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Liu T  Golden JW  Giedroc DP 《Biochemistry》2005,44(24):8673-8683
A novel Zn(II)/Pb(II)/Cd(II)-responsive operon that consists of genes encoding a Zn(II)/Pb(II) CPx-ATPase efflux pump (aztA) and a Zn(II)/Cd(II)/Pb(II)-specific SmtB/ArsR family repressor (aztR) has been identified and characterized from the cyanobacterium Anabaena PCC 7120. In vivo real time quantitative RT-PCR assays reveal that both aztR and aztA expression are induced by divalent metal ions Zn(II), Cd(II), and Pb(II) but not by other divalent [Co(II), Ni(II)] or monovalent metal ions [Cu(I) and Ag(I)]. The introduction of a plasmid containing the azt operon into a Zn(II)/Cd(II)-hypersensitive Escherichia coli strain GG48 functionally restores Zn(II) and Pb(II) resistance with a limited effect on Cd(II) resistance. Gel mobility shift assays and aztR O/P-lacZ induction experiments confirm that AztR is the metal-regulated repressor of this operon. In vitro biochemical and mutagenesis studies indicate that AztR contains a sole metal-binding site, designated the alpha3N site, that binds Zn(II), Cd(II), and Pb(II) with a high affinity. Optical absorption spectra of Co(II)- and Cd(II)-substituted AztR and (113)Cd NMR spectroscopy of (113)Cd(II)-substituted AztR reveal that the sole alpha3N site in AztR is a CadC-like distorted tetrahedral S(3)(N,O) metal site. The first metal-coordination shell in the AztR alpha3N site differs from other alpha3N family members that sense Cd(II)/Pb(II) and those alpha5 repressors that sense Zn(II)/Co(II). Our results reveal that the alpha3N site in AztR mediates derepression of the azt operon in the presence of Zn(II), as well as Cd(II) and Pb(II); this might have provided Anabaena with an evolutionary advantage to adapt to heavy-metal-rich environments, while maintaining homeostasis of an essential metal ion, Zn(II).  相似文献   

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Staphylococcus aureus pI258 CadC is an extrachromosomally encoded metalloregulatory repressor protein from the ArsR superfamily which negatively regulates the expression of the cad operon in a metal-dependent fashion. The metalloregulatory hypothesis holds that direct binding of thiophilic divalent cations including Cd(II), Pb(II), and Zn(II) by CadC allosterically regulates the DNA binding activity of CadC to the cad operator/promoter (O/P). This report presents a detailed characterization of the metal binding and DNA binding properties of wild-type CadC. The results of analytical ultracentrifugation experiments suggest that both apo- and Cd(1)-CadC are stable or weakly dissociable homodimers characterized by a K(dimer) = 3.0 x 10(6) M(-1) (pH 7.0, 0.20 M NaCl, 25.0 degrees C) with little detectable effect of Cd(II) on the dimerization equilibrium. As determined by optical spectroscopy, the stoichiometry of Cd(II) and Pb(II) binding is approximately 0.7-0.8 mol/mol of wild-type CadC monomer. Chelator (EDTA) competition binding isotherms reveal that Cd(II) binds very tightly, with K(Cd) = 4.3 (+/-1.8) x 10(12) M(-1). The results of UV-Vis and X-ray absorption spectroscopy of the Cd(1) complex are consistent with a tetrathiolate (S(4)) complex formed by four cysteine ligands. The (113)Cd NMR spectrum reveals a single resonance of delta = 622 ppm, consistent with an S(3)(N,O) or unusual upfield-shifted S(4) complex. The Pb(II) complex reveals two prominent absorption bands at 350 nm (epsilon = 4000 M(-1) cm(-1)) and 250 nm (epsilon = 41 000 M(-1) cm(-1)), spectral properties consistent with three or four thiolate ligands to the Pb(II) ion. The change in the anisotropy of a fluorescein-labeled oligonucleotide containing the cad O/P upon binding CadC and analyzed using a dissociable CadC dimer binding model reveals that apo-CadC forms a high-affinity complex [K(a) = (1.1 +/- 0.3) x 10(9) M(-1); pH 7.0, 0.40 M NaCl, 25 degrees C], the affinity of which is reduced approximately 300-fold upon the binding of a single molar equivalent of Cd(II) or Pb(II). The implications of these findings on the mechanism of metalloregulation are discussed.  相似文献   

