ferric hydroxamates antagonized the growth inhibition by albomycin and salmycin. Cross-inhibition of the structurally different ferric hydroxamates to both antibiotics can be explained by the similar iron coordination centers of the four compounds. [(55)Fe(3+)]ferrichrome and [(55)Fe(3+)]ferrioxamine B were taken up by the same transport system into S. pneumoniae. Mutants in the adjacent fhuD, fhuB, and fhuG genes were transport inactive and resistant to the antibiotics. Albomycin, ferrichrome, ferrioxamine B, and salmycin bound to the isolated FhuD protein and prevented degradation by proteinase K. The fhu locus consisting of the fhuD, fhuB, fhuG, and fhuC genes determines a predicted ABC transporter composed of the FhuD binding lipoprotein, the FhuB and FhuG transport proteins, and the FhuC ATPase. It is concluded that active transport of albomycin mediates the high antibiotic efficacy in S. pneumoniae.  相似文献   

7.
Staphylococcus aureus was shown to transport iron complexed to a variety of hydroxamate type siderophores, including ferrichrome, aerobactin, and desferrioxamine. An S. aureus mutant defective in the ability to transport ferric hydroxamate complexes was isolated from a Tn917-LTV1 transposon insertion library after selection on iron-limited media containing aerobactin and streptonigrin. Chromosomal DNA flanking the Tn917-LTV1 insertion was identified by sequencing of chromosomal DNA isolated from the mutant. This information localized the transposon insertion to a gene whose predicted product shares significant similarity with FhuG of Bacillus subtilis. DNA sequence information was then used to clone a larger fragment of DNA surrounding the fhuG gene, and this resulted in the identification of an operon of three genes, fhuCBG, all of which show significant similarities to ferric hydroxamate uptake (fhu) genes in B. subtilis. FhuB and FhuG are highly hydrophobic, suggesting that they are embedded within the cytoplasmic membrane, while FhuC shares significant homology with ATP-binding proteins. Given this, the S. aureus FhuCBG proteins were predicted to be part of a binding protein-dependent transport system for ferric hydroxamates. Exogenous iron levels were shown to regulate ferric hydroxamate uptake in S. aureus. This regulation is attributable to Fur in S. aureus because a strain containing an insertionally inactivated fur gene showed maximal levels of ferric hydroxamate uptake even when the cells were grown under iron-replete conditions. By using the Fur titration assay, it was shown that the Fur box sequences upstream of fhuCBG are recognized by the Escherichia coli Fur protein.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Summary Transport of iron(III) hydroxamates across the inner membrane into the cytoplasm ofEscherichia coli is mediated by the FhuC, FhuD and FhuB proteins and displays characteristics typical of a periplasmic-binding-protein-dependent transport mechanism. In contrast to the highly specific receptor proteins in the outer membrane, at least six different siderophores of the hydroxamate type and the antibiotic albomycin are accepted as substrates. AfhuB mutant (deficient in transport of substrates across the inner membrane) which overproduced the periplasmic FhuD 30-kDa protein, bound [55Fe] iron(III) ferrichrome. Resistance of FhuD to proteinase K in the presence of ferrichrome, aerobactin, and coprogen indicated binding of these substrates to FhuD. FhuD displays significant similarity to the periplasmic FecB, FepB, and BtuE proteins. The extremely hydrophobic FhuB 70-kDa protein is located in the cytoplasmic membrane and consists of two apparently duplicated halves. The N-and C-terminal halves [FhuB(N) and FhuB(C)] were expressed separately infhuB mutants. Only combinations of FhuB(N) and FhuB(C) polypeptides restored sensitivity to albomycin and growth on iron hydroxamate as a sole iron source, indicating that both halves of FhuB were essential for substrate translocation and that they combined to form an active permease. In addition, a FhuB derivative with a large internal duplication of 271 amino acids was found to be transport-active, indicating that the extra portion did not disturb proper insertion of the active FhuB segments into the cytoplasmic membrane. A region of considerable similarity, present twice in FhuB, was identified near the C-terminus of 20 analyzed hydrophobic proteins of periplasmic-binding-protein-dependent systems. The FhuC 30 kDa protein, most likely involved in ATP binding, contains two domains representing consensus sequences among all peripheral cytoplasmic membrane proteins of these systems. Amino acid replacements in domain I (LysGlu and Gln) and domain II (AspAsn and Glu) resulted in a transport-deficient phenotype.  相似文献   

