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In vivo and in vitro kinetics of metal transfer by the Klebsiella aerogenes urease nickel metallochaperone, UreE
Authors:Colpas G J  Hausinger R P
Affiliation:Departments of Biochemistry and Microbiology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824-1101, USA.
Abstract:The urease accessory protein encoded by ureE from Klebsiella aerogenes is proposed to deliver Ni(II) to the urease apoprotein during enzyme activation. Native UreE possesses a histidine-rich region at its carboxyl terminus that binds several equivalents of Ni(2+); however, a truncated form of this protein (H144*UreE) binds only 2 Ni(2+) per dimer and is functionally active (Brayman, T. G., and Hausinger, R. P. (1996) J. Bacteriol. 178, 5410-5416). The urease activation kinetics were studied in vivo by monitoring the development of urease activity upon adding Ni(2+) to spectinomycin-treated Escherichia coli cells that expressed the complete K. aerogenes urease gene cluster with altered forms of ureE. Site-specific alterations of H144*UreE decrease the rate of in vivo urease activation, with the most dramatic changes observed for the H96A, H110A, D111A, and H112A substitutions. Notably, urease activity in cells producing H96A/H144*UreE was lower than cells containing a ureE deletion. Prior studies had shown that H110A and H112A variants each bound a single Ni(2+) per dimer with elevated K(d) values compared with control H144*UreE, whereas the H96A and D111A variants bound 2 Ni(2+) per dimer with unperturbed K(d) values (Colpas, G. J., Brayman, T. G., Ming, L.-J., and Hausinger, R. P. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 4078-4088). To understand why cells containing the latter two proteins showed reduced rates of urease activation, we characterized their metal binding/dissociation kinetics and compared the results to those obtained for H144*UreE. The truncated protein was shown to sequentially bind two Ni(2+) with k(1) approximately 18 and k(2) approximately 100 M(-1) s(-1), and with dissociation rates k(-1) approximately 3 x 10(-3) and k(-2) approximately 10(-4) s(-1). Similar apparent rates of binding and dissociation were noted for the two mutant proteins, suggesting that altered H144*UreE interactions with Ni(2+) do not account for the changes in cellular urease activation. These conclusions are further supported by in vitro experiments demonstrating that addition of H144*UreE to urease apoprotein activation mixtures inhibited the rate and extent of urease formation. Our results highlight the importance of other urease accessory proteins in assisting UreE-dependent urease maturation.
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