19 research outputs found

    A third subunit in ancestral cytochrome c-dependent nitric oxide reductases

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    Reduction of NO to N2O by denitrifiying bacteria is catalyzed either by a monomeric quinol-nitric oxide reductase (qNor) or by a heterodimeric cytochrome c-dependent nitric oxide reductase (cNor). In ancient thermophilic bacteria belonging to the Thermales and Aquificales phylogenetic groups, the cluster encoding the cNor includes a small third gene (norH), in addition to those encoding homologues to the subunits of a typical cNor (norC and norB). We show in Thermus thermophilus that the three genes are cotranscribed in a single mRNA from an inducible promoter. The isolation of individual nor mutants and the production in vivo of His-tagged NorH protein followed by immobilized-metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) allowed us to conclude that NorH constitutes a third subunit of the cNor from T. thermophilus, which is involved in denitrification in vivo, likely allowing more efficient electron transport to cNor. © 2014, American Society for Microbiology.Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiviness (MEC) and by National Institutes of Health grants HL16101 (R.B.G.) and GM095600 (R.B.G.). An institutional grant from Fundación Ramón Areces to CBMSO and financial support to the Spanish National Network for Extremophilic Microorganisms (BIO2011-12879-E)Peer Reviewe

    Review and Hypothesis. New insights into the reaction mechanism of transhydrogenase: Swivelling the dIII component may gate the proton channel

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    AbstractThe membrane protein transhydrogenase in animal mitochondria and bacteria couples reduction of NADP+ by NADH to proton translocation. Recent X-ray data on Thermus thermophilus transhydrogenase indicate a significant difference in the orientations of the two dIII components of the enzyme dimer (Leung et al., 2015). The character of the orientation change, and a review of information on the kinetics and thermodynamics of transhydrogenase, indicate that dIII swivelling might assist in the control of proton gating by the redox state of bound NADP+/NADPH during enzyme turnover

    Type 2 NADH dehydrogenase is the only point of entry for electrons into the Streptococcus agalactiae respiratory chain and is a potential drug target

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    The opportunistic pathogen Streptococcus agalactiae is the major cause of meningitis and sepsis in a newborn’s first week, as well as a considerable cause of pneumonia, urinary tract infections, and sepsis in immunocompromised adults. This pathogen respires aerobically if heme and quinone are available in the environment, and a functional respiratory chain is required for full virulence. Remarkably, it is shown here that the entire respiratory chain of S. agalactiae consists of only two enzymes, a type 2 NADH dehydrogenase (NDH-2) and a cytochrome bd oxygen reductase. There are no respiratory dehydrogenases other than NDH-2 to feed electrons into the respiratory chain, and there is only one respiratory oxygen reductase to reduce oxygen to water. Although S. agalactiae grows well in vitro by fermentative metabolism, it is shown here that the absence of NDH-2 results in attenuated virulence, as observed by reduced colonization in heart and kidney in a mouse model of systemic infection. The lack of NDH-2 in mammalian mitochondria and its important role for virulence suggest this enzyme may be a potential drug target. For this reason, in this study, S. agalactiae NDH-2 was purified and biochemically characterized, and the isolated enzyme was used to screen for inhibitors from libraries of FDA-approved drugs. Zafirlukast was identified to successfully inhibit both NDH-2 activity and aerobic respiration in intact cells. This compound may be useful as a laboratory tool to inhibit respiration in S. agalactiae and, since it has few side effects, it might be considered a lead compound for therapeutics development. IMPORTANCE S. agalactiae is part of the human intestinal microbiota and is present in the vagina of ~30% of healthy women. Although a commensal, it is also the leading cause of septicemia and meningitis in neonates and immunocompromised adults. This organism can aerobically respire, but only using external sources of heme and quinone, required to have a functional electron transport chain. Although bacteria usually have a branched respiratory chain with multiple dehydrogenases and terminal oxygen reductases, here we establish that S. agalactiae utilizes only one type 2 NADH dehydrogenase (NDH-2) and one cytochrome bd oxygen reductase to perform respiration. NADH-dependent respiration plays a critical role in the pathogen in maintaining NADH/NAD+ redox balance in the cell, optimizing ATP production, and tolerating oxygen. In summary, we demonstrate the essential role of NDH-2 in respiration and its contribution to S. agalactiae virulence and propose it as a potential drug target

