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1.
Enzyme IIA(Glc), encoded by the crr gene of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system, plays an important role in regulating intermediary metabolism in Escherichia coli ("catabolite repression"). One function involves inhibition of inducible transport systems ("inducer exclusion"), and with lactose permease, a galactoside is required for unphosphorylated IIA(Glc) binding to cytoplasmic loops IV/V and VI/VII [Sondej, M., Sun, J. et al. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96, 3525-3530]. With inside-out membrane vesicles containing the permease, [(125)I]IIA(Glc) binding promoted by melibiose exhibits an affinity (K(D)(IIA)) of approximately 1 microM and a stoichiometry of one mole of IIA(Glc) per six moles of lactose permease. Both the quantity of [(125)I]IIA(Glc) bound and the sugar concentration required for half-maximal IIA(Glc) binding (K(0.5)(IIA)(sug)) was measured for eight permease substrates. Differences in maximal IIA(Glc) binding are observed, and the K(0.5)(IIA)(sug) does not correlate with the affinity of LacY for sugar. Furthermore, K(0.5)(IIA)(sug) does not correlate with sugar affinities for various permease mutants. IIA(Glc) does not bind to a mutant (Cys154 --> Gly), which is locked in an outwardly facing conformation, binds with increased stoichiometry to mutant Lys131 --> Cys, and binds only weakly to two other mutants which appear to be predominantly in either an outwardly or an inwardly facing conformation. When the latter two mutations are combined, sugar-dependent IIA(Glc) binding returns to near wild-type levels. The findings suggest that binding of various substrates to lactose permease results in a collection of unique conformations, each of which presents a specific surface toward the inner face of the membrane that can interact to varying degrees with IIA(Glc).  相似文献   

2.
The past decade has witnessed an exiting unveiling of numerous molecular mechanisms that characterize signal transduction by protein-protein interaction. The recent findings encouraged an increasing effort to understand the sequential metabolism of different sugars available as energy sources at the same time. It seems probable that at least three principle mechanisms which act together or separately, mediate carbon catabolite repression (CCR) depending on the system which is under metabolic control: i) by the main signal transducing chain via the ATP-dependent HPr-kinase, HPr(Ser46-P) or alternatively Crh via the central component CcpA and its interaction with cre, ii) by signals sensed from the specific regulators directly or via phosphorylation by HPr, iii) by inducer exclusion based on the concurrence of the enzyme IIA(Glc) domain of the glucose permease, and other PTS-dependent permeases composed only of the B and C domains and lacking the enzyme IIA domain.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Geertsma ER  Duurkens RH  Poolman B 《Biochemistry》2005,44(48):15889-15897
The metabolism of lactose by Streptococcus thermophilus is highly regulated, allowing the bacterium to prefer lactose over glucose as main source of carbon and energy. In vitro analysis of the enzymes involved in transport and hydrolysis of lactose showed that the transport reaction benefits from the hydrolysis of lactose at the trans side of the membrane. Furthermore, the activity of LacS is modulated by PEP-dependent phosphorylation of the IIA domain via the general energy coupling proteins of the PTS, Enzyme I and HPr. To determine whether unphosphorylated LacS-IIA inhibited, or the phosphorylated form stimulated lactose counterflow, a LacS-IIA truncation mutant of LacS was constructed. Detailed analyses of transport in whole cells and in proteoliposomes indicated that unphosphorylated LacS-IIA does not functionally interact with the carrier domain. Instead, interaction of the phosphorylated form of LacS-IIA with the carrier stimulates lactose counterflow transport. The proposed mode of regulation thus proceeds via a mechanism opposite to the inducer exclusion type of regulation in gram-negative bacteria, where transporters are inhibited by binding of the unphosphorylated form of IIA(Glc).  相似文献   

