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Zinc-binding to the cytoplasmic PAS domain regulates the essential WalK histidine kinase of Staphylococcus aureus

Authors :
Glenn F. King
Brit Winnen
Benjamin P Howden
Brett M. Collins
Christopher A. McDevitt
Timothy P. Stinear
Michael J. Kuiper
Ian R. Monk
Torsten Seemann
Mike Gajdiss
Jean Y. H. Lee
Nausad Shaikh
Stephanie L. Begg
Sacha J. Pidot
Rikki N. Hvorup
Gabriele Bierbaum
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

WalKR (YycFG) is the only essential two-component regulator in the human pathogenStaphylococcus aureus.WalKR regulates peptidoglycan synthesis, but this function alone appears not to explain its essentiality. To understand WalKR function we investigated a suppressor mutant that arose when WalKR activity was impaired; a single histidine to tryptophan substitution (H271Y) in the cytoplasmic Per-Arnt-Sim (PASCYT) domain of the histidine kinase WalK. Introduction of the WalKH271Ymutation into wild-typeS.aureusactivated the WalKR regulon. Structural analyses of the WalK PASCYTdomain revealed a hitherto unknown metal binding site, in which a zinc ion (Zn2+) was tetrahedrally-coordinated by four amino acid residues including H271. The WallkH271Ymutation abrogated metal binding, increasing WalK kinase activity and WalR phosphorylation. Thus, Zn2+-binding negatively regulates WalKR activity. Identification of a metal ligand sensed by the WalKR system substantially expands our understanding of this criticalS.aureusregulon.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9863994279360b3af7863626a0f7bb12
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/405365