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1.
To replicate in mammalian hosts, bacterial pathogens must acquire iron. The majority of iron is coordinated to the protoporphyrin ring of heme, which is further bound to hemoglobin. Pathogenic bacteria utilize secreted hemophores to acquire heme from heme sources such as hemoglobin. Bacillus anthracis, the causative agent of anthrax disease, secretes two hemophores, IsdX1 and IsdX2, to acquire heme from host hemoglobin and enhance bacterial replication in iron-starved environments. Both proteins contain NEAr-iron Transporter (NEAT) domains, a conserved protein module that functions in heme acquisition in Gram-positive pathogens. Here, we report the structure of IsdX1, the first of a Gram-positive hemophore, with and without bound heme. Overall, IsdX1 forms an immunoglobin-like fold that contains, similar to other NEAT proteins, a 310-helix near the heme-binding site. Because the mechanistic function of this helix in NEAT proteins is not yet defined, we focused on the contribution of this region to hemophore and NEAT protein activity, both biochemically and biologically in cultured cells. Site-directed mutagenesis of amino acids in and adjacent to the helix identified residues important for heme and hemoglobin association, with some mutations affecting both properties and other mutations affecting only heme stabilization. IsdX1 with mutations that reduced the ability to associate with hemoglobin and bind heme failed to restore the growth of a hemophore-deficient strain of B. anthracis on hemoglobin as the sole iron source. These data indicate that not only is the 310-helix important for NEAT protein biology, but also that the processes of hemoglobin and heme binding can be both separate as well as coupled, the latter function being necessary for maximal heme-scavenging activity. These studies enhance our understanding of NEAT domain and hemophore function and set the stage for structure-based inhibitor design to block NEAT domain interaction with upstream ligands.  相似文献   

2.
S. aureus is a pathogenic bacterium that requires iron to carry out vital metabolic functions and cause disease. The most abundant reservoir of iron inside the human host is heme, which is the cofactor of hemoglobin. To acquire iron from hemoglobin, S. aureus utilizes an elaborate system known as the iron-regulated surface determinant (Isd) system1. Components of the Isd system first bind host hemoglobin, then extract and import heme, and finally liberate iron from heme in the bacterial cytoplasm2,3. This pathway has been dissected through numerous in vitro studies4-9. Further, the contribution of the Isd system to infection has been repeatedly demonstrated in mouse models8,10-14. Establishing the contribution of the Isd system to hemoglobin-derived iron acquisition and growth has proven to be more challenging. Growth assays using hemoglobin as a sole iron source are complicated by the instability of commercially available hemoglobin, contaminating free iron in the growth medium, and toxicity associated with iron chelators. Here we present a method that overcomes these limitations. High quality hemoglobin is prepared from fresh blood and is stored in liquid nitrogen. Purified hemoglobin is supplemented into iron-deplete medium mimicking the iron-poor environment encountered by pathogens inside the vertebrate host. By starving S. aureus of free iron and supplementing with a minimally manipulated form of hemoglobin we induce growth in a manner that is entirely dependent on the ability to bind hemoglobin, extract heme, pass heme through the bacterial cell envelope and degrade heme in the cytoplasm. This assay will be useful for researchers seeking to elucidate the mechanisms of hemoglobin-/heme-derived iron acquisition in S. aureus and possibly other bacterial pathogens.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Polarized resonance Raman spectra of horse heart ferricytochrome c as a function of pH in the range 1.0–12, in the presence of the extrinsic ligands imidazole, cyanide, and azide, and in 4 M urea, are reported, as are resonance Raman spectra of heme undecapeptide in the presence of imidazole, pH 6.8 and pH 2.0, and with cyanide at pH 6.8. The range of investigation is 140–1700 cm?1, using the 5145-, 4880-, and 4579-Å excitations. The spectra have been analyzed in terms of complexity, sensitivity, and the conformation-heme energetics of the systems. The state of heme in various forms is analyzed with regard to heme energetics, core size, nature of planarity, and coordination configuration. All low-spin forms of heme c systems, cytochrome c, and heme models are concluded to be hexacoordinated, in-plane heme iron systems. The effect of the location of the heme in the protein environment is found to be a slight expansion of the porphyrin core, ~0.01 Å, while the covalent linkage of heme to protein and a mixed nature of axial coordination configuration seem to have little effect on the energetics of the heme group. Complex formation with extrinsic ligand, imidazole, cyanide, or azide, results in a slight contraction of the heme core. The formation of cytochrome c form IV, the alkaline form, is shown to follow a process with apK a of about 8.4, and similarly, acidic form II is created following the prior formation of an intermediate form with apK a of about 3.6. The precursor to form IV is interpreted as containing perturbation of the pyrrol rings, whereas the precursor to the acidic form seems to reflect alteration of the energetics of the CαCm α structures of the heme group. The acidic form of heme undecapeptide is a hexacoordinated high-spin heme with an estimated displacement of 0.25 Å from the heme plane. The pH 2 form of cytochrome c is also a hexacoordinated high-spin form with two weak axial ligands, but iron is in the plane of the porphyrin ring.  相似文献   