5.
The glucose transporter of Escherichia coli couples translocation with phosphorylation of glucose. The IICB(Glc) subunit spans the membrane eight times. Split, circularly permuted and cyclized forms of IICB(Glc) are described. The split variant was 30 times more active when the two proteins were encoded by a dicistronic mRNA than by two genes. The stability and activity of circularly permuted forms was improved when they were expressed as fusion proteins with alkaline phosphatase. Cyclized IICB(Glc) and IIA(Glc) were produced in vivo by RecA intein-mediated trans-splicing. Purified, cyclized IIA(Glc) and IICB(Glc) had 100% and 30% of wild-type glucose phosphotransferase activity, respectively. Cyclized IIA(Glc) displayed increased stability against temperature and GuHCl-induced unfolding.  相似文献   

6.
The signal-transducing protein EIIA(Glc), a component of the phosphoenolpyruvate-glucose phosphotransferase system, plays a key role in carbon regulation in enteric bacteria, such as Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium. The phosphorylation state of EIIA(Glc) governs transport and metabolism of a number of carbohydrates. When glucose as preferred carbon source is transported, EIIA(Glc) becomes predominantly unphosphorylated and allosterically inhibits several permeases, including the maltose ATP-binding cassette transport system (MalFGK2) in a process termed "inducer exclusion." We have mapped the binding surface of EIIA(Glc) that interacts with the MalK subunits by using synthetic cellulose-bound peptide arrays like pep scan- and substitutional analyses. Three regions constituting two binding sites were identified encompassing residues 69-79 (I), 87-91 (II), and 118-127 (III). Region III is MalK-specific, whereas residues from regions I and II partly overlap but are not identical to the binding interfaces for interaction with glycerol kinase and lactose permease. These results were fully verified by studying the inhibitory effect of purified EIIA(Glc) variants carrying mutations at positions representative of each of the three regions on the ATPase activity of the purified maltose transport complex reconstituted into proteoliposomes. Moreover, a synthetic peptide encompassing residues 69-91 was demonstrated to partially inhibit ATPase activity. We also show for the first time that the N-terminal domain of EIIA(Glc) is essential for inducer exclusion.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction between fermentation-respiration switch (FrsA) protein and glucose-specific enzyme IIA(Glc) increases glucose fermentation under oxygen-limited conditions. We show that FrsA converts pyruvate to acetaldehyde and carbon dioxide in a cofactor-independent manner and that its pyruvate decarboxylation activity is enhanced by the dephosphorylated form of IIA(Glc) (d-IIA(Glc)). Crystal structures of FrsA and its complex with d-IIA(Glc) revealed residues required for catalysis as well as the structural basis for the activation by d-IIA(Glc).  相似文献   

8.
Cyclized subunits of the E. coli glucose transporter were produced in vivo by intein mediated trans-splicing. IIA(Glc) is a beta-sandwich protein, IICB(Glc) spans the membrane eight times. Genes encoding the circularly permuted precursors U(Cdelta)-IIA(Glc)-U(Ndelta) and U(Cdelta)-IICB(Glc)-U(Ndelta) were assembled from DNA fragments encoding the 3' and 5' segments of the recA intein of M. tuberculosis and crr and ptsG of E. coli, respectively. A 20-residues long, Ala-Pro rich linker peptide and/or a histidine tag were used to join the native N- and C-termini in the cyclized proteins. The cyclized proteins complemented growth of glucose auxotrophic strains. Purified, cyclized IIA(Glc) and IICB(Glc) had 100 and 25%, respectively, of wild-type glucose phosphotransferase activity. They had an increased electrophoretic mobility, which decreased upon linearization of the proteins with chymotrypsin. Cyclized IIA(Glc) displayed increased stability against temperature and GuHCl-induced unfolding (75 vs. 70 degrees C; 1.52 vs. 1.05 M).  相似文献   

