|








| |
Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 5303-5310, Vol . 186,
No . 16
Defined
Inactive FecA Derivatives Mutated in Functional Domains of the Outer Membrane
Transport and Signaling Protein of Escherichia coli K-12
Annette Sauter and Volkmar Braun*
Mikrobiologie/Membranphysiologie, Universität Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
Received 19 February 2004/ Accepted 14 May 2004
The FecA outer membrane protein of Escherichia coli functions
as a transporter of ferric citrate and as a signal receiver and
signal transmitter for transcription initiation of the fec
transport genes . Three FecA regions for which functional roles have
been predicted from the crystal structures were mutagenized: (i)
loops 7 and 8, which move upon binding of ferric citrate and close
the entrance to the ferric citrate binding site; (ii) the dinuclear
ferric citrate binding site; and (iii) the interface between the
globular domain and the ß-barrel . Deletion of loops 7 and 8 abolished
FecA transport and induction activities . Deletion of loops 3 and 11
also inactivated FecA, whereas deletion of loops 9 and 10 largely
retained FecA activities . The replacement of arginine residue R365 or
R380 and glutamine Q570, which are predicted to serve as binding
sites for the negatively charged dinuclear ferric citrate, with
alanine resulted in inactive FecA, whereas the binding site mutant
R438A retained approximately 50% of the FecA induction and transport
activities . Residues R150, E541, and E587, conserved among
energy-coupled outer membrane transporters, are predicted to form
salt bridges between the globular domain and the ß-barrel and to
contribute to the fixation of the globular domain inside the
ß-barrel . Mutations E541A and E541R affected FecA induction and
transport activity slightly, whereas mutations E587A and E587R more
strongly reduced FecA activity . The double mutations R150A E541R and
R150A E587R nearly abolished FecA activity . Apparently, the
salt bridges are less important than the individual functions these
residues seem to have for FecA activity . Comparison of the properties
of the FecA, FhuA, FepA, and BtuB transporters indicates that
although they have very similar crystal structures, the details of
their functional mechanisms differ .
FecA serves as a transport protein for ferric citrate across the
outer membrane of Escherichia coli and as a signal receiving
and signal transduction protein (4, 24,
28) . Binding of ferric citrate to FecA induces
transcription of the ferric citrate transport genes fecABCDE (4,
5, 7) . Transport of ferric citrate
is not required for induction . The N terminus of FecA is located
in the periplasm and interacts with the FecR signal-transducing
protein across the cytoplasmic membrane (17) . Deletion of the
N terminus abolishes induction, but transport is fully retained
(28) . FecR interacts with the FecI sigma factor in the
cytoplasm and controls transcription initiation of the fec
transport genes (18, 43) .
Comparisons with genome sequences of other bacteria reveal homologs
of FecIRA whose encoding genes are arranged in the same order as
fecIRA of E . coli (7) . Particularly abundant
are fecIRA homologs in Pseudomonas aeruginosa (46),
Pseudomonas putida (34), Nitrosomonas
europaea, and Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, for which 10,
11, 15, and 23 fecIRA gene clusters, respectively, are
predicted (V . Braun and S . Mahren, unpublished results) . The E .
coli fecIRA type of transmembrane transcriptional control thus
seems to represent a paradigm of a large number of similar
transcriptional control devices in many gram-negative bacteria .
The crystal structure of FecA is similar to the crystal structures
of FhuA (20, 33), FepA (8),
and BtuB (12, 13) . They all consist
of a ß-barrel composed of 22 antiparallel ß-strands that form a
channel closed by the N-terminal globular domain . Only FecA contains,
in addition to the globular domain located inside the ß-barrel, a
periplasmic 79-residue N-terminal extension through which it
interacts with FecR for fec transport gene transcription
initiation (Fig . 1) . Moreover, it is the only
transporter for which the crystal structure revealed a strong
movement of surface loops 7 and 8 upon binding of the substrate,
dinuclear ferric citrate . It is thought that this movement closes the
entrance to the ferric citrate binding site and thus prevents escape
of ferric citrate into the medium when it is released from the
binding site during transport through the ß-barrel into the
periplasm . Interestingly, when FecA is incubated with iron-free
citrate, two citrate molecules bind to the binding site of dinuclear
ferric citrate but do not induce movement of loops 7 and 8 (48) .