5.
The unique feature of this model is that both the fractional saturation and the free energy change are handled within the framework of the tension-displacement mechanism for hemoglobin co-operativity proposed by Perutz (1970, 1972), i.e. heme iron movement and associated changes in the protein globin internal tension, tau. Physically, tau is the force applied by the protein globin on the proximal histidine, preventing the iron stereochemistry from attaining the geometry preferred in the bound state. It is assumed that a change in position of the heme iron on ligand binding displaces the protein globin proportionately, thereby decreasing tau at neighboring sites; the resulting energy change is assumed to be delocalized throughout the flexible protein globin rather than localized at the heme group per se. The physical interpretation of the model parameters has important implications with regard to data analysis: first, structural data is used to fix the molecular displacements lt and lr; second, jt/jr provides a measure of the protein's intrinsic (i.e. tau = 0) affinity for the bound ligand, and third the set [Ei] is a property of the hemoglobin molecule only and can be determined, in principle, using structural data and optical absorption spectra. The calculated protein globin internal tension in the tense, unbound state (approximately 2 X 10(-5) dyne), determined from the fractional saturation data of Joels & Pugh (1958), is very similar (approximately 3.2 X 10(-5) dyne) to the value estimated by Hopfield (1973) from free energy considerations.  相似文献   

6.
Genome of the model dicot flowering plant, Arabidopsis thaliana, a popular tool for understanding molecular biology of plant physiology, encodes all three classes of plant hemoglobins that differ in their sequence, ligand binding and spectral properties. As such these globins are of considerable attention. Crystal structures of few members of plant class I nonsymbiotic hemoglobin have been described earlier. Here we report the crystal structure of Arabidopsis class I hemoglobin (AHb1) to 2.2 ? and compare its key features with the structures of similar nonsymbiotic hemoglobin from other species. Crystal structure of AHb1 is homologous to the related members with similar globin fold and heme pocket architecture. The structure is homodimeric in the asymmetric unit with both distal and proximal histidines coordinating to the heme iron atom. Residues lining the dimeric interface are also conserved in AHb1 with the exception of additional electrostatic interaction between H112 and E113 of each subunit and that involving Y119 through two water molecules. In addition, differences in heme pocket non-covalent interactions, a novel Ser residue at F7 position, Xe binding site variability, internal cavity topology differences, CD loop conformation and stability and other such properties might explain kinetic variability in AHb1. Detailed cavity analysis of AHb1 showed the presence of a novel long tunnel connecting the distal pockets of both the monomers. Presence of such tunnel, along with conformational heterogeneity observed in the two chains, might suggest cooperative ligand binding and support its role in NO scavenging. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Oxygen Binding and Sensing Proteins.  相似文献   

7.
The technique of resonance X-ray diffraction (Blasie, J.K. and Stamatoff, J. (1981) Annu. Rev. Biophys. Bioeng. 10, 451–452) utilizing synchrotron radiation was used to determine the locations of the cytochrome c heme iron atom and the photosynthetic reaction center iron atom within the profile of a reconstituted membrane. The accuracy of these determinations was better than ±2 ?. The cytochrome c heme iron atom → reaction center iron atom vector was determined to have a magnitude of approx. 44 ? projected onto the membrane profile and to span most of the lipid hydrocarbon core of the membrane profile. Since the reaction center iron atom interacts magnetically with the primary quinone electron acceptor QI over a distance of less than 10 ?, the primary light-induced electron-transfer reactions for this system generate the electric charge separation between oxidized cytochrome c+ and Fe-Q?I across most (approx. 23) of the membrane profile including most or all of the lipid hydrocarbon core of the membrane.  相似文献   