9.
The bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system regulates a variety of physiological processes as well as effecting sugar transport. The crr gene product (enzyme IIA(Glc) (IIA(Glc))) mediates some of these regulatory phenomena. In this report, we characterize a novel IIA(Glc)-binding protein from Escherichia coli extracts, discovered using ligand-fishing with surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy. This protein, which we named FrsA (fermentation/respiration switch protein), is the 47-kDa product of the yafA gene, previously denoted as "function unknown." FrsA forms a 1:1 complex specifically with the unphosphorylated form of IIA(Glc), with the highest affinity of any protein thus far shown to interact with IIA(Glc). Orthologs of FrsA have been found to exist only in facultative anaerobes belonging to the gamma-proteobacterial group. Disruption of frsA increased cellular respiration on several sugars including glucose, while increased FrsA expression resulted in an increased fermentation rate on these sugars with the concomitant accumulation of mixed-acid fermentation products. These results suggest that IIA(Glc) regulates the flux between respiration and fermentation pathways by sensing the available sugar species via a phosphorylation state-dependent interaction with FrsA.  相似文献   

10.
Enzyme IIA(Glucose) (IIA(Glc)) is a signal-transducing protein in the phosphotransferase system of Escherichia coli. Structural studies of free IIA(Glc) and the HPr-IIA(Glc) complex have shown that IIA(Glc) comprises a globular beta-sheet sandwich core (residues 19-168) and a disordered N-terminal tail (residues 1-18). Although the presence of the N-terminal tail is not required for IIA(Glc) to accept a phosphorus from the histidine phosphocarrier protein HPr, its presence is essential for effective phosphotransfer from IIA(Glc) to the membrane-bound IIBC(Glc). The sequence of the N-terminal tail suggests that it has the potential to form an amphipathic helix. Using CD, we demonstrate that a peptide, corresponding to the N-terminal 18 residues of IIA(Glc), adopts a helical conformation in the presence of either the anionic lipid phosphatidylglycerol or a mixture of anionic E. coli lipids phosphatidylglycerol (25%) and phosphatidylethanolamine (75%). The peptide, however, is in a random coil state in the presence of the zwitterionic lipid phosphatidylcholine, indicating that electrostatic interactions play a role in the binding of the lipid to the peptide. In addition, we show that intact IIA(Glc) also interacts with anionic lipids, resulting in an increase in helicity, which can be directly attributed to the N-terminal segment. From these data we propose that IIA(Glc) comprises two functional domains: a folded domain containing the active site and capable of weakly interacting with the peripheral IIB domain of the membrane protein IIBC(Glc); and the N-terminal tail, which interacts with the negatively charged E. coli membrane, thereby stabilizing the complex of IIA(Glc) with IIBC(Glc). This stabilization is essential for the final step of the phosphoryl transfer cascade in the glucose transport pathway.  相似文献   

11.
The glucose transporter of the bacterial phosphotransferase system mediates sugar transport across the cytoplasmic membrane concomitant with sugar phosphorylation. It consists of a cytoplasmic subunit IIA(Glc) and the transmembrane subunit IICB(Glc). IICB(Glc) was purified to homogeneity by urea/alkali washing of membranes and nickel-chelate affinity chromatography. About 1.5 mg highly pure IICB(Glc) representing 77% of the total activity present in the membranes was obtained from 8g (wet weight) of cells. IICB(Glc) was reconstituted into lipid bilayers by temperature-controlled dialysis to yield small 2D crystals and by a rapid detergent-dilution procedure to yield densely packed vesicles. Electron microscopy and digital image processing of the negatively stained 2D crystals revealed a trigonal lattice with a unit cell size of a = b = 14.5 nm. The unit cell morphology exhibited three dimers of IICB(Glc) surrounding the threefold symmetry center. Single particle analysis of IICB(Glc) in proteoliposomes obtained by detergent dialysis also showed predominantly dimeric structures.  相似文献   