Not all citrate binding sites are identical to the ferric citrate
binding site, and the configuration of the two citrate molecules
differs from that of ferric citrate . Citrate alone does not induce
synthesis of the ferric citrate transport system (25),
as confirmed by measuring transcription of a fecA-lacZ
reporter gene (V . Braun and C . Herrmann, unpublished results) .
|
FIG . 1 . Topology of the FecA polypeptide chain across the outer membrane
of E . coli . The outer membrane (OM) transmembrane antiparallel
ß-strands of the unfolded ß-barrel are connected at the cell surface by
loops 1 to 11 (L1 to L11) . The residues of the globular domain, the
ß-barrel, and the loops that are predicted to bind dinuclear ferric
citrate (21) are shaded black . Residues R150, E541,
and E581 at the interface between the globular domain and the ß-barrel
are shaded grey . The signal sequence released upon secretion of FecA
across the cytoplasmic membrane and the TonB box are indicated . The
globular cork domain (residues 80 to 221) that is inserted in the
ß-barrel is shown as linear sequence.
|
|
Since closure of the entry cavity upon binding of the substrate is
seen only in the crystal of FecA (21) but not in the crystals
of FhuA (20, 33) and BtuB (12,
13), whether loops 7 and 8 are essential for FecA
activity was studied . It was conceivable that deletion of these loops
would reduce, but not abolish, transport . Furthermore, the signaling
activity of FecA requires TonB, ExbB, and ExbD, as does the transport
activity . Whether signaling has the same FecA structural requirements
as transport, in particular with regard to loops 7 and 8, was
addressed . Loops 7 and 8 were deleted to determine whether they are
essential for ferric citrate induction and transport . For comparison,
other loops were deleted, and the activities of the FecA deletion
derivatives were tested . Moreover, amino acids in the predicted
ferric citrate binding site, composed of residues from the globular
domain and the ß-barrel, were replaced by alanine . The basic amino
acids lysine (K) in loop 7 and arginine (R) in loop 8 were replaced
by alanine to determine whether they form primary ferric citrate
binding sites that facilitate entry of ferric citrate into the tight
binding site inside FecA .
Bacterial strains, plasmids, and growth conditions. The strains
and plasmids used are listed in Table 1 . Cells were
grown at 37°C in tryptone-yeast extract and nutrient broth (NB)
(Difco Laboratories) and supplemented, as indicated, with 1 mM
citrate and where required with ampicillin (40 µg/ml) or
chloramphenicol (20 µg/ml) .
| TABLE 1 . E . coli strains and plasmids used in this study
|
|
Construction of plasmids. Plasmids were constructed by PCR
amplification of DNA fragments with appropriate primer pairs, the
sequences of which are available upon request . E . coli K-12
strain AB2847 was used as a PCR template, unless indicated otherwise .
To construct plasmids pASA30 to pASA37, two fecA fragments lacking
the codons for the amino acids to be deleted were amplified by
PCR . Introduced restriction sites were used to ligate the fragments
to form mutant fecA genes, which were then PCR amplified . The
PCR products were digested with EcoRI and BamHI, which flank fecA,
and cloned into vector pT7-7 cleaved with EcoRI and BamHI .
The same procedure was used to construct pASA39, with pASA34 as a
template . Plasmid pASA29 was constructed by introducing an SphI
restriction site and a BsiWI restriction site before and after the
deleted amino acids of loop 7, respectively, in plasmid pASA32 .
pASA38 was constructed by replacing the EcoRI/BamHI fragment of
vector pT7-7 with the EcoRI/BamHI fecA PCR fragment encoding a
FecA protein with amino acids of loop 11 deleted .
To construct plasmids pASA40 to pASA53, the QuikChange site-directed
mutagenesis kit (Stratagene Europe, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
was used to introduce point mutations . pASA49 and pASA51 were used
for construction of pASA52 and pASA53 by PCR .
To obtain plasmids pASA54 to pASA57, SphI/BsiWI fhuA fragments
were amplified from plasmid pHK763 and cloned into pASA29 cleaved
with SphI and BsiWI .
Plasmids pASA58 to pASA85 were constructed by cloning fecA excised
with EcoRI and BamHI from plasmids pASA30 to pASA57 into plasmid
pMMO203 cleaved with EcoRI and BamHI .
The sequences of all constructed fecA derivatives were confirmed
by nucleotide sequencing .