8.
To initiate and sustain an infection in mammals, bacterial pathogens must acquire host iron. However, the host''s compartmentalization of large amounts of iron in heme, which is bound primarily by hemoglobin in red blood cells, acts as a barrier to bacterial iron assimilation. Bacillus anthracis, the causative agent of the disease anthrax, secretes two NEAT (near iron transporter) proteins, IsdX1 and IsdX2, which scavenge heme from host hemoglobin and promote growth under low iron conditions. The mechanism of heme transfer from these hemophores to the bacterial cell is not known. We present evidence that the heme-bound form of IsdX1 rapidly and directionally transfers heme to IsdC, a NEAT protein covalently attached to the cell wall, as well as to IsdX2. In both cases, the transfer of heme is mediated by a physical association between the donor and recipient. Unlike Staphylococcus aureus, whose NEAT proteins acquire heme from hemoglobin directly at the bacterial surface, B. anthracis secretes IsdX1 to capture heme in the extracellular milieu and relies on NEAT-NEAT interactions to deliver the bound heme to the envelope via IsdC. Understanding the mechanism of NEAT-mediated iron transport into pathogenic Gram-positive bacteria may provide an avenue for the development of therapeutics to combat infection.  相似文献   

9.
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on the structure of product-inhibited mammalian peroxidase. Lactoperoxidase is a heme containing an enzyme that catalyzes the inactivation of a wide range of microorganisms. In the presence of hydrogen peroxide, it preferentially converts thiocyanate ion into a toxic hypothiocyanate ion. Samples of bovine lactoperoxidase containing thiocyanate (SCN) and hypothiocyanate (OSCN) ions were purified and crystallized. The structure was determined at 2.3-Å resolution and refined to Rcryst and Rfree factors of 0.184 and 0.221, respectively. The determination of structure revealed the presence of an OSCN ion at the distal heme cavity. The presence of OSCN ions in crystal samples was also confirmed by chemical and spectroscopic analysis. The OSCN ion interacts with the heme iron, Gln-105 Nɛ1, His-109 Nɛ2, and a water molecule W96. The sulfur atom of the OSCN ion forms a hypervalent bond with a nitrogen atom of the pyrrole ring D of the heme moiety at an S–N distance of 2.8 Å. The heme group is covalently bound to the protein through two ester linkages involving carboxylic groups of Glu-258 and Asp-108 and the modified methyl groups of pyrrole rings A and C, respectively. The heme moiety is significantly distorted from planarity, whereas pyrrole rings A, B, C, and D are essentially planar. The iron atom is displaced by ≈0.2 Å from the plane of the heme group toward the proximal site. The substrate channel resembles a long tunnel whose inner walls contain predominantly aromatic residues such as Phe-113, Phe-239, Phe-254, Phe-380, Phe-381, Phe-422, and Pro-424. A phosphorylated Ser-198 was evident at the surface, in the proximity of the calcium-binding channel.  相似文献   

10.
It is known that heme iron and inorganic iron are absorbed differently. Heme iron is found in the diet mainly in the form of hemoglobin and myoglobin. The mechanism of iron absorption remains uncertain. This study focused on the heme iron uptake by Caco-2 cells from a hemoglobin digest and its response to different iron concentrations. We studied the intracellular Fe concentration and the effect of time, K+ depletion, and cytosol acidification on apical uptake and transepithelial transport in cells incubated with different heme Fe concentrations. Cells incubated with hemoglobin-digest showed a lower intracellular Fe concentration than cells grown with inorganic Fe. However, uptake and transepithelial transport of Fe was higher in cells incubated with heme Fe. Heme Fe uptake had a low V max and K m as compared to inorganic Fe uptake and did not compete with non-heme Fe uptake. Heme Fe uptake was inhibited in cells exposed to K+ depletion or cytosol acidification. Heme oxygenase 1 expression increased and DMT1 expression decreased with higher heme Fe concentrations in the media. The uptake of heme iron is a saturable and temperature-dependent process and, therefore, could occur through a mechanism involving both a receptor and the endocytic pathway.  相似文献   