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The Staphylococcus aureus plasmid pI258 CadC is a homodimeric repressor that binds Cd(II), Pb(II), and Zn(II) and regulates expression of the cadAC operon. CadC binds two Cd(II) ions per dimer, with a tetrathiolate binding site composed of residues Cys(7), Cys(11), Cys(58), and Cys(60). It is not known whether each site consists of residues from a single monomer or from residues contributed by both subunits. To examine whether Cys(7) and Cys(11) are spatially proximate to Cys(58) and Cys(60) of the same subunit or of the other subunit, homodimers with the same cysteine mutation in each subunit and heterodimers containing different cysteine mutations in the two subunits were reacted with 4,6-bis(bromomethyl)-3,7-dimethyl-1,5-diazabicyclo[3.3.0]octa-3,6-diene-2,8-dione, which cross-links thiol groups that are within 3-6 A of each other. Cys(7) or Cys(11) cross-linked only with Cys(58) or Cys(60) on the other subunit. The data demonstrate that Cys(7) and Cys(11) from one monomer are within 3-6 A of either Cys(58) or Cys(60) in the other monomer. The results of this study strongly indicate that each of the two Cd(II) binding sites in the CadC homodimer is composed of Cys(7) and Cys(11) from one monomer and Cys(58) and Cys(60) from the other monomer.  相似文献   

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VanZile ML  Chen X  Giedroc DP 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):9776-9786
The Synechococcus PCC 7942 smt operon is responsible for cellular resistance to excess zinc and consists of two divergently transcribed genes, smtB and smtA. SmtB is the Zn(II)-sensing metal-regulated repressor of the system and binds to a 12-2-12 imperfect inverted repeat in the smtA O/P region. Using fluorescence anisotropy to monitor SmtB-smt O/P multiple equilibria, we show that four SmtB homodimers bind to a 40 bp oligonucleotide containing a single 12-2-12 inverted repeat. The binding affinities of the first two dimers are very tight (K(int) = 2.9 x 10(9) M(-1)) with the affinities of the third and fourth dimers lower by approximately 10- and approximately 30-fold, respectively. A single monomer equivalent of Zn(II), Cd(II), or Co(II) promotes disassembly of the oligomeric complex to a mixture of (P(2)).D and (P(2))(2).D SmtB dimer-DNA complexes with the intrinsic affinity of all SmtB homodimers for DNA greatly reduced by approximately 500-2000-fold. Substitution or derivatization of cysteines which comprise the alpha3N metal binding site (Cys14 and Cys61) [VanZile, M. L., et al. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 9765-9775] has no effect on allosteric negative regulation by Zn(II); in contrast, H106Q SmtB, harboring a single zinc-liganding substitution in the alpha5 metal binding site, is refractory to zinc-induced disassembly of SmtB-DNA complexes. The alpha5 metal binding sites are therefore regulatory for Zn(II) sensing in vitro and in vivo, while the high-affinity alpha3N sites play some other role. This finding for SmtB is the opposite of that previously determined for Staphylococcus aureus pI258 CadC, a Pb(II)/Cd(II)/Bi(III) sensor [Busenlehner, L. S., et al. (2002) J. Mol. Biol. 319, 685-701], thus providing insight into the origin of functional metal ion selectivity in this family of metal sensor proteins.  相似文献   