Recombinant DNA techniques. Standard techniques (41)
or the protocols of suppliers were used for the isolation of plasmid
DNA, PCR, digestion with restriction endonucleases, ligation,
transformation, and agarose gel electrophoresis . DNA was sequenced
commercially using the dideoxy chain-termination method .
Transport assays. Quantitative transport of 55Fe3+
citrate by plasmid-encoded FecA was determined in freshly transformed
E . coli K-12 strain IS1031 fecA and with E . coli
AA93
fec,
which in addition to the various fecA genes was transformed
with pMON37 fecBCDE . Cells were grown overnight at 37°C in NB
medium and used to inoculate 7-ml NB medium supplemented with 0.4%
glucose and 1 mM sodium citrate . The culture was incubated for 3 h to
an optical density at 578 nm (OD578) of 0.5 to 1 to fully
induce the transport system . After 1.5 h, 50 µM dipyridyl was
added to complex free iron(II) ions in the medium and to induce
the fec transport genes . Cells were suspended to an OD578 of
0.5 in 5 ml of transport medium (2.07 g NaH2PO4 · H2O,
0.68 g of KH2PO4, 0.66 g of (NH4)2SO4,
47 mg of MgCl2, 22 mg of CaCl2, 1 g of glucose
per liter, adjusted to pH 6.9) . Sodium nitrilotriacetate (50 µl, 10
mM) was added, and the mixture was incubated for 5 min at 37°C to
remove free iron . After the addition of 50 µl of radioactive ferric
citrate (10 µM 55Fe3+, 1 M sodium citrate [pH
6.8]), 0.7-ml samples were taken after 1, 6, 11, 16, 21, and 26 min
of incubation at 37°C and filtered through cellulose nitrate filters
(pore size, 0.45 µm; Sartorius AG, Göttingen, Germany);
the filters were then washed twice with 5 ml of 0.1 M LiCl . The
filters were dried, and the radioactivity was determined by liquid
scintillation counting .
Iron citrate binding assays. Cells of
fec
E . coli AA93 were freshly transformed with the plasmids to be
tested and grown overnight at 37°C in NB medium . fecA
transcription was induced by growing cells first in 7 ml of NB medium
supplemented with 0.4% glucose and 1 mM sodium citrate . After 1.5 h,
50 µM dipyridyl was added to complex free iron(II) ions in the
medium . Cells were suspended to an OD578 of 0.5 in 5 ml of
transport medium as described in the transport assays . After addition
of 50 µl of the 55Fe3+ citrate mix (10 µM 55Fe3+,
1 M sodium citrate [pH 6.8]), 0.7-ml samples were taken after 1, 6,
11, 16, and 21 min of incubation at 37°C . After 21 min, a 100-fold
surplus of nonradioactive ferric citrate (1 mM) was added to chase
radiolabeled iron that has not entered the cytoplasm . Two chase
samples were measured . Probes were filtered through cellulose nitrate
filters (pore size, 0.45 µm; Sartorius AG) and washed twice with
5 ml of 0.1 M LiCl, the filters were dried, and the radioactivity
was determined by liquid scintillation counting .
Protein analytical methods and Western blotting. E . coli
AA93 transformed with one of the various plasmids was grown in NB
medium with or without 1 mM sodium citrate at 37°C . Cells were
harvested by centrifugation at an OD578 of 1 .
Outer membranes were prepared by lysing cells with lysozyme-EDTA,
followed by solubilization of the cytoplasmic membrane with 0.2%
Triton X-100 and differential centrifugation (23) . The
proteins were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (11% polyacrylamide) (32)
and then transferred to nitrocellulose membranes (Schleicher and
Schuell, Dassel, Germany) for Western blot analysis to estimate
the amount of wild-type FecA and mutant FecA . Blots were blocked in
5% bovine serum albumin in TNT buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, 500 mM NaCl,
0.05% Tween 20 [pH 7.5]), probed with polyclonal anti-FecA antibodies
(diluted 1:20,000) overnight, and then washed with TNT buffer and
incubated with anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G conjugated with alkaline
phosphatase (Sigma, München, Germany) . The blots were developed with
nitroblue tetrazolium-5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate (Serva,
Heidelberg, Germany) .
Determination of ß-galactosidase activity. ß-Galactosidase
activity was measured according to published methods (22,
35) . To determine the induction level, cells were
grown in NB medium with or without 1 mM sodium citrate .