11.
The molecular structures of ferri- and ferrocytochrome c551 from Pseudomonas aeruginosa have been refined at a resolution of 1.6 Å, to an R factor of 19.5% for the oxidized molecule and 18.7% for the reduced. Reduction of oxidized crystals with ascorbate produced little change in cell dimensions, a 10% mean change in Fobs, and no damage to the crystals. The heme iron is not significantly displaced from the porphyrin plane. Bond lengths from axial ligands to the heme iron are as expected in a low-spin iron compound. A total of 67 solvent molecules were incorporated in the oxidized structure, and 73 in the reduced, of which four are found inside the protein molecule. The oxidized and reduced forms have virtually identical tertiary structures with 2 ° root-mean-square differences in main-chain torsion angles φ and ψ, but with larger differences along the two edges of the heme crevice. The difference map and pyrrole ring tilt suggest that a partially buried water molecule (no. 23) in the heme crevice moves upon change of oxidation state.Pseudomonas cytochrome c551 differs from tuna cytochrome c in having: (1) a water molecule (no. 23) at the upper left of the heme crevice; that is, between Pro62 and the heme pyrrol 3 ring on the sixth ligand Met61 side, where tuna cytochrome c has an evolutionary invariant Phe82 ring; (2) a string of hydrophobic side-chains along the left side of the heme crevice, and fewer positively charged lysines in the vicinity; and (3) a more exposed and presumably more easily ionizable heme propionate group at the bottom of the molecule. A network of hydrogen bonds in the heme crevice is reminiscent of that inside the heme crevice of tuna cytochrome c. As in tuna, a slight motion of the water molecule toward the heme is observed in the oxidized state, helping to give the heme a more polar microenvironment. The continuity of solvent environment between the heme crevice and the outer medium could explain the greater dependence of redox potential on pH in cytochrome c551 than in cytochrome c.  相似文献   

12.
Lactoperoxidase (LPO) is a member of the mammalian peroxidase superfamily. It catalyzes the oxidation of thiocyanate and halides. Freshly isolated and purified samples of caprine LPO were saturated with ammonium iodide and crystallized using 20% polyethylene glycol 3350 in a hanging drop vapor diffusion setup. The structure has been determined using X-ray crystallographic method and refined to Rcryst and Rfree factors of 0.196 and 0.203, respectively. The structure determination revealed an unexpected phosphorylation of Ser198 in LPO, which is also confirmed by anti-phosphoserine antibody binding studies. The structure is also notable for observing densities for glycan chains at all the four potential glycosylation sites. Caprine LPO consists of a single polypeptide chain of 595 amino acid residues and folds into an oval-shaped structure. The structure contains 20 well-defined α-helices of varying lengths including a helix, H2a, unique to LPO, and two short antiparallel β-strands. The structure confirms that the heme group is covalently linked to the protein through two ester linkages involving carboxylic groups of Glu258 and Asp108 and modified methyl groups of pyrrole rings A and C, respectively. The heme moiety is slightly distorted from planarity, but pyrrole ring B is distorted considerably. However, an iron atom is displaced only by 0.1 Å from the plane of the heme group toward the proximal site. The substrate diffusing channel in LPO is cylindrical in shape with a diameter of approximately 6 Å. Two histidine residues and six buried water molecules are connected through a hydrogen-bonded chain from the distal heme cavity to the surface of protein molecule and seemingly form the basis of proton relay for catalytic action. Ten iodide ions have been observed in the structure. Out of these, only one iodide ion is located in the distal heme cavity and is hydrogen bonded to the water molecule W1. W1 is also hydrogen bonded to the heme iron as well as to distal His109. The structure contains a calcium ion that is coordinated to seven oxygen atoms and forms a typical pentagonal bipyramidal coordination geometry.  相似文献   

13.
The metal iron is a limiting nutrient for bacteria during infection. Bacillus anthracis, the causative agent of anthrax and a potential weapon of bioterrorism, grows rapidly in mammalian hosts, which suggests that it efficiently attains iron during infection. Recent studies have uncovered both heme (isd) and siderophore-mediated (asb) iron transport pathways in this pathogen. Whereas deletion of the asb genes results in reduced virulence, the loss of three surface components from isd had no effect, thereby leaving open the question of what additional factors in B. anthracis are responsible for iron uptake from the most abundant iron source for mammals, heme. Here, we describe the first functional characterization of bas0520, a gene recently implicated in anthrax disease progression. bas0520 encodes a single near-iron transporter (NEAT) domain and several leucine-rich repeats. The NEAT domain binds heme, despite lacking a stabilizing tyrosine common to the NEAT superfamily of hemoproteins. The NEAT domain also binds hemoglobin and can acquire heme from hemoglobin in solution. Finally, deletion of bas0520 resulted in bacilli unable to grow efficiently on heme or hemoglobin as an iron source and yielded the most significant phenotype relative to that for other putative heme uptake systems, a result that suggests that this protein plays a prominent role in the replication of B. anthracis in hematogenous environments. Thus, we have assigned the name of Hal (heme-acquisition leucine-rich repeat protein) to BAS0520. These studies advance our understanding of heme acquisition by this dangerous pathogen and justify efforts to determine the mechanistic function of this novel protein for vaccine or inhibitor development.  相似文献   