    Phosphate-Enhanced Stationary-Phase Fitness of Escherichia coli Is Related to Inorganic Polyphosphate Level▿

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    We found that Escherichia coli grown in media with >37 mM phosphate maintained a high polyphosphate level in late stationary phase, which could account for changes in gene expression and enzyme activities that enhance stationary-phase fitness

    Characterization of the nitric oxide reductase from Thermus thermophilus

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    Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a powerful greenhouse gas implicated in climate change. The dominant source of atmospheric N2O is incomplete biological dentrification, and the enzymes responsible for the release of N 2O are NO reductases. It was recently reported that ambient emissions of N2O from the Great Boiling Spring in the United States Great Basin are high, and attributed to incomplete denitrification by Thermus thermophilus and related bacterial species [Hedlund BP, et al. (2011) Geobiology 9(6)471-480]. In the present work, we have isolated and characterized the NO reductase (NOR) from T. thermophilus. The enzyme is a member of the cNOR family of enzymes and belongs to a phylogenetic clade that is distinct from previously examined cNORs. Like other characterized cNORs, the T. thermophilus cNOR consists of two subunits, NorB and NorC, and contains a one heme c, one Ca 2+, a low-spin heme b, and an active site consisting of a high-spin heme b and FeB. The roles of conserved residues within the cNOR family were investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. The most important and unexpected result is that the glutamic acid ligand to FeB is not essential for function. The E211A mutant retains 68% of wild-type activity. Mutagenesis data and the pattern of conserved residues suggest that there is probably not a single pathway for proton delivery from the periplasm to the active site that is shared by all cNORs, and that there may be multiple pathways within the T. thermophilus cNOR. © PNAS 2013.National Institutes of Health (HL16101); Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity (BIO2010-18875); Fundación Ramón ArecesPeer Reviewe

    CtaM Is Required for Menaquinol Oxidase aa3 Function in Staphylococcus aureus

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    Staphylococcus aureus is the leading cause of skin and soft tissue infections, bacteremia, osteomyelitis, and endocarditis in the developed world. The ability of S. aureus to cause substantial disease in distinct host environments is supported by a flexible metabolism that allows this pathogen to overcome challenges unique to each host organ. One feature of staphylococcal metabolic flexibility is a branched aerobic respiratory chain composed of multiple terminal oxidases. Whereas previous biochemical and spectroscopic studies reported the presence of three different respiratory oxygen reductases (o type, bd type, and aa3 type), the genome contains genes encoding only two respiratory oxygen reductases, cydAB and qoxABCD. Previous investigation showed that cydAB and qoxABCD are required to colonize specific host organs, the murine heart and liver, respectively. This work seeks to clarify the relationship between the genetic studies showing the unique roles of the cydAB and qoxABCD in virulence and the respiratory reductases reported in the literature. We establish that QoxABCD is an aa3-type menaquinol oxidase but that this enzyme is promiscuous in that it can assemble as a bo3-type menaquinol oxidase. However, the bo3 form of QoxABCD restricts the carbon sources that can support the growth of S. aureus. In addition, QoxABCD function is supported by a previously uncharacterized protein, which we have named CtaM, that is conserved in aerobically respiring Firmicutes. In total, these studies establish the heme A biosynthesis pathway in S. aureus, determine that QoxABCD is a type aa3 menaquinol oxidase, and reveal CtaM as a new protein required for type aa3 menaquinol oxidase function in multiple bacterial genera