Activity of loop deletion mutants. Loops 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, and
11 were each deleted such that at least three amino acid residues
remained to connect the ß-strands with a turn in the periplasm . In
loop 7 and 8 two different deletion mutants were constructed . Two
fragments in loop 7 were excised that differed by two residues in
length, and two fragments in loop 8 were excised that differed by
five residues in length, to examine whether the size of the turns
remaining affected integration into the outer membrane and FecA
activity . The small loops L1, L2, L4, and L6 were not shortened . The
fecA wild-type and mutant genes were each cloned on the
low-copy-number plasmid pHSG576 and introduced into E . coli
AA93
fecIRABCDE
bytransformation . To measure fecA transcription, strain AA93
contained a plasmid-encoded fecA-lacZ reporter gene . Ferric
citrate did not induce fecA transcription of the loop 7 and
loop 8 deletion mutants and the loop 7/8 double mutant (Table
2) . The loop 3 and loop 11 deletion mutants were
also inactive . The loop 5 mutant showed low activity, and the loop 9
and 10 mutants displayed an intermediate level of activity (Table
2) .
| TABLE 2 . Properties of FecA mutants
|
|
Citrate-mediated 55Fe3+ transport was determined for E .
coli IS1031, which carries a chromosomally encoded FecA R413H
mutation that renders cells inactive for citrate-mediated iron
transport and exhibits no polar effect on the downstream fecBCDE
genes (24, 47) . IS1031
transformants carried the fecA genes on the medium-copy-number
plasmid pT7-7 . IS1031 transformed with the wild-type fecA gene
transported iron (Table 2) . IS1031 synthesizing the
loop 7 or loop 8 FecA deletion protein did not transport iron (Table
2) . The loop 3 and loop 11 mutants were also inactive
in citrate-mediated iron transport . The loop 5, 9, and 10 mutants
displayed 23, 74, and 48% of the fecA wild-type transport rate,
respectively .
In addition, 55Fe3+ transport into E . coli AA93,
which was the strain used for the induction experiments, was
determined . AA93 was transformed with the fecA wild-type and
mutant genes on the low-copy-number plasmid pMMO203 which were used
for the induction experiments . The level of transport could thus be
directly compared with the level of induction . For transport
across the cytoplasmic membrane, AA93 was transformed with plasmid
pMON37 carrying the fecBCDE wild-type genes . Transport of 55Fe3+
into AA93 was determined with those fecA mutant genes, which
displayed intermediary transport rates in IS1031 . Related to
the transport rate of the fecA wild-type transformant, the fecA
mutant transformants showed rates comparable with those obtained
with the IS1031 transformants (Table 2) . The
plasmid-encoded fecABCDE transport genes in AA93 conferred
transport rates which were comparable with those of the chromosomally
encoded fecBCDE transport genes in IS1031 complemented by the
fecA mutant genes . The similar results obtained with AA93 and
IS1031 indicated that gene copy numbers did not strongly influence
the mutant values related to wild-type FecA and that recombination
between chromosomal and plasmid-encoded fecA in IS1031 played
no role . Since the studied mutations were in the ß-barrel domain
and IS1031 is also mutated in the ß-barrel domain, no
reconstitution of active FecA could occur of the kind observed with
FhuA, where wild-type cork of one FhuA molecule could complement the
missing cork of a cosynthesized FhuA ß-barrel (3) .
In fact, such a reconstitution does not occur with FecA (V . Braun,
unpublished results) .
Since the loop 3, 7, 8, and 11 mutants did not induce fecA-lacZ
transcription, transport inactivity could be caused by the lack
of transport proteins . Induction was determined with the mutant genes
cloned on the low-copy-number plasmid pHSG576, whereas transport was
determined with the mutant genes cloned on the medium-copy-number
plasmid pT7-7 . The presence of the mutant FecA proteins in E . coli
IS1031 carrying the pT7-7 derivatives, used for the transport assays,
was determined by SDS-PAGE . Western blotting with anti-FecA antiserum
revealed that all the mutants synthesized the FecA protein in amounts
sufficient to mediate transport (Fig . 2) .
Transformants that synthesized wild-type FecA or mutant FecA with a
deletion in loop 9 or 10 produced more FecA protein when grown in
ferric-citrate-containing medium than in citrate-free medium (Fig.
2) . No ferric-citrate-dependent increase of FecA
was observed in the loop 3, 5, 7, 8, and 11 mutants and the loop 7/8
double mutant (Fig . 2) . E . coli IS1031
carrying the pT7-7 vector synthesized chromosomally encoded mutant
FecA; the amount of FecA did not increase when ferric citrate was
present in the medium, as was found previously (47) .