14.
The synthesis, purification as a tetrafluoroborate salt and structural elucidation of the verdohemochrome 2a derived from the coupled oxidation of octaethylhemochrome 1 is described. Based on elemental analyses, spectroscopic studies (visible and infrared absorption, 1H-NMR) and fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry, the assignment of the iron(II) oxaporphyrin structure for the verdohemochrome 2a and the blue monocarbonyl species 2b, obtained upon treatment of 2a with carbon monoxide, has been accomplished. This assignment raises a number of questions regarding the iron oxidation state of intermediates in the pathway of heme catabolism both in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, the implications of the occurrence of an iron oxaporphyrin intermediate in the pathway of heme metabolism, which is suggested by the similarity of the visible absorption spectrum of the CO species 2b with that of a new intermediate recently observed in the heme oxygenase-catalyzed degradition of heme and mesoheme, is considered.  相似文献   

15.
Oxidized cytochrome c6 from Anabaena PCC 7119 was studied by electron spin echo envelope modulation spectroscopy. Hyperfine couplings of the unpaired electron with several nuclei were detected, in particular those of the nitrogens bound to the iron atom. Combining the experimental information here presented and previous continuous wave-electron paramagnetic resonance and electron nuclear double resonance results, some details on the electronic structure of the heme center in the protein are obtained. These results are discussed on the basis of a molecular model that considers one unpaired electron localized mainly in the iron d orbitals and propagation of the spin density within the heme center via spin polarization of the nitrogen σ-orbitals. The coexistence of two heme forms at physiological pH values in this c-type cytochrome is also discussed taking into account the experimental evidence.  相似文献   

16.
The 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (nmr) spectra of complexes of soybean ferric leghemoglobin with 3-substituted pyridines and 5-substituted nicotinic acids have been recorded in order to determine the influence of axial ligands on heme electronic structure. The hyperfine shifted resonances of the heme group were assigned by analogy to previous assignments for the pyridine and nicotinic acid complexes of leghemoglobin. The spectra are characteristic of predominantly low-spin ferric heme complexes. For the pyridine complexes, the rate of ligand exchange was found to increase with decreasing ligand pKA. For many of the complexes, optical and nmr spectra reveal the presence of an equilibrium mixture of high- and low-spin states of the iron atom. The percentage of high-spin component increases with decreasing ligand pKA Smaller hyperfine shifts are noted for leghemoglobin complexes with ligands capable of weak ligand → metal π bonding. The pattern of hyperfine shifted resonances is similar for all complexes studied and indicates that the overall heme electronic structure is dominated by the bonding to the proximal histidine.  相似文献   

17.
Anammox is a bacterial energy metabolic process that forms N2 gas from nitrite and ammonium ions. The enzymatic mechanisms of anammox have been gradually revealed; however, the electron transport chain in anammox bacteria remains poorly understood. In the present study, we purified and characterized two low-molecular-weight c-type cytochromes from an enriched culture of the anammox bacterium strain, KSU-1. Their genes, KSU1_B0428 and KSU1_C0855, were identified in the KSU-1 genome, and their recombinant proteins were characterized. KSU1_B0428 is a typical c-type cytochrome with a His/Met coordinated heme, acting as an electron transfer protein. In contrast, KSU1_C0855 could not be assigned as a known cytochrome and its heme was suggested to have an uncommon axial ligand set. Crystal structural analyses of C0855 clearly showed that its heme iron is coordinated by His15 as a fifth ligand. Moreover, the sixth coordination site is occupied by the aromatic ring of Tyr60, and an unassignable electron density that is inseparable with that of aromatic carbon of Tyr60 was found. The additional electron density was assigned to an O atom by molecular mass analyses. Therefore, Tyr60 would be chemically modified to 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine and bound to the Fe atom. We revealed that an anammox bacterium strain KSU-1 expresses a novel cytochrome c having an unprecedented His/3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine coordinating heme. The expression of the novel c-type cytochrome might be required for the redox reaction of the anammox process.  相似文献   

