15 research outputs found
Structural Alterations in a Component of Cytochrome c Oxidase and Molecular Evolution of Pathogenic Neisseria in Humans
Three closely related bacterial species within the genus Neisseria are of importance to human disease and health. Neisseria meningitidis is a major cause of meningitis, while Neisseria gonorrhoeae is the agent of the sexually transmitted disease gonorrhea and Neisseria lactamica is a common, harmless commensal of children. Comparative genomics have yet to yield clear insights into which factors dictate the unique host-parasite relationships exhibited by each since, as a group, they display remarkable conservation at the levels of nucleotide sequence, gene content and synteny. Here, we discovered two rare alterations in the gene encoding the CcoP protein component of cytochrome cbb3 oxidase that are phylogenetically informative. One is a single nucleotide polymorphism resulting in CcoP truncation that acts as a molecular signature for the species N. meningitidis. We go on to show that the ancestral ccoP gene arose by a unique gene duplication and fusion event and is specifically and completely distributed within species of the genus Neisseria. Surprisingly, we found that strains engineered to express either of the two CcoP forms conditionally differed in their capacity to support nitrite-dependent, microaerobic growth mediated by NirK, a nitrite reductase. Thus, we propose that changes in CcoP domain architecture and ensuing alterations in function are key traits in successive, adaptive radiations within these metapopulations. These findings provide a dramatic example of how rare changes in core metabolic proteins can be connected to significant macroevolutionary shifts. They also show how evolutionary change at the molecular level can be linked to metabolic innovation and its reversal as well as demonstrating how genotype can be used to infer alterations of the fitness landscape within a single host
Identification of a histidine-tyrosine cross-link in the active site of the cbb(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides
The heme-copper oxidases constitute a superfamily of terminal dioxygen-reducing enzymes located in the inner mitochondrial or in the bacterial cell membrane. The presence of a mechanistically important covalent bond between a histidine ligand of the copper ion (Cu(B)) in the active site and a generally conserved tyrosine residue nearby has been shown to exist in the canonical cytochrome c oxidases. However, according to sequence alignment studies, this critical tyrosine is missing from the subfamily of cbb(3)-type oxidases found in certain bacteria. Recently, homology modeling has suggested that a tyrosine residue located in a different helix might fulfill this role in these enzymes. Here, we show directly by methods of protein chemistry and mass spectrometry that there is indeed a covalent link between this tyrosine and the copper-ligating histidine. The identity of the cross-linked tyrosine was determined by showing that the cross-link is not formed when this residue is replaced by phenylalanine, even though structural integrity is maintained. These results suggest a universal functional importance of the histidine-tyrosine cross-link in the mechanism of O(2) reduction by all heme-copper oxidases