The results indicated that the lack of citrate-mediated iron
transport was not caused by the lack of FecA protein .
|
FIG . 2 . Anti-FecA Western blot of outer membranes of E . coli
IS1031 (fecA) transformed with pT7-7 carrying wild-type fecA
or one of a number of mutant fecA genes encoding FecA loop
deletion proteins . +, induction with 1 mM citrate; –, uninduced; v,
vector; wt, wild-type FecA . The sizes of the marker proteins are
indicated on the left in kilodaltons.
|
|
The FecA loop 7 cannot be replaced by FhuA loops. To examine
whether loop 7 must assume a certain structure to fulfill its
function, residues 516 to 535 of FecA were replaced by residues 502
to 515 (loop 7), residues 243 to 273 (loop 3), residues 318 to 339
(loop 4), or residues 394 to 419 (loop 5) of FhuA . None of the
mutants showed induction and transport activity . SDS-PAGE revealed
wild-type amounts of uninduced FecA mutant proteins (data not shown) .
Apparently, movement of loop 7 upon binding of ferric citrate and/or
closure of the entry to the binding site depends on a certain loop
structure .
Activity of ferric-citrate-binding-site mutants. In FecA,
residues T138, R365, R380, R438, and Q570 are in closest proximity,
3.0, 3.0, 2.6, 3.3, and 2.5 Å, respectively, to bound dinuclear
ferric citrate (21, 48; A . D . Ferguson,
personal communication) . These residues were individually replaced by
alanine, and ferric-citrate-mediated induction of fecA-lacZ
transcription and citrate-mediated iron transport were determined .
FecA(R365A), FecA(R380A), and FecA(Q570A) expressed in E . coli
IS1031 were induction and transport inactive, whereas FecA(T138A)
and FecA(R438A) displayed approximately half-maximal induction
and transport activities (Table 2) . Of particular importance
are the positively charged R residues for binding of the negatively
charged dinuclear ferric citrate . In addition, residue K525 of
loop 7 or residue D573 or R578 of loop 8 was replaced by alanine to
determine whether these residues play a role in initial adsorption of
ferric citrate to FecA, from which ferric citrate could enter the
tight binding site within FecA . We postulated that access to the
final binding site might be facilitated when ferric citrate first
binds to the loops and then is transferred to the final binding site
by the movement of loops 7 and 8 . FecA(K525A) and FecA(R578A) showed
high induction and transport rates, whereas FecA(D573A) displayed a
reduced induction but a high transport rate (Table 2;
Fig . 3) . Binding of ferric citrate to FecA(D573A)
was decreased, as revealed by the low 1-min value (Fig .
3), which reflects binding and initial transport . Since the
distance of D573 to dinuclear ferric citrate is 3.5 Å, D573 might
contribute to the binding of dinuclear ferric citrate; the mutation
D573A might reduce binding and therefore induction .
|
FIG . 3 . Transport of 55Fe3+ citrate into E .
coli IS1031 (fecA) transformed with pT7-7 carrying wild-type
fecA or one of a number of mutant fecA genes . The mutant
fecA genes encode FecA derivatives mutated in the ferric citrate
binding site.
|
|
Binding of radiolabeled 55Fe3+ citrate could not reliably
be determined . Initial binding (1-min value) to
fec
E . coli AA93 transformed with wild-type fecA was low at
600 ions per cell, which increased to 1,000 ions after 20 min . Chase
with a surplus of unlabeled ferric citrate reduced binding to only
600 ions per cell . Mutant K525A gave wild-type values, mutants T138A
and D573A gave 400 ions per cell, and the other mutants gave
below 200 ions per cell, which was also obtained with AA93 transformed
with the vector . It is possible that binding of ferric citrate
is not strong enough to withstand washing of the filters with 0.1 M
LiCl . In addition, the molecular form of ferric citrate in the assay
is not clearly defined, since it polymerizes into numerous molecular
forms (40) . The results give no indication that
closing of loops 7 and 8 prevent release of ferric citrate from the
FecA binding site . Under similar conditions, 20,000 iron ions
supplied as ferrichrome complex are bound to FhuA, and after chase
2,000 ions remain bound to the cells .