10.
The fec region of the Escherichia coli chromosome determines a citrate-dependent iron(III) transport system. The nucleotide sequence of fec revealed five genes, fecABCDE, which are transcribed from fecA to fecE. The fecA gene encodes a previously described outer membrane receptor protein. The fecB gene product is formed as a precursor protein with a signal peptide of 21 amino acids; the mature form, with a molecular weight of 30,815, was previously found in the periplasm. The fecB genes of E. coli B and E. coli K-12 differed in 3 nucleotides, of which 2 gave rise to conservative amino acid exchanges. The fecC and fecD genes were found to encode very hydrophobic polypeptides with molecular weights of 35,367 and 34,148, respectively, both of which are localized in the cytoplasmic membrane. The fecE product was a rather hydrophilic but cytoplasmic membrane-bound protein of Mr 28,189 and contained regions of extensive homology to ATP-binding proteins. The number, structural characteristics, and locations of the FecBCDE proteins were typical for a periplasmic-binding-protein-dependent transport system. It is proposed that after FecA- and TonB-dependent transport of iron(III) dicitrate across the outer membrane, uptake through the cytoplasmic membrane follows the binding-protein-dependent transport mechanism. FecC and FecD exhibited homologies to each other, to the N- and C-terminal halves of FhuB of the iron(III) hydroxamate transport system, and to BtuC of the vitamin B12 transport system. FecB showed some homology to FhuD, suggesting that the latter may function in the same manner as a binding protein in iron(III) hydroxamate transport. The close homology between the proteins of the two iron transport systems and of the vitamin B12 transport system indicates a common evolution for all three systems.  相似文献   

11.
The ability to gain access to iron is pivotal for bacterial pathogens during infection. Although much is known about iron acquisition systems in Gram-negative bacteria, comparatively little is known about how Gram-positive pathogens access iron from host iron sources. A previous study showed that, in the Gram-positive human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus, a cell surface-associated glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) enzyme (Gap, or Tpn) is capable of binding human transferrin, representing a potential means by which this bacterium is able to access iron in vivo. We have investigated this property of S. aureus further and shown that, in S. aureus RN6390, GAPDH is expressed on the S. aureus cell surface independent of exogenous iron concentrations, and that overexpressed and purified Gap, although retaining GAPDH activity, has no affinity for human transferrin. Moreover, although a S. aureus gap mutant was devoid of surface-associated and cytoplasmic GAPDH activity, it retained the ability to bind human transferrin, equivalent to wild type. We concluded from these results that the Gap protein is not involved in S. aureus binding to human transferrin. We identified the transferrin-binding protein as a novel cell wall-anchored protein, designated StbA for staphylococcal transferrin-binding protein A, which shared no significant similarities with any other bacterial transferrin-binding proteins. StbA contained a C-terminal cell wall-anchoring motif (LPKTG), and expression of StbA in the cell wall was strictly controlled by exogenous iron concentrations. The stbA gene is found within a 7 kb region in the S. aureus chromosome that contains a total of six iron-regulated genes. Immediately downstream from stbA is an iron-regulated gene whose product was predicted to be another cell wall-anchored protein with no significant similarity to proteins with characterized functions. Transcribed in the opposite direction from stbA is a four-gene operon whose expression is also regulated by iron. While the deduced products of the first two genes lack similarity to known proteins, the last two genes encode, respectively, putative lipoprotein and permease components of an ABC transporter that shares significant similarities with several iron(III) ABC transporters in a variety of bacteria.  相似文献   

