4.5 Article

The Aer2 chemoreceptor from Vibrio vulnificus is a tri-PAS-heme oxygen sensor

Journal

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 119, Issue 1, Pages 59-73

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mmi.15007

Keywords

chemoreceptor; oxygen sensing; PAS domain; signal transduction; Vibrio vulnificus

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In this study, the chemoreceptor VvAer2 in the marine pathogen Vibrio vulnificus was analyzed and found to have unique structural features compared to other bacteria. Experimental results confirmed that VvAer2 can sense and respond to oxygen. Further investigations revealed distinct roles of different PAS domains in signal transduction, strengthening previous understandings of Aer2 receptors.
The marine pathogen Vibrio vulnificus senses and responds to environmental stimuli via two chemosensory systems and 42-53 chemoreceptors. Here, we present an analysis of the V. vulnificus Aer2 chemoreceptor, VvAer2, which is the first V. vulnificus chemoreceptor to be characterized. VvAer2 is related to the Aer2 receptors of other gammaproteobacteria, but uncharacteristically contains three PAS domains (PAS1-3), rather than one or two. Using an E. coli chemotaxis hijack assay, we determined that VvAer2, like other Aer2 receptors, senses and responds to O-2. All three VvAer2 PAS domains bound pentacoordinate b-type heme and exhibited similar O-2 affinities. PAS2 and PAS3 both stabilized O-2 via conserved I beta-Trp residues, but PAS1, which was easily oxidized in vitro, was unaffected by I beta-Trp replacement. Our results support a model in which PAS1 is largely dispensable for O-2-mediated signaling, whereas PAS2 modulates PAS3 signaling, and PAS3 signals to the downstream domains. Each PAS domain appeared to be positionally optimized, because PAS swapping caused altered signaling properties, and neither PAS1 nor PAS2 could replace PAS3. Our findings strengthen previous conclusions that Aer2 receptors are O-2 sensors, but with distinct N-terminal domain arrangements that facilitate, modulate and tune responses based on environmental signals.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available