    Ionophoric effects of the antitubercular drug bedaquiline

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    Bedaquiline (BDQ), an inhibitor of the mycobacterial F1Fo-ATP synthase, has revolutionized the antitubercular drug discovery program by defining energy metabolism as a potent new target space. Several studies have recently suggested that BDQ ultimately causes mycobacterial cell death through a phenomenon known as uncoupling. The biochemical basis underlying this, in BDQ, is unresolved and may represent a new pathway to the development of effective therapeutics. In this communication, we demonstrate that BDQ can inhibit ATP synthesis in Escherichia coli by functioning as a H+/K+ ionophore, causing transmembrane pH and potassium gradients to be equilibrated. Despite the apparent lack of a BDQ-binding site, incorporating the E. coli Fo subunit into liposomes enhanced the ionophoric activity of BDQ. We discuss the possibility that localization of BDQ at F1Fo-ATP synthases enables BDQ to create an uncoupled microenvironment, by antiport-ing H+/K+. Ionophoric properties may be desirable in high-affinity antimicrobials targeting integral membrane proteins

    Type 2 NADH dehydrogenase is the only point of entry for electrons into the Streptococcus agalactiae respiratory chain and is a potential drug target

    No full text
    The opportunistic pathogen Streptococcus agalactiae is the major cause of meningitis and sepsis in a newborn's first week, as well as a considerable cause of pneumonia, urinary tract infections, and sepsis in immunocompromised adults. This pathogen respires aerobically if heme and quinone are available in the environment, and a functional respiratory chain is required for full virulence. Remarkably, it is shown here that the entire respiratory chain of S. agalactiae consists of only two enzymes, a type 2 NADH dehydrogenase (NDH-2) and a cytochrome bd oxygen reductase. There are no respiratory dehydrogenases other than NDH-2 to feed electrons into the respiratory chain, and there is only one respiratory oxygen reductase to reduce oxygen to water. Although S. agalactiae grows well in vitro by fermentative metabolism, it is shown here that the absence of NDH-2 results in attenuated virulence, as observed by reduced colonization in heart and kidney in a mouse model of systemic infection. The lack of NDH-2 in mammalian mitochondria and its important role for virulence suggest this enzyme may be a potential drug target. For this reason, in this study, S. agalactiae NDH-2 was purified and biochemically characterized, and the isolated enzyme was used to screen for inhibitors from libraries of FDA-approved drugs. Zafirlukast was identified to successfully inhibit both NDH-2 activity and aerobic respiration in intact cells. This compound may be useful as a laboratory tool to inhibit respiration in S. agalactiae and, since it has few side effects, it might be considered a lead compound for therapeutics development. IMPORTANCE S. agalactiae is part of the human intestinal microbiota and is present in the vagina of similar to 30% of healthy women. Although a commensal, it is also the leading cause of septicemia and meningitis in neonates and immunocompromised adults. This organism can aerobically respire, but only using external sources of heme and quinone, required to have a functional electron transport chain. Although bacteria usually have a branched respiratory chain with multiple dehydrogenases and terminal oxygen reductases, here we establish that S. agalactiae utilizes only one type 2 NADH dehydrogenase (NDH-2) and one cytochrome bd oxygen reductase to perform respiration. NADH-dependent respiration plays a critical role in the pathogen in maintaining NADH/NAD(+) redox balance in the cell, optimizing ATP production, and tolerating oxygen. In summary, we demonstrate the essential role of NDH-2 in respiration and its contribution to S. agalactiae virulence and propose it as a potential drug target

    Ionophoric effects of the antitubercular drug bedaquiline

    Get PDF
    Bedaquiline (BDQ), an inhibitor of the mycobacterial F1Fo-ATP synthase, has revolutionized the antitubercular drug discovery program by defining energy metabolism as a potent new target space. Several studies have recently suggested that BDQ ultimately causes mycobacterial cell death through a phenomenon known as uncoupling. The biochemical basis underlying this, in BDQ, is unresolved and may represent a new pathway to the development of effective therapeutics. In this communication, we demonstrate that BDQ can inhibit ATP synthesis in Escherichia coli by functioning as a H+/K+ ionophore, causing transmembrane pH and potassium gradients to be equilibrated. Despite the apparent lack of a BDQ-binding site, incorporating the E. coli Fo subunit into liposomes enhanced the ionophoric activity of BDQ. We discuss the possibility that localization of BDQ at F1Fo-ATP synthases enables BDQ to create an uncoupled microenvironment, by antiport-ing H+/K+. Ionophoric properties may be desirable in high-affinity antimicrobials targeting integral membrane proteins.Accepted Author ManuscriptBT/Biocatalysi
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