18.
M.J. Tervoort  B.F. Van Gelder 《BBA》1983,722(1):137-143
The optical spectrum of reduced bovine cytochrome c1 at 77 K shows a fine splitting of the β-band, which is indicative of the native conformation of the protein. At room temperature, this conformation is reflected in an absorbance band at 530 nm. The exposure of the heme of ferrocytochrome c1, investigated by means of solvent-perturbation spectroscopy, appears to be extremely sensitive to temperature and SH reagents bound to the oxidized protein. Addition of combinations of potential ligands to the isolated tryptic heme peptide of cytochrome c1 reveals that only a mixture of methionine and cysteine (or their equivalents) generates a β-band at 77 K which is identical in shape to that of native cytochrome c1. In the EPR spectrum of a complex of ferrocytochrome c1 and nitric oxide at pH 10.5, no hyperfine splitting derived from a second ligated nitrogen atom could be detected. The results indicate that methionine and cysteine are the axial ligands of heme in cytochrome c1. The EPR spectrum of isolated ferricytochrome c1 is that of a low-spin heme iron compound with a gz value of 3.36 and a gy value of 2.04.  相似文献   

19.
The structure of metmanganoglobin, in which Mn(III) replaces Fe(III) as the heme metal, has been compared with that of native hemoglobin by X-ray difference Fourier techniques. Their quaternary structures are identical and their tertiary structures are similar, as expected both from the close stereochemical correspondence between manganese porphyrins and the corresponding iron porphyrins, and from the similarities in functional properties previously reported. There are, however, a number of small but significant differences. The α-heme is essentially unperturbed by the metal substitution, in contrast to the β-heme. It appears that the sixth ligand of the β-heme, a water molecule in native hemoglobin, has been lost, and that the resultant five-co-ordinate β-heme in metmanganoglobin is distinctly ruffled in accord with quasi-S4 symmetry. The loss of non-covalent ligand-globin interactions together with the heme ruffling produce numerous small perturbations in the β-globin, which are transmitted across the α11 interface to the α-globin. The α12 interface is only slightly perturbed. Metmanganoglobin thus displays some, but not all, of the structural features to be expected in a partially liganded hemoglobin: those arising directly from ligand loss from the β-hemes, and contraction of the ligand pocket in the β-chain, but not others, such as those which accompany a marked alteration in the distance of the proximal histidine from the mean plane of the porphyrin. The basic similarity in the structural and functional properties of manganoglobin and native hemoglobin demonstrates that hemoglobin function is not uniquely dependent on the co-ordination properties of the metal.  相似文献   

20.
Staphylococcus lugdunensis is the only coagulase-negative Staphylococcus species with a locus encoding iron-regulated surface determinant (Isd) proteins. In Staphylococcus aureus, the Isd proteins capture heme from hemoglobin and transfer it across the wall to a membrane-bound transporter, which delivers it into the cytoplasm, where heme oxygenases release iron. The Isd proteins of S. lugdunensis are expressed under iron-restricted conditions. We propose that S. lugdunensis IsdB and IsdC proteins perform the same functions as those of S. aureus. S. lugdunensis IsdB is the only hemoglobin receptor within the isd locus. It specifically binds human hemoglobin with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 23 nM and transfers heme on IsdC. IsdB expression promotes bacterial growth in an iron-limited medium containing human hemoglobin but not mouse hemoglobin. This correlates with weak binding of IsdB to mouse hemoglobin in vitro. Unlike IsdB and IsdC, the proteins IsdJ and IsdK are not sorted to the cell wall in S. lugdunensis. In contrast, IsdJ expressed in S. aureus and Lactococcus lactis is anchored to peptidoglycan, suggesting that S. lugdunensis sortases may differ in signal recognition or could be defective. IsdJ and IsdK are present in the culture supernatant, suggesting that they could acquire heme from the external milieu. The IsdA protein of S. aureus protects bacteria from bactericidal lipids due to its hydrophilic C-terminal domain. IsdJ has a similar region and protected S. aureus and L. lactis as efficiently as IsdA but, possibly due to its location, was less effective in its natural host.  相似文献   

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