1 research outputs found
Asymmetric Structure of the Dimerization Domain of PhoR, a Sensor Kinase Important for the Virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
The
PhoP–PhoR two-component system is essential for the
virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (<i>Mtb</i>) and therefore represents a potential target
for developing novel antituberculosis therapies. However, little is
known about the mechanism by which this two-component system regulates
the virulence. In this study, we demonstrated that a <i>phoR</i> mutant <i>Mtb</i> strain has phenotypes similar to those
of a <i>phoP</i> mutant, suggesting that PhoP and PhoR work
in the same pathway to regulate <i>Mtb</i> virulence. We
determined the structure of the dimerization and histidine phosphotransfer
(DHp) domain of PhoR to a 1.9 Ã… resolution. The structure revealed
that the DHp domain is a dimer. Each subunit consists of two antiparallel
α helices connected by a loop of five residues. The two subunits
of the dimer fold into a four-helical bundle with a continuous hydrophobic
core. The topology of the four-helical bundle is identical to the
histidine kinases that are known to have a cis-autophosphorylation
mechanism, suggesting that PhoR is likely to autophosphorylate in
cis. The dimer is asymmetric, with one subunit having a greater bending
angle than the other at the highly conserved proline residue five-residues
downstream of the phosphorylation site histidine. This structural
asymmetry of the dimer suggests the flexibility of the PhoR DHp domain,
which is likely to be important for the signal transduction mechanism
in controlling the autophosphorylation and phosphotransfer reactions
and communicating with the upstream structure