4 resultados para SUBSTRATE-BINDING
em Digital Commons at Florida International University
Resumo:
Antibiotic resistance, production of alginate and virulence factors, and altered host immune responses are the hallmarks of chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection. Failure of antibiotic therapy has been attributed to the emergence of P. aeruginosa strains that produce β-lactamase constitutively. In Enterobacteriaceae, β-lactamase induction involves four genes with known functions: ampC, ampR, ampD, and ampG, encoding the enzyme, transcriptional regulator, amidase and permease, respectively. In addition to all these amp genes, P. aeruginosa possesses two ampG paralogs, designated ampG and ampP. In this study, P. aeruginosa ampC, ampR, ampG and ampP were analyzed. Inactivation of ampC in the prototypic PAO1 failed to abolish the β-lactamase activity leading to the discovery of P. aeruginosa oxacillinase PoxB. Cloning and expression of poxB in Escherichia coli confers β-lactam resistance. Both AmpC and PoxB contribute to P. aeruginosa resistance against a wide spectrum of β-lactam antibiotics. The expression of PoxB and AmpC is regulated by a LysR-type transcriptional regulator AmpR that up-regulates AmpC but down-regulates PoxB activities. Analyses of P. aeruginosa ampR mutant demonstrate that AmpR is a global regulator that modulates the expressions of Las and Rhl quorum sensing (QS) systems, and the production of pyocyanin, LasA protease and LasB elastase. Introduction of the ampR mutation into an alginate-producing strain reveals the presence of a complex co-regulatory network between antibiotic resistance, QS alginate and other virulence factor production. Using phoA and lacZ protein fusion analyses, AmpR, AmpG and AmpP were localized to the inner membrane with one, 16 and 10 transmembrane helices, respectively. AmpR has a cytoplasmic DNA-binding and a periplasmic substrate binding domains. AmpG and AmpP are essential for the maximal expression of β-lactamase. Analysis of the murein breakdown products suggests that AmpG exports UDP-N-acetylmuramyl-L-alanine-γ-D-glutamate-meso-diaminopimelic acid-D-alanine-D-alanine (UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide), the corepressor of AmpR, whereas AmpP imports N-acetylglucosaminyl-beta-1,4-anhydro-N-acetylmuramic acid-Ala-γ-D-Glu-meso-diaminopimelic acid (GlcNAc-anhMurNAc-tripeptide) and GlcNAc-anhMurNAc-pentapeptide, the co-inducers of AmpR. This study reveals a complex interaction between the Amp proteins and murein breakdown products involved in P. aeruginosa β-lactamase induction. In summary, this dissertation takes us a little closer to understanding the P. aeruginosa complex co-regulatory mechanism in the development of β-lactam resistance and establishment of chronic infection. ^
Resumo:
Hemoproteins are a very important class of enzymes in nature sharing the essentially same prosthetic group, heme, and are good models for exploring the relationship between protein structure and function. Three important hemoproteins, chloroperoxidase (CPO), horseradish peroxidase (HRP), and cytochrome P450cam (P450cam), have been extensively studied as archetypes for the relationship between structure and function. In this study, a series of 1D and 2D NMR experiments were successfully conducted to contribute to the structural studies of these hemoproteins. ^ During the epoxidation of allylbenzene, CPO is converted to an inactive green species with the prosthetic heme modified by addition of the alkene plus an oxygen atom forming a five-membered chelate ring. Complete assignment of the NMR resonances of the modified porphyrin extracted and demetallated from green CPO unambiguously established the structure of this porphyrin as an NIII-alkylated product. A novel substrate binding motif of CPO was proposed from this concluded regiospecific N-alkylation structure. ^ Soybean peroxidase (SBP) is considered as a more stable, more abundant and less expensive substitute of HRP for industrial applications. A NMR study of SBP using 1D and 2D NOE methods successfully established the active site structure of SBP and consequently fills in the blank of the SBP NMR study. All of the hyperfine shifts of the SBP-CN- complex are unambiguously assigned together with most of the prosthetic heme and all proximal His170 resonances identified. The active site structure of SBP revealed by this NMR study is in complete agreement with the recombinant SBP crystal structure and is highly similar to that of the HRP with minor differences. ^ The NMR study of paramagnetic P450cam had been greatly restricted for a long time. A combination of 2D NMR methods was used in this study for P450cam-CN - complexes with and without camphor bound. The results lead to the first unequivocal assignments of all heme hyperfine-shifted signals, together with certain correlated diamagnetic resonances. The observed alternation of the assigned novel proximal cysteine β-CH2 resonances induced by camphor binding indicated a conformational change near the proximal side.^
Resumo:
Chloroperoxidase (CPO) is the most versatile heme-containing enzyme that catalyzes a broad spectrum of reactions. The remarkable feature of this enzyme is the high regio- and enantio-selectivity exhibited in CPO-catalyzed oxidation reactions. The aim of this dissertation is to elucidate the structural basis for regio- and enantio-selective transformations and investigate the application of CPO in biodegradation of synthetic dyes. ^ To unravel the mechanism of CPO-catalyzed regioselective oxidation of indole, the dissertation explored the structure of CPO-indole complex using paramagnetic relaxation and molecular modeling. The distances between the protons of indole and the heme iron revealed that the pyrrole ring of indole is oriented toward the heme with its 2-H pointing directly at the heme iron. This provides the first experimental and theoretical explanation for the "unexpected" regioselectivity of CPO-catalyzed indole oxidation. Furthermore, the residues including Leu 70, Phe 103, Ile 179, Val 182, Glu 183, and Phe 186 were found essential to the substrate binding to CPO. These results will serve as a lighthouse in guiding the design of CPO mutants with tailor-made activities for biotechnological applications. ^ To understand the origin of the enantioselectivity of CPO-catalyzed oxidation reactions, the interactions of CPO with substrates such as 2-(methylthio)thiophene were investigated by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) and computational techniques. In particular, the enantioselectivity is partly explained by the binding orientation of substrates. In third facet of this dissertation, a green and efficient system for degradation of synthetic dyes was developed. Several commercial dyes such as orange G were tested in the CPO-H2O 2-Cl- system, where degradation of these dyes was found very efficient. The presence of halide ions and acidic pH were found necessary to the decomposition of dyes. Significantly, the results revealed that this degradation of azo dyes involves a ferric hypochlorite intermediate of CPO (Fe-OCl), compound X.^
Resumo:
Chloroperoxidase (CPO) is the most versatile heme-containing enzyme that catalyzes a broad spectrum of reactions. The remarkable feature of this enzyme is the high regio- and enantio-selectivity exhibited in CPO-catalyzed oxidation reactions. The aim of this dissertation is to elucidate the structural basis for regio- and enantio-selective transformations and investigate the application of CPO in biodegradation of synthetic dyes. To unravel the mechanism of CPO-catalyzed regioselective oxidation of indole, the dissertation explored the structure of CPO-indole complex using paramagnetic relaxation and molecular modeling. The distances between the protons of indole and the heme iron revealed that the pyrrole ring of indole is oriented toward the heme with its 2-H pointing directly at the heme iron. This provides the first experimental and theoretical explanation for the "unexpected" regioselectivity of CPO-catalyzed indole oxidation. Furthermore, the residues including Leu 70, Phe 103, Ile 179, Val 182, Glu 183, and Phe 186 were found essential to the substrate binding to CPO. These results will serve as a lighthouse in guiding the design of CPO mutants with tailor-made activities for biotechnological applications. To understand the origin of the enantioselectivity of CPO-catalyzed oxidation reactions, the interactions of CPO with substrates such as 2-(methylthio)thiophene were investigated by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) and computational techniques. In particular, the enantioselectivity is partly explained by the binding orientation of substrates. In third facet of this dissertation, a green and efficient system for degradation of synthetic dyes was developed. Several commercial dyes such as orange G were tested in the CPO-H2O2-Cl- system, where degradation of these dyes was found very efficient. The presence of halide ions and acidic pH were found necessary to the decomposition of dyes. Significantly, the results revealed that this degradation of azo dyes involves a ferric hypochlorite intermediate of CPO (Fe-OCl), compound X.