12.
Reverse genetics is used to evaluate the roles in vivo of allosteric regulation of Escherichia coli glycerol kinase by the glucose-specific phosphocarrier of the phosphoenolpyruvate:glycose phosphotransferase system, IIA(Glc) (formerly known as III(glc)), and by fructose 1,6-bisphosphate. Roles have been postulated for these allosteric effectors in glucose control of both glycerol utilization and expression of the glpK gene. Genetics methods based on homologous recombination are used to place glpK alleles with known specific mutations into the chromosomal context of the glpK gene in three different genetic backgrounds. The alleles encode glycerol kinases with normal catalytic properties and specific alterations of allosteric regulatory properties, as determined by in vitro characterization of the purified enzymes. The E. coli strains with these alleles display the glycerol kinase regulatory phenotypes that are expected on the basis of the in vitro characterizations. Strains with different glpR alleles are used to assess the relationships between allosteric regulation of glycerol kinase and specific repression in glucose control of the expression of the glpK gene. Results of these studies show that glucose control of glycerol utilization and glycerol kinase expression is not affected by the loss of IIA(Glc) inhibition of glycerol kinase. In contrast, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate inhibition of glycerol kinase is the dominant allosteric control mechanism, and glucose is unable to control glycerol utilization in its absence. Specific repression is not required for glucose control of glycerol utilization, and the relative roles of various mechanisms for glucose control (catabolite repression, specific repression, and inducer exclusion) are different for glycerol utilization than for lactose utilization.  相似文献   

13.
The solution structure of the second protein-protein complex of the Escherichia coli phosphoenolpyruvate: sugar phosphotransferase system, that between histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein (HPr) and glucose-specific enzyme IIA(Glucose) (IIA(Glc)), has been determined by NMR spectroscopy, including the use of dipolar couplings to provide long-range orientational information and newly developed rigid body minimization and constrained/restrained simulated annealing methods. A protruding convex surface on HPr interacts with a complementary concave depression on IIA(Glc). Both binding surfaces comprise a central hydrophobic core region surrounded by a ring of polar and charged residues, positive for HPr and negative for IIA(Glc). Formation of the unphosphorylated complex, as well as the phosphorylated transition state, involves little or no change in the protein backbones, but there are conformational rearrangements of the interfacial side chains. Both HPr and IIA(Glc) recognize a variety of structurally diverse proteins. Comparisons with the structures of the enzyme I-HPr and IIA(Glc)-glycerol kinase complexes reveal how similar binding surfaces can be formed with underlying backbone scaffolds that are structurally dissimilar and highlight the role of redundancy and side chain conformational plasticity.  相似文献   

14.
The bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) includes a collection of proteins that accomplish phosphoryl transfer from phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to a sugar in the course of transport. The soluble proteins of the glucose transport pathway also function as regulators of diverse systems. The mechanism of interaction of the phosphoryl carrier proteins with each other as well as with their regulation targets has been amenable to study by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The three-dimensional solution structures of the complexes between the N-terminal domain of enzyme I and HPr and between HPr and enzyme IIA(Glc) have been elucidated. An analysis of the binding interfaces of HPr with enzyme I, IIA(Glc) and glycogen phosphorylase revealed that a common surface on HPr is involved in all these interactions. Similarly, a common surface on IIA(Glc) interacts with HPr, IIB(Glc) and glycerol kinase. Thus, there is a common motif for the protein-protein interactions characteristic of the PTS.  相似文献   

15.
Enzyme IIA(Glc) of the Escherichia coli phosphoenolpyruvate:glucose phosphotransferase system plays a direct role in regulating inducible transport systems. Dephosphorylated IIA(Glc) binds directly to lactose permease in a reaction that requires binding of a galactosidic substrate. A double-Cys mutation (Ile129 --> Cys/Lys131 --> Cys) was introduced into helix IV of the permease near the IIA(Glc) binding site in cytoplasmic loop IV/V and in the vicinity of the galactoside binding site at the interface of helices IV, V, and VIII. The mutant no longer requires galactoside for IIA(Glc) binding as demonstrated by both a [(125)I]IIA(Glc) binding assay and a newly developed fluorescence anisotropy assay. Further characterization of the mutant shows that it binds substrate with high affinity, but is almost completely defective in all modes of translocation across the cytoplasmic membrane. The data are consistent with the interpretation that the double mutant is locked in an inward-facing conformation.  相似文献   

