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Oligomeric Sensor Kinase DcuS in the Membrane of Escherichia coli and in Proteoliposomes: Chemical Cross-linking and FRET Spectroscopy
Authors:Patrick D Scheu  Yun-Feng Liao  Julia Bauer  Holger Kneuper  Thomas Basché  Gottfried Unden  Wolfgang Erker
Institution:Institute for Microbiology and Wine Research, Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany,1. Institute for Physical Chemistry, Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany2.
Abstract:DcuS is the membrane-integral sensor histidine kinase of the DcuSR two-component system in Escherichia coli that responds to extracellular C4-dicarboxylates. The oligomeric state of full-length DcuS was investigated in vitro and in living cells by chemical cross-linking and by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) spectroscopy. The FRET results were quantified by an improved method using background-free spectra of living cells for determining FRET efficiency (E) and donor fraction {fD = (donor)/(donor) + (acceptor)]}. Functional fusions of cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) and yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) variants of green fluorescent protein to DcuS were used for in vivo FRET measurements. Based on noninteracting membrane proteins and perfectly interacting proteins (a CFP-YFP fusion), the results of FRET of cells coexpressing DcuS-CFP and DcuS-YFP were quantitatively evaluated. In living cells and after reconstitution of purified recombinant DcuS in proteoliposomes, DcuS was found as a dimer or higher oligomer, independent of the presence of an effector. Chemical cross-linking with disuccinimidyl suberate showed tetrameric, in addition to dimeric, DcuS in proteoliposomes and in membranes of bacteria, whereas purified DcuS in nondenaturing detergent was mainly monomeric. The presence and amount of tetrameric DcuS in vivo and in proteoliposomes was not dependent on the concentration of DcuS. Only membrane-embedded DcuS (present in the oligomeric state) is active in (auto)phosphorylation. Overall, the FRET and cross-linking data demonstrate the presence in living cells, in bacterial membranes, and in proteoliposomes of full-length DcuS protein in an oligomeric state, including a tetramer.The DcuSR (dicarboxylate uptake sensor and regulator) system of Escherichia coli is a typical two-component system consisting of a membranous sensor kinase (DcuS) and a cytoplasmic response regulator (DcuR) (11, 26, 48). DcuS responds to C4-dicarboxylates like fumarate, malate, or succinate (19). In the presence of the C4-dicarboxlates, the expression of the genes of anaerobic fumarate respiration (dcuB, fumB, and frdABCD) and of aerobic C4-dicarboxylate uptake (dctA) is activated. DcuS is a histidine protein kinase composed of two transmembrane helices with an intermittent sensory PAS domain in the periplasm (PASP) that was also termed the PDC domain (for PhoQ/DcuS/DctB/CitA domain or fold) (7, 20, 32, 48). The second transmembrane helix is followed by a cytoplasmic PAS domain (PASC) and the C-terminal transmitter domain. PASC functions in signal transfer from transmembrane helix 2 (TM2) to the kinase domain (9). The C-terminal part of the transmitter domain consists of a catalytic or HATPase (histidine kinase/ATPase) subdomain for autophosphorylation of DcuS (16). The N-terminal part of the transmitter contains two conserved α-helical regions, including a conserved His residue which is the site for autophosphorylation. The α-helices serve in dimerization and form a four-helix bundle in the kinase dimer (dimerization and histidine phosphotransfer DHp] domain) (25, 35, 42, 44).The dimeric sensor kinases have been supposed to phosphorylate mutually, by the catalytic domain of one monomer, the His residue of the partner monomer (10). The oligomeric state of the membrane-bound sensor kinases EnvZ and VirA was also deduced from in vivo complementation studies (31, 46). In addition, signal transduction across the membrane and along cytoplasmic PAS domains appears to be a mechanical process requiring oligomeric proteins (9, 40). Therefore, His kinases are supposed to be dimeric in the functional state, but a higher oligomeric state has not been tested and is conceivable. Only a limited number of membrane-bound sensor kinases have been studied for their oligomerization in their membrane-bound state. Thus, the oligomeric state of the KdpD and TorS sensor kinases of E. coli have been shown to prevail in the detergent-solubilized state as oligomers, presumably dimers (14, 29). There was indirect information that functional DcuS is a dimer as well. Purified DcuS shows kinase activity only after reconstitution into liposomes, and phosphorylation is stimulated by C4-dicarboxylates (16, 19). Detergent-solubilized DcuS, on the other hand, shows no kinase activity, and it was assumed that reconstituted DcuS prevails as a dimer, whereas the inactivation of the detergent-solubilized form is due to monomerization. Recently, it was suggested that autophosphorylation in a sensor kinase of Thermotoga maritima proceeds by a cis mechanism on DHp and catalytic kinase domains within the same monomer (6). The sensor kinase is supposed to prevail as a dimer for reasons of signal transfer to the sensor domain, but the presence of cis phosphorylation principally brings into question the need for dimers for sensor kinase function.Overall, it appears that sensor kinases are oligomers for functional reasons. There is, however, no clear evidence for an oligomeric state of full-length sensor kinases in their membrane-embedded state. Moreover, the studies do not address the question of whether the sensor kinases are dimers or higher oligomers. Therefore, several aspects of the oligomeric state of sensor kinases in vivo in bacterial membranes, that is, before solubilization by detergent, are not clear. In this study, the oligomerization of full-length DcuS was examined in vivo in growing bacteria and in bacterial membranes and in vitro after isolation and reconstitution in liposomes by chemical cross-linking and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) spectroscopy. FRET techniques have been used widely to study intermolecular interactions of biological molecules (1, 4, 18, 21, 23, 34). The sensitivity of fluorescence allows experiments at low concentrations of native proteins, and genetically generated fusions of DcuS with fluorescent proteins ensure site-specific labeling of DcuS for noninvasive and nondestructive measurements in living cells. In particular, it was investigated whether dimers or higher oligomeric states can be detected for DcuS and whether the oligomerization state depends on function-related parameters.
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