4.8 Article

Structural insights into homo- and heterotropic allosteric coupling in the zinc sensor S-aureus CzrA from covalently fused dimers

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 128, Issue 6, Pages 1937-1947

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja0546828

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM 042569] Funding Source: Medline

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The Zn(II)/Co(II)-sensing transcriptional repressor, Staphylococcus aureus CzrA, is a homodimer containing a symmetry-related pair of subunit-bridging tetrahedral N3O metal sensor coordination sites. A metal-induced quaternary structural change within the homodimer is thought to govern the biological activity of this and other metal sensor proteins. Here, we exploit covalent (Gly(4)Ser)(n) linkers of variable length in fused CzrAs, where n = 1 (designated SL-fCzrA), 2 (10L-fCzrA), or 3 (15L-fCzrA), as molecular rulers designed to restrict any quaternary structural changes that are associated with metal binding and metalmediated allosteric regulation of DNA binding to varying degrees. While 15L-fCzrA exhibits properties most like homodimeric CzrA, shortening the linker in 10L-fCzrA abolishes negative homotropic cooperativity of Zn(II) binding and reduces DNA binding affinity of the apoprotein significantly. Decreasing the linker length further in 5L-fCzrA effectively destroys one metal site altogether and further reduces DNA binding affinity. However, Zn(II) negatively regulates DNA binding of all fCzrAs, with allosteric coupling free energies (Delta G(c)(1).) of 4.6, 3.1, and 2.7 kcal mol(-1) for 15L-, 10L-, and 5L-fCzrAs, respectively. Introduction of a single nonliganding H97N substitution into either the N-terminal or C-terminal protomer domain in 10L-fCzrA results in Delta G(c)(1) = 2.6 kcal mol-1 or approximate to 83% that of 10L-fCzrA; in contrast, homodimeric H97N CzrA gives Delta G(c)(1) = 0. H-1-N-15 HSQC spectra acquired for wt-, 10L-fCzrA and H97N 10L-fCzrA in various Zn(II) ligation states reveal that the allosteric change of the protomer domains within the fused climer is independent and not concerted. Thus, occupancy of a single metal site by Zn(II) introduces asymmetry into the CzrA homodimer that leads to significant allosteric regulation of DNA binding.

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