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Liu T  Chen X  Ma Z  Shokes J  Hemmingsen L  Scott RA  Giedroc DP 《Biochemistry》2008,47(40):10564-10575
ArsR (or ArsR/SmtB) family metalloregulatory homodimeric repressors collectively respond to a wide range of metal ion inducers in regulating homeostasis and resistance of essential and nonessential metal ions in bacteria. BxmR from the cyanobacterium Osciliatoria brevis is the first characterized ArsR protein that senses both Cu (I)/Ag (I) and divalent metals Zn (II)/Cd (II) in cells by regulating the expression of a P-type ATPase efflux pump (Bxa1) and an intracellular metallothionein (BmtA). We show here that both pairs of predicted alpha3N and alpha5 sites bind metal ions, but with distinct physicochemical and functional metal specificities. Inactivation of the thiophilic alpha3N site via mutation (C77S) abolishes regulation by both Cd (II) and Cu (I), while Zn (II) remains a potent allosteric negative effector of operator/promoter binding (Delta G c >or= +3.2 kcal mol (-1)). In contrast, alpha5 site mutant retains regulation by all four metal ions, albeit with a smaller coupling free energy (Delta G c approximately +1.7 (+/-0.1) kcal mol (-1)). Unlike the other metals ions, the BxmR dimer binds 4 mol equiv of Cu (I) to form an alpha3N binuclear Cu (I) 2S 4 cluster by X-ray absorption spectroscopy. BxmR is thus distinguishable from other closely related ArsR family sensors, in having evolved a metalloregulatory alpha3N site that can adopt an expanded range of coordination chemistries while maintaining redundancy in the response to Zn (II). The evolutionary implications of these findings for the ArsR metal sensor family are discussed.  相似文献   

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A novel SmtB/ArsR family metalloregulator, denoted BxmR, has been identified and characterized from the cyanobacterium Oscillatoria brevis. Genetic and biochemical evidence reveals that BxmR represses the expression of both bxa1, encoding a CPx-ATPase metal transporter, as well as a divergently transcribed operon encoding bxmR and bmtA, a heavy metal sequestering metallothionein. Derepression of the expression of all three genes is mediated by both monovalent (Ag(I) and Cu(I)) and divalent (Zn(II) and Cd(II)) heavy metal ions, a novel property among SmtB/ArsR metal sensors. Electrophoretic gel mobility shift experiments reveal that apoBxmR forms multiple resolvable complexes with oligonucleotides containing a single 12-2-12 inverted repeat derived from one of the two operator/promoter regions with similar apparent affinities. Preincubation with either monovalent or divalent metal ions induces disassembly of both the BxmR-bxa1 and BxmR-bxmR/bmtA operator/promoter complexes. Interestingly, the temporal regulation of expression of bxa1 and bmtA mRNAs is different in O. brevis with bxa1 induced first upon heavy metal treatment, followed by bmtA/bxmR. A dynamic interplay among Bxa1, BmtA, and BxmR is proposed that maintains metal homeostasis in O. brevis by balancing the relative rates of metal storage and efflux of multiple heavy metal ions.  相似文献   

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ZntA, a soft metal-translocating P1-type ATPase from Escherichia coli, confers resistance to Pb(II), Cd(II), and Zn(II). ZntA was expressed as a histidyl-tagged protein, solubilized from membranes with Triton X-100, and purified to homogeneity. The soft metal-dependent ATP hydrolysis activity of purified ZntA was characterized. The activity was specific for Pb(II), Cd(II), Zn(II), and Hg(II), with the highest activity obtained when the metals were present as thiolate complexes of cysteine or glutathione. The maximal ATPase activity of ZntA was approximately 3 micromol/(mg x min) obtained with the Pb(II)-thiolate complex. In the absence of thiolates, Cd(II) inhibits ZntA above pH 6, whereas the Cd(II)-thiolate complexes stimulate activity, suggesting that a metal-thiolate complex is the true substrate in vivo. These results are consistent with the physiological role of ZntA as mediator of resistance to toxic concentrations of the divalent soft metals, Pb(II), Cd(II), and Zn(II), by ATP-dependent efflux. Our results confirm that ZntA is the first Pb(II)-dependent ATPase discovered to date.  相似文献   

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