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Cloning, expression, purification and characterization of a DsbA-like protein from Wolbachia pipientis
Authors
Alun Jones
Bardwell
+42 more
Begoña Heras
Collet
Debarbieux
Edeling
Ellermeier
Ellman
Floate
Gautier Robin
Gordon J. King
Goulding
Gruber
Heras
Hillson
Holmgren
Iñaki Iturbe-Ormaetxe
Jennifer L. Martin
Jeyaprakash
Kadokura
Kelley
Mareike Kurz
Martin
Martin
McCarthy
Messens
Nakamoto
Nathan Cowieson
O’Neill
O’Neill
Patrick Frei
Raina
Riegler
Rietsch
Rudi Glockshuber
Russell Jarrott
Sambrook
Scott L. O’Neill
Studier
Taylor
Taylor
Werren
Wu
Yu
Publication date
1 June 2008
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
Abstract
Wolbachia pipientis are obligate endosymbionts that infect a wide range of insect and other arthropod species. They act as reproductive parasites by manipulating the host reproduction machinery to enhance their own transmission. This unusual phenotype is thought to be a consequence of the actions of secreted Wolbachia proteins that are likely to contain disulfide bonds to stabilize the protein structure. In bacteria, the introduction or isomerization of disulfide bonds in proteins is catalyzed by Dsb proteins. The Wolbachia genome encodes two proteins, a-DsbA1 and a-DsbA2, that might catalyze these steps. In this work we focussed on the 234 residue protein a-DsbA1; the gene was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, the protein was purified and its identity confirmed by mass spectrometry. The sequence identity of a-DsbA1 for both dithiol oxidants(E. coli DsbA, 12%) and disulfide isomerases(E. coli DsbC, 14%) is similar. We therefore sought to establish whether a-DsbA1 is an oxidant or an isomerase based on functional activity. The purified a-DsbA1 was active in an oxidoreductase assay but had little isomerase activity, indicating that a-DsbA1 is DsbA-like rather than DsbC-like. This work represents the first successful example of the characterization of a recombinant Wolbachia protein. Purified a-DsbA1 will now be used in further functional studies to identify protein substrates that could help explain the molecular basis for the unusual Wolbachia phenotypes, and in structural studies to explore its relationship to other disulfide oxidoreductase proteins. Copyright © 2008 Elsevier In
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