Of those FecA mutants that transported iron in strain IS1031,
transport was also determined in strain AA93 to test correlation of
transport with induction in the same strain . Qualitatively the
results obtained were similar to the results obtained with strain
IS1031, but quantitative differences were noted (Table
2) . With half of the mutants the level of induction correlated
somewhat better for AA93 than for IS1031 .
Activity of globular domain and ß-barrel contact-site mutants.
The four crystal structures of TonB-dependent outer membrane
transporters indicate strictly conserved residues at the interface
between the globular domain and the ß-barrel . In FecA, these residues
are R150 and R196 in the globular domain and E541 and E587 in the
ß-barrel, which are close enough and oriented such that they form
salt bridges (R150 to E541 and E587 and R196 to E587) . R150, E541,
and E587 were each mutated, and induction and transport activities of
the mutant proteins were determined . Induction and transport by
FecA(E541A) and FecA(E541R) were close to that of wild-type FecA
(Table 2), which indicated that the salt bridge to
R150 was dispensable and that even repulsion of R150 by R541 did not
impair FecA structure and function . In contrast, induction by
FecA(E587A) and FecA(E587R) was reduced to one-third of that of
wild-type FecA . Transport was also reduced with FecA(E587A) and even
more strongly reduced with FecA(E587R) (Table 2) .
Induction by the double mutants FecA(R150A E541R) and FecA(R150A
E587R) was abolished or nearly abolished, and transport was strongly
reduced (Table 2) . Outer membrane fractions of
cells expressing FecA(E541A) or FecA(E541R) contained reduced amounts
of ferric-citrate-induced FecA, and the double mutants contained only
uninduced amounts (Fig . 4) . The data suggested that
the conserved interface residues play a role in FecA structure and
function and not just for fixation of the globular domain inside the
ß-barrel .
|
FIG . 4 . Anti-FecA Western blot of outer membranes of E . coli
IS1031 (fecA) transformed with pT7-7 carrying wild-type fecA
or one of a number of mutant fecA genes encoding FecA derivatives
mutated in the interface between the globular domain and the ß-barrel .
+, induction with 1 mM citrate; –, uninduced; v, vector; wt, wild-type
FecA . The sizes of the marker proteins are indicated on the left in
kilodaltons.
|
|
Crystal structures provide a precise but static view of a protein in
the form in which it crystallizes . Postulations derived from the
crystal structure as to how a protein might function have to be
tested by studying appropriate mutants and by using biophysical
methods that monitor the dynamics of a protein . In this study, three
FecA regions with predictable functional roles were selected for
further study: (i) loops 7 and 8, (ii) the dinuclear ferric citrate
binding site, and (iii) the interface between the globular domain and
the ß-barrel .
Deletion of loops 7 and 8 abolished induction and transport, which
showed that both loops are essential for both FecA activities and
suggested that movement of the two loops, as observed in the crystal
structures, is important . The difference in size of loop 7 (FecA 18,
FhuA 14, and FepA 38 residues) and loop 8 (FecA 20, FhuA 7, and FepA
13 residues) suggest that loops 7 and 8 do not function the same way
in all transporters . Loop 7 and 8 deletion mutants of FepA display no
ferric enterobactin binding and transport (37) .
FecA and FepA are similar in that deletion of loop 7 or 8 abolishes
all activities; in contrast, FhuA loop 7 or 8 deletion mutants retain
all activities (15) . FecA is similar to FhuA in
that deletion of loop 3 or 11 abolishes all activities; in contrast,
a loop 3 deletion mutant of FepA retains fully ferric enterobactin
transport and sensitivity to colicin B (37) .
Comparison of the mutant phenotypes clearly indicates that each loop
has different roles in the three transporters .
Surface loops in BtuB have still other properties and functions .
In the BtuB crystal, the extracellular loops 2, 3, and 4 are
disordered . Upon binding of two calcium ions, loop 2 becomes ordered
and loop 3 becomes partially ordered . Upon additional binding of
cyanocobalamin, loops 3 and 4 become fully ordered (12,
13) . BtuB tolerates duplication of large parts of the
sequence to a surprising degree, e.g., duplications extending from
ß-strand 1 into loop 2, loop 3 to ß-strand 6, or ß-strand
10 to ß-strand 12 . Such duplication mutants display 64 to 100% of the
wild-type level of vitamin B12 transport activity (31) .