16.
Strains of Escherichia coli K12, including MG-1655, accumulate methyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside via the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent glucose:phosphotransferase system (IICB(Glc)/IIA(Glc)). High concentrations of intracellular methyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside 6-phosphate are toxic, and cell growth is prevented. However, transformation of E. coli MG-1655 with a plasmid (pAP1) encoding the gene aglB from Klebsiella pneumoniae resulted in excellent growth of the transformant MG-1655 (pAP1) on the glucose analog. AglB is an unusual NAD+/Mn2+-dependent phospho-alpha-glucosidase that promotes growth of MG-1655 (pAP1) by catalyzing the in vivo hydrolysis of methyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside 6-phosphate to yield glucose 6-phosphate and methanol. When transformed with plasmid pAP2 encoding the K. pneumoniae genes aglB and aglA (an alpha-glucoside-specific transporter AglA (IICB(Agl))), strain MG-1655 (pAP2) metabolized a variety of other alpha-linked glucosides, including maltitol, isomaltose, and the following five isomers of sucrose: trehalulose alpha(1-->1), turanose alpha(1-->3), maltulose alpha(1-->4), leucrose alpha(1-->5), and palatinose alpha(1-->6). Remarkably, MG-1655 (pAP2) failed to metabolize sucrose alpha(1-->2). The E. coli K12 strain ZSC112L (ptsG::cat manXYZ nagE glk lac) can neither grow on glucose nor transport methyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside. However, when transformed with pTSGH11 (encoding ptsG) or pAP2, this organism provided membranes that contained either the PtsG or AglA transporters, respectively. In vitro complementation of transporter-specific membranes with purified general phosphotransferase components showed that although PtsG and AglA recognized glucose and methyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside, only AglA accepted other alpha-D-glucosides as substrates. Complementation experiments also revealed that IIA(Glc) was required for functional activity of both PtsG and AglA transporters. We conclude that AglA, AglB, and IIA(Glc) are necessary and sufficient for growth of E. coli K12 on methyl-alpha-D-glucoside and related alpha-D-glucopyranosides.  相似文献   

17.
The catalytic activity of glycerol kinase (EC 2.7.1.30, ATP:glycerol 3-phosphotransferase) from Escherichia coli is inhibited allosterically by IIA(Glc) (previously known as III(Glc)), the glucose-specific phosphocarrier protein of the phosphoenolpyruvate:glycose phosphotransferase system. A sequentially contiguous portion of glycerol kinase undergoes an induced fit conformational change involving coil, alpha-helix, and 3(10)-helix upon IIA(Glc) binding. A second induced fit occurs upon binding of Zn(II) to a novel intermolecular site, which increases complex stability by cation-promoted association. Eight of the ten sequentially contiguous amino acids are substituted with alanine to evaluate the roles of these positions in complex formation. Effects of the substitutions reveal both favorable and antagonistic contributions of the normal amino acids to complex formation, and Zn(II) reverses these contributions for two of the amino acids. The consequences of some of the substitutions for IIA(Glc) inhibition are consistent with changes in the intermolecular interactions seen in the crystal structures. However, for the amino acids that are located in the region that is alpha-helical in the absence of IIA(Glc), the effects of the substitutions are not consistent with changes in intermolecular interactions but with increased stability of the alpha-helical region due to the higher alpha-helix propensity of alanine. The reduced affinity for IIA(Glc) binding seen for these variants is consistent with predictions of Freire and co-workers [Luque, I., and Freire, E. (2000) Proteins: Struct., Funct., Genet. 4, 63-71]. These variants show also increased cation-promoted association by Zn(II) so that the energetic contribution of Zn(II) to complex formation is doubled. The similarity of effects of the alanine substitutions of the amino acids in the alpha-helical region for IIA(Glc) binding affinity and cation-promoted association by Zn(II) indicates that they function as a cooperative unit.  相似文献   