12.
The acquisition of iron by pathogenic bacteria is often a crucial step in establishing infection. To accomplish this, many bacteria, including Staphylococcus aureus, produce low-molecular-weight iron-chelating siderophores. However, the secretion and transport of these molecules in gram-positive organisms are poorly understood. The sequence, organization, and regulation of genes involved in siderophore transport are conserved among gram-negative bacteria. We used this information to identify a putative siderophore transport locus from an S. aureus genomic sequence database. This locus contains three predicted open reading frames with a high degree of homology to genes involved in siderophore uptake in several bacterial species, in particular the cbr locus of the plant pathogen Erwinia chrysanthemi. The first gene in the locus, which we have designated sir for staphylococcal iron regulated, encodes a putative lipoprotein with a molecular mass of 37 kDa. The open reading frame is preceded by a 19-bp region of dyad symmetry with homology for operator sequences controlling iron-regulated expression of genes in other bacteria. Fur titration experiments indicate that this region of dyad symmetry is sufficient for Fur-dependent regulation in Escherichia coli. The expression of this gene was repressed, in a dose-dependent manner, by the addition of iron to the S. aureus culture medium. sir-encoded proteins may be involved in iron acquisition in vivo and therefore may be targets for antimicrobial agents.  相似文献   

13.
Summary ThefhuB, fhuC andfhuD genes encode proteins which catalyze transport of iron(III)-hydroxamate compounds from the periplasm into the cytoplasm ofEscherichia coli. ThefhuB, C, D genes were cloned downstream of a strong phage T7 promoter and transcribed by T7 RNA polymerase. The overexpressed FhuD protein appeared in two forms of 31 and 28 kDa and was released upon conversion of vegetative cells into spheroplasts, suggesting synthesis of FhuD as a precursor and export into the periplasm. The very hydrophobic FhuB protein was found in the cytoplasmic membrane. These properties, together with the previously found homologies in the FhuC protein to ATP-binding proteins, display the characteristics of a periplasmic binding protein dependent transport system across the cytoplasmic membrane. The molecular weight of FhuB and the sequence offhuC, as previously published by us, was confirmed. FhuB exhibited double the size of most hydrophobic proteins of such systems and showed homology between the amino- and carboxy-terminal halves of the protein, indicating duplication of an original gene and subsequent fusion of the two DNA fragments.  相似文献   

14.
Iron transport systems of Serratia marcescens.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
A Angerer  B Klupp    V Braun 《Journal of bacteriology》1992,174(4):1378-1387
Serratia marcescens W225 expresses an unconventional iron(III) transport system. Uptake of Fe3+ occurs in the absence of an iron(III)-solubilizing siderophore, of an outer membrane receptor protein, and of the TonB and ExbBD proteins involved in outer membrane transport. The three SfuABC proteins found to catalyze iron(III) transport exhibit the typical features of periplasmic binding-protein-dependent systems for transport across the cytoplasmic membrane. In support of these conclusions, the periplasmic SfuA protein bound iron chloride and iron citrate but not ferrichrome, as shown by protection experiments against degradation by added V8 protease. The cloned sfuABC genes conferred upon an Escherichia coli aroB mutant unable to synthesize its own enterochelin siderophore the ability to grow under iron-limiting conditions (in the presence of 0.2 mM 2.2'-dipyridyl). Under extreme iron deficiency (0.4 mM 2.2'-dipyridyl), however, the entry rate of iron across the outer membrane was no longer sufficient for growth. Citrate had to be added in order for iron(III) to be translocated as an iron citrate complex in a FecA- and TonB-dependent manner through the outer membrane and via SfuABC across the cytoplasmic membrane. FecA- and TonB-dependent iron transport across the outer membrane could be clearly correlated with a very low concentration of iron in the medium. Expression of the sfuABC genes in E. coli was controlled by the Fur iron repressor gene. S. marcescens W225 was able to synthesize enterochelin and take up iron(III) enterochelin. It contained an iron(III) aerobactin transport system but lacked aerobactin synthesis. This strain was able to utilize the hydroxamate siderophores ferrichrome, coprogen, ferrioxamine B, rhodotorulic acid, and schizokinen as sole iron sources and grew on iron citrate as well. In contrast to E. coli K-12, S. marcescens could utilize heme. DNA fragments of the E. coli fhuA, iut, exbB, and fur genes hybridized with chromosomal S. marcescens DNA fragments, whereas no hybridization was obtained between S. marcescens chromosomal DNA and E. coli fecA, fhuE, and tonB gene fragments. The presence of multiple iron transport systems was also indicated by the increased synthesis of at least five outer membrane proteins (in the molecular weight range of 72,000 to 87,000) after growth in low-iron media. Serratia liquefaciens and Serratia ficaria produced aerobactin, showing that this siderophore also occurs in the genus Serratia.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Transport of iron(III) hydroxamates across the inner membrane ofEscherichia coli depends on a binding protein-dependent transport system composed of the FhuB,C and D proteins. The FhuD protein, which is synthesized as a precursor and exported through the cytoplasmic membrane, represents the periplasmic binding protein of the system, accepting as substrates a number of hydroxamate siderophores and the antibiotic albomycin. A FhuD derivative, carrying an N-terminal His-tag sequence instead of its signal sequence and therefore not exported through the inner membrane, was purified from the cytoplasm. Functional activity, comparable to that of wild-type FhuD, was demonstrated for this His-tag-FhuD in vitro by protease protection experiments in the presence of different substrates, and in vivo by reconstitution of iron transport in afhuD mutant strain. The experimental data demonstrate that the primary sequence of the portion corresponding to the mature FhuD contains all the information required for proper folding of the polypeptide chain into a functional solute-binding protein. Moreover, purification of modified periplasmic proteins from the cytosol may be a useful approach for recovery of many polypeptides which are normally exported across the inner membrane and can cause toxicity problems when overproduced.  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
The Escherichia coli iron transport system via ferrichrome belongs to the group of ATP-dependent transporters that are widely distributed in prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Transport across the cytoplasmic membrane is mediated by three proteins: FhuD in the periplasm, FhuB in the cytoplasmic membrane and FhuC (ATPase) associated with the inside of the cytoplasmic membrane. Interaction of FhuD with FhuB was studied in vitro with biotinylated synthetic 10 residue and 20–24 residue peptides of FhuB by determining the activity of β-galactosidase linked to the peptides via streptavidin. Peptides identical in sequence to only one of the four periplasmic loops (loop 2), predicted by a transmembrane model of FhuB, and peptides representing a transmembrane segment and part of the adjacent cytoplasmic loop 7 of FhuB bound to FhuD. Decapeptides were transferred into the periplasm of cells through a FhuA deletion derivative that forms permanently open channels three times as large as the porins in the outer membrane. FhuB peptides that bound to FhuD inhibited ferrichrome transport, while peptides that did not bind to FhuD did not affect transport. These data led us to propose that the periplasmic FhuD interacts with a transmembrane region and the cytoplasmic segment 7 of FhuB. The transmembrane region may be part of a pore through which a portion of FhuD inserts into the cytoplasmic membrane during transport. The cytoplasmic segment 7 of FhuB contains the conserved amino acid sequence EAA…G (in FhuB DTA…G) found in ABC transporters, which is predicted to interact with the cytoplasmic FhuC ATPase. Triggering of ATP hydrolysis by substrate-loaded FhuD may occur by physical interaction between FhuD and FhuC, which bind close to each other on loop 7. Although FhuB consists of two homologous halves, FhuB(N) and FhuB(C), the sites identified for FhuD-mediated ferrichrome transport are asymmetrically arranged.  相似文献   

20.
Due to its extreme insolubility, Fe3+ is not transported as a monoatomic ion. In microbes, iron is bound to low molecular weight carriers, designated siderophores. For uptake into cells of Escherichia coli Fe3+ siderophores have to be translocated across two membranes. Transport across the outer membrane is receptor-dependent and energy-coupled; transport across the cytoplasmic membrane seems to follow a periplasmic binding protein-dependent transport mechanism. In support of this notion we demonstrate specific binding of the Fe3+ hydroxamate compounds ferrichrome, aerobactin, and coprogen, which are transported via the Fhu system, to the periplasmic FhuD protein, and no binding of the transport inactive ferrichrome A, ferric citrate, and iron sulfate. About 10(4) ferrichrome molecules were bound to the FhuD protein of cells which overproduced plasmid-encoded FhuD. Binding depended on transport across the outer membrane mediated by the FhuA receptor and the TonB protein. Binding to FhuD was supported by the exclusive resistance of FhuD to proteinase K in the presence of the transport active hydroxamates. The overproduced precursor form of the FhuD protein was not protected by the Fe3+ hydroxamates indicating a conformation different to the mature form. The FhuD protein apparently serves as a periplasmic carrier for Fe3+ hydroxamates with widely different structures.  相似文献   

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