In FhuA, insertions of 4 to 16 heterologous residues in loops 4, 5,
7, or 10 result in derivatives that support growth on ferrichrome as
the sole iron source and sensitivity to the FhuA ligands albomycin,
colicin M, microcin J25, and the phages T1, T5,
80,
and UC1 (30, 36) . The loops, therefore,
display a complex behavior . On one hand, they are highly flexible and
show large changes in position upon binding of substrate and in
response to TonB and energy input (26); on the other hand,
they assume rather rigid structures, e.g., loops 3, 5, and 11
in FhuA form a sturdy protuberance extending approximately 35 Å above
the membrane surface (33) . Multiple interactions
between loops occur, and these interactions might change during
transport .
Only the crystal structures of FecA reveal closure of loops 7 and
8 upon binding of dinuclear ferric citrate (21) . No such
movement is seen in the crystal structures of FhuA (20,
33) . However, ferrichrome-induced fluorescence
quenching of fluorescein-labeled FhuA at residue D336C indicates
movement of loop 4 or movement of neighboring loops such that the
environment of the label changes (2) . The crystal
structure of FepA does not reveal the entire loops 4, 5, and 8 and
bound ferric enterobactin (8) . However,
spectroscopic and cross-linking studies have disclosed movement of
loops during ferric enterobactin transport (10,
26, 29, 42) .
Biphasic binding kinetics and mutant analyses point to there being
two ferric enterobactin binding sites on FepA (9,
10) . It is conceivable that ferric enterobactin
first binds reversibly to peripheral residues, followed by firm
binding inside FepA . With such a model in mind, potential initial
binding sites in loops 7 and 8 of FecA were replaced . These are the
only positively charged residues—K525 in loop 7 and R578 in loop
8—that could initially bind the negatively charged dinuclear ferric
citrate . The induction and transport activities of FecA(K525A)
were similar to or even higher than those of wild-type FecA; the
activities of FecA(R578A) were diminished . The level of transport
reduction suggests that R578 serves as an initial ferric citrate
binding site or that the replaced A alters the structure of loop 8
such that it affects movement of loop 8 .
Of the binding site mutants studied, R365A, R380A, and Q570A most
strongly reduced citrate-mediated iron transport . These residues are
the residues closest to dinuclear ferric citrate . The negatively
charged dinuclear ferric citrate is probably most strongly bound by
the positively charged R365 and R380 residues, suggesting decreased
binding of ferric citrate to the R365A and R380A mutants . However,
weak binding does not necessarily lead to slow transport, as examples
of FhuA (15) and FepA (37)
demonstrate . Replacement of R81, which is highly conserved in FhuA
homologues, leads to a very strong reduction in binding but fully
retained transport (14) .
The FecA crystal structure predicts salt bridges of R150 with E541
and E587 and of R196 with E587 . Disruption of the salt bridges in the
E541A mutant and even repulsion in the E541R mutant had no strong
effects on FecA-mediated induction and ferric citrate transport .
Apparently, the salt bridge between R150 and E541 is not essential
for FecA structure and function . The E587A and E587R mutants
displayed less induction, and transport was more strongly reduced in
the E587R mutant than in the E587A mutant . Strong reduction of
induction and transport was observed in the R150A E541R and R150A
E587R double mutants . These results partially differ from those
obtained with FhuA (16)—disruption of the salt
bridges of R93 to E522 and E571 and of R133 to E571 and repulsion
between these residues have either no effects or only small effects
on FhuA transport and receptor activities . However, in contrast to
FecA, the FhuA(E522R) mutant is inactive and the FhuA(E571R) mutant
is nearly inactive, even in the double mutant FhuA(R93E E522R), in
which a salt bridge could be formed . R is not tolerated at the E
sites, but E is not required, since E-to-A replacements yield FhuA
wild-type activities . In FhuA, 60 hydrogen bonds and 7 salt bridges (33)
either directly or through intermediate water molecules (19)
are predicted to contribute to the fixation of the globular domain to
the ß-barrel; and the situation is similar for FecA . Disruption of
one or two such bridges might not be sufficient to affect the
structures to a degree that functions are seriously reduced . There
must be other reasons in addition to fixation of the globular domain
in the ß-barrel to explain why these residues are highly
conserved in TonB-dependent transporters and why E587 is important in
FecA and E522 and E571 cannot be replaced by R without loss of FhuA
activity . A similar conclusion can be drawn from results obtained
with FepA in which R75, R126, E511, and E567 constitute the polar
interaction sites between the globular domain and the ß-barrel . The
R75L, R75P, and R126H derivatives resulting from random mutation are
strongly reduced in ferric enterobactin transport (1),
the site-directed mutant R75Q displays a 10-fold increased Km
and a threefold lower Vmax than wild-type FepA, the
E511Q mutant has wild-type activities, and the E567A mutant has a
Vmax of 17% of that of wild-type FepA, but the E567A
E511Q double mutant has 32% of the wild-type level of FepA transport
activity (11) . The distinct phenotypes of the
mutants suggest that they affect the functions of the transporters,
such as binding of the substrate, release of the substrate, opening
of the ß-barrel channel, and restoration of the closed state, in a
complex manner .