18.
Glycerol kinase (EC 2.7.1.30) is a bacterial sugar kinase and a member of the sugar kinase/actin/hsc-70 superfamily of enzymes. The enzyme from Escherichia coli is an allosteric regulatory enzyme whose activity is inhibited by fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) and the glucose-specific phosphocarrier of the phosphoenolpyruvate:glycose phosphotransferase system, IIA(Glc) (previously termed III(Glc)). Comparison of its primary structure with that of the highly similar Haemophilus influenzae glycerol kinase reveals that the amino acid sequence for the binding site for FBP is conserved while the amino acid sequence for the binding site for IIA(Glc) contains differences that are predicted to prevent its inhibition. To test this hypothesis, the H. influenzae glpK gene was assembled from DNA library fragments and subcloned into pUC18. The enzyme is expressed at high levels in E. coli. It was purified to greater than 90% homogeneity by taking advantage of its solubility behavior in a procedure that requires no column chromatography. The initial-velocity kinetic parameters of the purified enzyme are similar to those of the E. coli glycerol kinase. The H. influenzae glycerol kinase is inhibited by FBP but not by IIA(Glc), in agreement with the prediction based on sequence comparison. Sedimentation velocity experiments reveal that inhibition of HiGK by FBP is associated with oligomerization, behavior which is similar to EcGK. The possibility of utilizing mutagenesis studies to exploit the high degree of similarity of these two enzymes to elucidate the mechanism of allosteric regulation by IIA(Glc) is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The solution structure of the complex between the cytoplasmic A domain (IIA(Mtl)) of the mannitol transporter II(Mannitol) and the histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein (HPr) of the Escherichia coli phosphotransferase system has been solved by NMR, including the use of conjoined rigid body/torsion angle dynamics, and residual dipolar couplings, coupled with cross-validation, to permit accurate orientation of the two proteins. A convex surface on HPr, formed by helices 1 and 2, interacts with a complementary concave depression on the surface of IIA(Mtl) formed by helix 3, portions of helices 2 and 4, and beta-strands 2 and 3. The majority of intermolecular contacts are hydrophobic, with a small number of electrostatic interactions at the periphery of the interface. The active site histidines, His-15 of HPr and His-65 of IIA(Mtl), are in close spatial proximity, and a pentacoordinate phosphoryl transition state can be readily accommodated with no change in protein-protein orientation and only minimal perturbations of the backbone immediately adjacent to the histidines. Comparison with two previously solved structures of complexes of HPr with partner proteins of the phosphotransferase system, the N-terminal domain of enzyme I (EIN) and enzyme IIA(Glucose) (IIA(Glc)), reveals a number of common features despite the fact that EIN, IIA(Glc), and IIA(Mtl) bear no structural resemblance to one another. Thus, entirely different underlying structural elements can form binding surfaces for HPr that are similar in terms of both shape and residue composition. These structural comparisons illustrate the roles of surface and residue complementarity, redundancy, incremental build-up of specificity and conformational side chain plasticity in the formation of transient specific protein-protein complexes in signal transduction pathways.  相似文献   

20.
The N-terminal domain of enzyme IIA(Glc) of the Escherichia coli phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system confers amphitropism to the protein, allowing IIA(Glc) to shuttle between the cytoplasm and the membrane. To further understand this amphitropic protein, we have elucidated, by NMR spectroscopy, the solution structure of a synthetic peptide corresponding to the N-terminal domain of IIA(Glc). In water, this peptide is predominantly disordered, consistent with previous data obtained in the absence of membranes. In detergent micelles of dihexanoylphosphatidylglycerol (DHPG) or sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS), however, residues Phe 3-Val 10 of the peptide adopt a helical conformation in the ensemble of structures calculated on the basis of NOE-derived distance restraints. The root mean square deviations for superimposing the backbone atoms of the helical region are 0.18 A in DHPG and 0.22 A in SDS. The structure, chemical shifts, and spin-spin coupling constants all indicate that, of the four lysines in the N-terminal domain of IIA(Glc), only Lys 5 and Lys 7 in the amphipathic helical region interact with DHPG. In addition, the peptide-detergent interactions were investigated using intermolecular NOESY experiments. The aliphatic chains of anionic detergents DHPG, SDS, and 2,2-dimethyl-2-silapentane-5-sulfonate sodium salt (DSS) all showed intermolecular NOE cross-peaks to the peptide, providing direct evidence for the putative membrane anchor of IIA(Glc) in binding to the membrane-mimicking micelles.  相似文献   

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