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1.
Expression of a functional neisserial fbp gene in Escherichia coli   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The ability to acquire iron from a human host is a major determinant in the pathogenesis of Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Neisseria meningitidis. Pathogenic Neisseria spp. do not synthesize siderophores and instead express a receptor-mediated, high-affinity iron acquisition system in the iron-restricted environment of its host. A ferric-iron-binding protein (Fbp) of Neisseria spp. is also iron-regulated and may play a central role in this novel iron-uptake system. To define the physical properties of Fbp further, we used polymerase chain reaction to synthesize DNA fragments containing the fbp structural gene with and without the sequence encoding the Fbp leader peptide. These fragments were ligated into pUC13 to create in-frame fusions with the alpha peptide of lacZ. The expression of Fbp was under the control of the lacZ promoter. Both fusion clones produced Fbp in large amounts, facilitating the purification of quantities of Fbp sufficient for elucidating the biochemical, immunologic, and functional properties of this protein.  相似文献   

2.
Two pathogenic species within the genus Neisseria cause the diseases gonorrhoea and meningitis. While vaccines are available to protect against four N. meningitidis serogroups, there is currently no commercial vaccine to protect against serogroup B or against N. gonorrhoeae. Moreover, the available vaccines have significant limitations and with antibiotic resistance becoming an alarming issue, the search for effective vaccine targets to elicit long‐lasting protection against Neisseria species is becoming more urgent. One strategy for vaccine development has targeted the neisserial iron import systems. Without iron, the Neisseriae cannot survive and, therefore, these iron import systems tend to be relatively well conserved and are promising vaccine targets, having the potential to offer broad protection against both gonococcal and meningococcal infections. These efforts have been boosted by recent reports of the crystal structures of the neisserial receptor proteins TbpA and TbpB, each solved in complex with human transferrin, an iron binding protein normally responsible for delivering iron to human cells. Here, we review the recent structural reports and put them into perspective with available functional studies in order to derive the mechanism(s) for how the pathogenic Neisseriae are able to hijack human iron transport systems for their own survival and pathogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
Ferric binding protein, Fbp, serves an essential biological function in shuttling naked (hydrated) Fe3+ across the periplasmic space of many Gram-negative bacteria. In this process, iron must be released at the cytoplasmic membrane to a permease. How iron is released from Fbp has yet to be resolved. Consequently, understanding the dynamics of iron release from Fbp is of both biological and chemical interest. Fbp requires an exogenous anion, e.g. phosphate when isolated from cell lysates, for tight iron sequestration. To address the role of exogenous anion identity and lability on Feaq 3+ dissociation from Fbp, the kinetics of PO4 3– exchange in Fe3+ nFbp(PO4) (nFbp=recombinant Fbp from Neisseria meningitidis) were investigated by dynamic 31P NMR and the kinetics of Fe3+ dissociation from Fe3+ nFbp(X) (X=PO4 3–, citrate anion) were investigated by stopped-flow pH-jump measurements. We justify the use of non-physiological low-pH conditions because a high [H+] will drive the Feaq 3+ dissociation reaction to completion without using competing chelators, whose presence may complicate or influence the dissociation mechanism. For perspective, these studies of nFbp (which has been referred to as a bacterial transferrin) are compared to new and previously published kinetic and thermodynamic data for mammalian transferrin. Significantly, we address the lability of the Fe3+ coordination shell in nFbp, Fe3+ nFbp(X) (X=PO4 3–, citrate), with respect to exogenous anion (X n) exchange and dissociation, and ultimately complete dissociation of the protein to yield naked (hydrated) Feaq 3+. These findings are a first step in understanding the process of iron donation to the bacterial permease for transport across the cytoplasmic membrane.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at . Abbreviations DTPP diethylenetriaminepenta(methylenephosphonic acid) - Fbp ferric binding protein - H3cit citric acid - hFbp Fbp from Haemophilus influenzae - H2ox oxalic acid - hTf human serum transferrin - 3,4-LICAMS N,N,N-tris(5-sulfo-2,3-dihydroxybenzoyl)-1,5,10-triazadecane - nFbp recombinant Fbp from Neisseria meningitidis - NTA nitrilotriacetic acid - TRENSOX tris[2-aminoethyl(8-hydroxyquinoline-5-sulfonato-7-carbonyl)]amine  相似文献   

4.
Iron piracy: acquisition of transferrin-bound iron by bacterial pathogens   总被引:40,自引:5,他引:35  
The mechanism of iron utilization from transferrin has been most extensively characterized in the pathogenic Neisseria species and Haemophilus species. Two transferrin-binding proteins, Tbp1 and Tbp2, have been identified in these pathogens and are thought to be components of the transferrin receptor. Tbp1 appears to be an integral, TonB-dependent outer membrane protein while Tbp2, a lipoprotein, may be peripherally associated with the outer membrane. The relative contribution of each of these proteins to transferrin binding and utilization is discussed and a model of iron uptake from transferrin is presented. Sequence comparisons of the genes encoding neisserial transferrin-binding proteins suggest that they are probably under positive selection for variation and may have resulted from inter-species genetic exchange.  相似文献   

5.
Ferric-binding proteins (FbpA) have been implicated in the transferrin receptor-mediated iron acquisition pathways of Haemophilus influenzae and Neisseria spp. These proteins are believed to function by shuttling iron from outer membrane transferrin receptors to a specific inner membrane permease complex. However, the role of these proteins has not been conclusively resolved, as attempts at creating isogenic mutants in the fbpA genes of both species have been unsuccessful, prompting the hypothesis that FbpA may play a critical role in H . influenzae and Neisseria spp. This study describes the construction and characterization of an H . influenzae isogenic fbpA mutant. It is demonstrated that this mutant is deficient in its ability to use human transferrin as a sole iron source, even though the strain is still competent for binding human transferrin. It is also demonstrated that this mutant is impaired in its ability to use ferric citrate as an iron source, and grows at a reduced rate relative to wild type in broth supplemented with protoporphyrin rather than haemin.  相似文献   

6.
Vibrio cholerae has multiple iron acquisition systems, including TonB-dependent transport of heme and of the catechol siderophore vibriobactin. Strains defective in both of these systems grow well in laboratory media and in the infant mouse intestine, indicating the presence of additional iron acquisition systems. Previously uncharacterized potential iron transport systems, including a homologue of the ferrous transporter Feo and a periplasmic binding protein-dependent ATP binding cassette (ABC) transport system, termed Fbp, were identified in the V. cholerae genome sequence. Clones encoding either the Feo or the Fbp system exhibited characteristics of iron transporters: both repressed the expression of lacZ cloned under the control of a Fur-regulated promoter in Escherichia coli and also conferred growth on a Shigella flexneri mutant that has a severe defect in iron transport. Two other ABC transporters were also evaluated but were negative by these assays. Transport of radioactive iron by the Feo system into the S. flexneri iron transport mutant was stimulated by the reducing agent ascorbate, consistent with Feo functioning as a ferrous transporter. Conversely, ascorbate inhibited transport by the Fbp system, suggesting that it transports ferric iron. The growth of V. cholerae strains carrying mutations in one or more of the potential iron transport genes indicated that both Feo and Fbp contribute to iron acquisition. However, a mutant defective in the vibriobactin, Fbp, and Feo systems was not attenuated in a suckling mouse model, suggesting that at least one other iron transport system can be used in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of cholera, has an absolute requirement for iron and must obtain this element in the human host as well as in its varied environmental niches. It has multiple systems for iron acquisition, including the TonB-dependent transport of heme, the endogenous siderophore vibriobactin and several siderophores that are produced by other microorganisms. There is also a Feo system for the transport of ferrous iron and an ABC transporter, Fbp, which transports ferric iron. There appears to be at least one additional high affinity iron transport system that has not yet been identified. In iron replete conditions, iron acquisition genes are repressed by Fur. Fur also represses the synthesis of a small, regulatory RNA, RyhB, which negatively regulates genes for iron-containing proteins involved in the tricarboxylic acid cycle and respiration as well as genes for motility and chemotaxis. The redundancy in iron transport systems has made it more difficult to determine the role of individual systems in vivo and in vitro, but it may reflect the overall importance of iron in the growth and survival of V. cholerae.  相似文献   

8.

Background  

Transferrin binding protein B (tbpB), an outer membrane lipoprotein, is required for the acquisition of iron from human transferrin. Two tbpB families have been documented in Neisseria meningitidis: an isotype I tbpB gene of 1.8 kb and an isotype II tbpB gene of 2.1 kb, the former expressed by meningococci in the disease-associated ST-11 clonal complex and the latter found among meningococci belonging to the hyper-invasive clonal complexes including ST-8, ST-18, ST-32, ST-41/44 as well as N. gonorrhoeae isolates. The origin of the isotype I tbpB gene is unknown, however several features in common with non-pathogenic Neisseria and the ST-11 clonal complex N. meningitidis isolate FAM18 have been documented leading to the hypothesis that the isotype I tbpB gene may also be shared between non-pathogenic Neisseria and ST-11 meningococci. As a result, the diversity of the tbpB gene was investigated in a defined collection of Neisseria species.  相似文献   

9.

Background

Gram negative bacteria require iron for growth and virulence. It has been shown that certain pathogenic bacteria such as Neisseria gonorrhoeae possess a periplasmic protein called ferric binding protein (FbpA), which is a node in the transport of iron from the cell exterior to the cytosol.

Scope of review

The relevant literature is reviewed which establishes the molecular mechanism of FbpA mediated iron transport across the periplasm to the inner membrane.

Major conclusions

Here we establish that FbpA may be considered a bacterial transferrin on structural and functional grounds. Data are presented which suggest a continuum whereby FbpA may be considered as a naked iron carrier, as well as a Fe–chelate carrier, and finally a member of the larger family of periplasmic binding proteins.

General significance

An investigation of the molecular mechanisms of action of FbpA as a member of the transferrin super family enhances our understanding of bacterial mechanisms for acquisition of the essential nutrient iron, as well as the modes of action of human transferrin, and may provide approaches to the control of pathogenic diseases. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Transferrins: Molecular mechanisms of iron transport and disorders.  相似文献   

10.
Iron acquisition systems in the pathogenic Neisseria   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Pathogenic neisseriae have a repertoire of high-affinity iron uptake systems to facilitate acquisition of this essential element in the human host. They possess surface receptor proteins that directly bind the extracellular host iron-binding proteins transferrin and lactoferrin. Alternatively, they have siderophore receptors capable of scavenging iron when exogenous siderophores are present. Released intracellular haem iron present in the form of haemoglobin, haemoglobin-haptoglobin or free haem can be used directly as a source of iron for growth through direct binding by specific surface receptors. Although these receptors may vary in complexity and composition, the key protein involved in the transport of iron (as iron, haem or iron-siderophore) across the outer membrane is a TonB-dependent receptor with an overall structure presumably similar to that determined recently for Escherichia coli FhuA or FepA. The receptors are potentially ideal vaccine targets in view of their critical role in survival in the host. Preliminary pilot studies indicate that transferrin receptor-based vaccines may be protective in humans.  相似文献   

11.
Lactoferrin (Lf) is a bi-lobed, iron-binding protein found on mucosal surfaces and at sites of inflammation. Gram-negative pathogens from the Neisseriaceae and Moraxellaceae families are capable of using Lf as a source of iron for growth through a process mediated by a bacterial surface receptor that directly binds host Lf. This receptor consists of an integral outer membrane protein, lactoferrin binding protein A (LbpA), and a surface lipoprotein, lactoferrin binding protein B (LbpB). The N-lobe of the homologous transferrin binding protein B, TbpB, has been shown to facilitate transferrin binding in the process of iron acquisition. Currently there is little known about the role of LbpB in iron acquisition or how Lf interacts with the bacterial receptor proteins. No structural information on any LbpB or domain is available. In this study, we express and purify from Escherichia coli the full-length LbpB and the N-lobe of LbpB from the bovine pathogen Moraxella bovis for crystallization trials. We demonstrate that M. bovis LbpB binds to bovine but not human Lf. We also report the crystal structure of the N-terminal lobe of LbpB from M. bovis and compare it with the published structures of TbpB to speculate on the process of Lf mediated iron acquisition.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The transferrins are a family of proteins that bind free iron in the blood and bodily fluids. Serum transferrins function to deliver iron to cells via a receptor-mediated endocytotic process as well as to remove toxic free iron from the blood and to provide an anti-bacterial, low-iron environment. Lactoferrins (found in bodily secretions such as milk) are only known to have an anti-bacterial function, via their ability to tightly bind free iron even at low pH, and have no known transport function. Though these proteins keep the level of free iron low, pathogenic bacteria are able to thrive by obtaining iron from their host via expression of outer membrane proteins that can bind to and remove iron from host proteins, including both serum transferrin and lactoferrin. Furthermore, even though human serum transferrin and lactoferrin are quite similar in sequence and structure, and coordinate iron in the same manner, they differ in their affinities for iron as well as their receptor binding properties: the human transferrin receptor only binds serum transferrin, and two distinct bacterial transport systems are used to capture iron from serum transferrin and lactoferrin. Comparison of the recently solved crystal structure of iron-free human serum transferrin to that of human lactoferrin provides insight into these differences.  相似文献   

14.

Background  

The NMB0736 gene of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B strain MC58 encodes the putative nitrogen regulatory protein, IIANtr (abbreviated to NM-IIANtr). The homologous protein present in Escherichia coli is implicated in the control of nitrogen assimilation. As part of a structural proteomics approach to the study of pathogenic Neisseria spp., we have selected this protein for structure determination by X-ray crystallography.  相似文献   

15.
Iron Transport Systems in Neisseria meningitidis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Acquisition of iron and iron complexes has long been recognized as a major determinant in the pathogenesis of Neisseria meningitidis. In this review, high-affinity iron uptake systems, which allow meningococci to utilize the human host proteins transferrin, lactoferrin, hemoglobin, and haptoglobin-hemoglobin as sources of essential iron, are described. Classic features of bacterial iron transport systems, such as regulation by the iron-responsive repressor Fur and TonB-dependent transport activity, are discussed, as well as more specific features of meningococcal iron transport. Our current understanding of how N. meningitidis acquires iron from the human host and the vaccine potentials of various components of these iron transport systems are also reviewed.  相似文献   

16.
The periplasmic iron-binding protein, FbpA (ferric-ion-binding protein A), performs an essential role in iron acquisition from transferrin in Haemophilus influenzae. A series of site-directed mutants in the metal-binding amino acids of FbpA were prepared to determine their relative contribution to iron binding and transport. Structural studies demonstrated that the mutant proteins crystallized in an open conformation with the iron atom associated with the C-terminal domain. The iron-binding properties of the mutant proteins were assessed by several assays, including a novel competitive iron-binding assay. The relative ability of the proteins to compete for iron was pH dependent, with a rank order at pH 6.5 of wild-type, Q58L, H9Q>H9A, E57A>Y195A, Y196A. The genes encoding the mutant FbpA were introduced into H. influenzae and the resulting strains varied in the level of ferric citrate required to support growth on iron-limited medium, suggesting a rank order for metal-binding affinities under physiological conditions comparable with the competitive binding assay at pH 6.5 (wild-type=Q58L>H9Q>H9A, E57A>Y195A, Y196A). Growth dependence on human transferrin was only obtained with cells expressing wild-type, Q58L or H9Q FbpAs, proteins with stability constants derived from the competition assay >2.0x10(18) M(-1). These results suggest that a relatively high affinity of iron binding by FbpA is required for removal of iron from transferrin and its transport across the outer membrane.  相似文献   

17.
Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans requires iron to grow under limiting conditions imposed by synthetic and natural chelators. Although none of the strains tested used hemoglobin, lactoferrin or transferrin, all of them used FeCl3 and hemin as iron sources under chelated conditions. Dot-blot binding assays showed that all strains bind lactoferrin, hemoglobin, and hemin but not transferrin. When compared with smooth strains, the rough isolates showed higher hemin binding activity, which was sensitive to proteinase K treatment. A. actinomycetemcomitans harbors the Fur-regulated afeABCD locus coding for iron acquisition in isogenic and non-isogenic cell backgrounds. The genome of this oral pathogen also harbors several other predicted iron uptake genes including the hitABC locus, which restored iron acquisition in the E. coli 1017 ent mutant. However, the disruption of this locus in the parental strain did not affect iron acquisition as drastically as the inactivation of AfeABCD, suggesting that the latter system could be more involved in iron transport than the HitABC system. The genome of this oral pathogen also harbors an active copy of the exbBexbDtonB operon, which could provide the energy needed for hemin acquisition. However, inactivation of each coding region of this operon did not affect the hemin and iron acquisition phenotypes of isogenic derivatives. This observation suggests that the function of these proteins could be replaced by those coded for by tolQ, tolR and tolA as it was described for other bacterial transport systems. Interruption of a hasR homolog, an actively transcribed gene that is predicted to code for an outer membrane hemophore receptor protein, did not affect the ability of an isogenic derivative to bind and use hemin under chelated conditions. This result also indicates that A. actinomycetemcomitans could produce more than one outer membrane hemin receptor as it was described in other human pathogens. All strains tested formed biofilms on plastic under iron-rich and iron-chelated conditions. However, smooth strains attached poorly and formed weaker biofilms when compared with rough isolates. The incubation of rough cells in the presence of FeCl3 or hemin resulted in an increased number of smaller aggregates and microcolonies as compared to the fewer but larger aggregates formed when cells were grown in the presence of dipyridyl.  相似文献   

18.
The immunophilin family of FK506-binding proteins (FKBPs), involved in eukaryotic protein folding and cell regulation, have recently been found to have prokaryotic homologues. Genes with sequences homologous to those encoding human FKBPs were examined in Neisseria species. An FKBP DNA sequence was present, as shown by the polymerase chain reaction and Southern blotting experiments, in the chromosome of Neisseria meningitidis (14 strains) and in all 11 different commensal Neisseria spp. studied, but was not found in Neisseria gonorrhoeae (11 strains tested) or in Moraxella catarrhalis. The nucleotide and predicted protein sequences of the FKBP-encoding domain from five of the meningococcal strains were highly conserved (e.g. ≥97% homologous). The meningococcal nucleotide sequence was ≥93% homologous and the consensus meningococcal protein sequence was ≥97% homologous to FKBP sequences found in seven different commensal Neisseria spp. The meningococcal nucleotide and predicted protein sequences were ≥59% homologous to the conserved C-terminus of the human FKBP gene family. The FKBP nucleotide sequence was present as a single copy in the chromosome of commensal Neisseria spp. and in most strains of N. meningitidis. The FKBP gene was linked to the silent pilin locus, pilS, in class II-piliated meningococcal strains. In meningococcal strains expressing class I pili, the FKBP gene was linked to one of several pilS loci but not the pilE locus present in these strains. FKBP genes found in commensal Neisseria spp. were not linked to known pilin loci.  相似文献   

19.
The acquisition of iron from transferrin by Gram-negative bacterial pathogens is dependent on a periplasmic ferric-ion-binding protein, FbpA. FbpA shuttles iron from the outer membrane to an inner membrane transport complex. A bound phosphate anion completes the iron co-ordination shell of FbpA and kinetic studies demonstrate that the anion plays a critical role in iron binding and release in vitro. The present study was initiated to directly address the hypothesis that the synergistic anion is required for transport of iron in intact cells. A series of site-directed mutants in the anion-binding amino acids of the Haemophilus influenzae FbpA (Gln-58, Asn-175 and Asn-193) were prepared to provide proteins defective in binding of the phosphate anion. Crystal structures of various mutants have revealed that alteration of the C-terminal domain ligands (Asn-175 or Asn-193) but not the N-terminal domain ligand (Gln-58) abrogated binding of the phosphate anion. The mutant proteins were introduced into H. influenzae to evaluate their ability to mediate iron transport. All of the single site-directed mutants (Q58L, N175L and N193L) were capable of mediating iron acquisition from transferrin and from limiting concentrations of ferric citrate. The results suggest that the transport of iron by FbpA is not dependent on binding of phosphate in the synergistic anion-binding site.  相似文献   

20.
Iron transport across the periplasmic space to the cytoplasmic membrane of certain Gram-negative bacteria is mediated by a ferric binding protein (Fbp). This requires Fe(3+) loading of Fbp at the inner leaflet of the outer membrane. A synergistic anion is required for tight Fe(3+) sequestration by Fbp. Although phosphate fills this role in the protein isolated from bacterial cell lysates, nitrilotriacetate anion (NTA) can also satisfy this requirement in vitro. Here, we report the kinetics and mechanism of Fe(3+) loading of Fbp from Fe(NTA)(aq) in the presence of phosphate at pH 6.5. The reaction proceeds in four kinetically distinguishable steps to produce Fe(3+)Fbp(PO(4)) as a final product. The first three steps exhibit half-lives ranging from ca. 20 ms to 0.5 min, depending on the concentrations, and produce Fe(3+)Fbp(NTA) as an intermediate product of significant stability. The rate for the first step is accelerated with an increasing phosphate concentration, while that of the third step is retarded by phosphate. Conversion of Fe(3+)Fbp(NTA) to Fe(3+)Fbp(PO(4)) in the fourth step is a slow process (half-life approximately 2 h) and is facilitated by free phosphate. A mechanism for the Fe(3+)-loading process is proposed in which the synergistic anions, phosphate and NTA, play key roles. These data suggest that not only is a synergistic anion required for tight Fe(3+) sequestration by Fbp, but also the synergistic anion plays a critical role in the process of inserting Fe(3+) into the Fbp binding site.  相似文献   

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