We thank Andrew D . Ferguson for advice and Karen A . Brune for
critical reading of the manuscript .
This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
(BR330/9-1) and the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address:
Mikrobiologie/Membranphysiologie, Auf der Morgenstelle 28, D-72076 Tübingen,
Germany . Phone: 49 7071 2972096 . Fax: 49 7071 5843 . E-mail:
volkmar.braun@mikrobio.uni-tuebingen.de .
- Barnard, T . J., M . E . Watson, Jr., and M . A . McIntosh.
2001 . Mutations in the Escherichia coli receptor FepA reveal residues
involved in ligand binding and transport . Mol . Microbiol . 41:527-536.
- Bös, C., D . Lorenzen, and V . Braun. 1998 . Specific in
vivo labeling of cell surface-exposed protein loops: reactive cysteines in the
predicted gating loop mark a ferrichrome binding site and a ligand-induced
conformational change of the Escherichia coli FhuA protein . J .
Bacteriol . 180:605-613 .
- Braun, M., H . Killmann, and V . Braun. 2003 . In vivo
reconstitution of the FhuA transport protein of Escherichia coli K-12 .
J . Bacteriol . 185:5508-5518 .
- Braun, V. 1997 . Surface signaling: novel transcription
initiation mechanism starting from the cell surface . Arch . Microbiol . 167:325-331.
- Braun, V. 2003 . Iron uptake by Escherichia coli.
Front . Biosci . 8:1409-1421.
- Braun, V., R . E . W . Hancock, K . Hantke, and A . Hartmann.
1976 . Functional organization of the outer membrane of Escherichia coli:
phage and colicin receptors as components of iron uptake systems . J . Supramol .
Struct . 5:37-58.
- Braun, V., S . Mahren, and M . Ogierman. 2003 . Regulation
of the FecI-type ECF sigma factor by transmembrane signalling . Curr . Opinion.
6:173-180.
- Buchanan, S . K., B . S . Smith, L . Venkatramani, D . Xia, L .
Esser, M . Palnitkar, R . Chakraborty, D . van der Helm, and J . Deisenhofer.
1999 . Crystal structure of the outer membrane active transporter FepA from
Escherichia coli. Nat . Struct . Biol . 6:56-63.
- Cao, Z., Z . Qi, C . Sprencel, S . M . C . Newton, and P . E .
Klebba. 2000 . Aromatic components of two ferric enterobactin binding sites
in Escherichia coli FepA . Mol . Microbiol . 37:1306-1317.
- Cao, Z., P . Warfel, S . M . C . Newton, and P . E . Klebba.
2003 . Spectroscopic observations of ferric enterobactin transport . J . Biol .
Chem . 278:1022-1028 .
- Chakraborty, R., E . Lembke, Z . Cao, P . E . Klebba, and D . van
der Helm. 2003 . Identification and mutational studies of conserved amino
acids in the outer membrane receptor protein FepA, which affect transport but
not binding of ferric enterobactin in Escherichia coli. BioMetals
16:507-518.
- Chimento, D . P., A . K . Mohanty, R . J . Kadner, and M . C .
Wiener. 2003 . Substrate-induced transmembrane signaling in the cobalamin
transporter BtuB . Nat . Struct . Biol . 10:394-401.
- Chimento, D . P., R . Kadner, and M . Wiener. 2003 . The
Escherichia coli outer membrane transporter BtuB: structural analysis of
the calcium and substrate binding, and identification of orthologous
transporters by sequence/structure conservation . J . Mol . Biol . 332:999-1014.
- Endriß, F. 2000 . Die Funktion des Aminosäurerests Arg-81
von FhuA aus E . coli K-12 für die Aufnahme und Bindung der FhuA
spezifischen Liganden . