5hlg
From Proteopedia
Structure of reduced AbfR bound to DNA
Structural highlights
FunctionPublication Abstract from PubMedAs a master redox-sensing MarR-family transcriptional regulator, AbfR participates in oxidative stress responses and virulence regulations in Staphylococcus epidermidis. Here, we present structural insights into the DNA-binding mechanism of AbfR in different oxidation states by determining the X-ray crystal structures of a reduced-AbfR/DNA complex, an overoxidized (Cys13-SO2H and Cys13-SO3H) AbfR/DNA, and 2-disulfide cross-linked AbfR dimer. Together with biochemical analyses, our results suggest that the redox regulation of AbfR-sensing displays two novel features: (i) the reversible disulfide modification, but not the irreversible overoxidation, significantly abolishes the DNA-binding ability of the AbfR repressor; (ii) either 1-disulfide cross-linked or 2-disulfide cross-linked AbfR dimer is biologically significant. The overoxidized species of AbfR, resembling the reduced AbfR in conformation and retaining the DNA-binding ability, does not exist in biologically significant concentrations, however. The 1-disulfide cross-linked modification endows AbfR with significantly weakened capability for DNA-binding. The 2-disulfide cross-linked AbfR adopts a very "open" conformation that is incompatible with DNA-binding. Overall, the concise oxidation chemistry of the redox-active cysteine allows AbfR to sense and respond to oxidative stress correctly and efficiently. Structural Insights into the Redox-Sensing Mechanism of MarR-Type Regulator AbfR.,Liu G, Liu X, Xu H, Liu X, Zhou H, Huang Z, Gan J, Chen H, Lan L, Yang CG J Am Chem Soc. 2017 Jan 23. doi: 10.1021/jacs.6b11438. PMID:28086264[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
|