4.8 Article

Escherichia coli acid resistance:: pH-sensing, activation by chloride and autoinhibition in GadB

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 25, Issue 11, Pages 2643-2651

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.emboj.7601107

Keywords

autoinhibition; bacterial acid resistance; chloride binding; glutamate decarboxylase; pyridoxal 5 '-phosphate

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Escherichia coli and other enterobacteria exploit the H+-consuming reaction catalysed by glutamate decarboxylase to survive the stomach acidity before reaching the intestine. Here we show that chloride, extremely abundant in gastric secretions, is an allosteric activator producing a 10-fold increase in the decarboxylase activity at pH 5.6. Cooperativity and sensitivity to chloride were lost when the N-terminal 14 residues, involved in the formation of two triple-helix bundles, were deleted by mutagenesis. X-ray structures, obtained in the presence of the substrate analogue acetate, identified halide-binding sites at the base of each N-terminal helix, showed how halide binding is responsible for bundle stability and demonstrated that the interconversion between active and inactive forms of the enzyme is a stepwise process. We also discovered an entirely novel structure of the cofactor pyridoxal 5'-phosphate ( aldamine) to be responsible for the reversibly inactivated enzyme. Our results link the entry of chloride ions, via the H+/Cl- exchange activities of ClC-ec1, to the trigger of the acid stress response in the cell when the intracellular proton concentration has not yet reached fatal values.

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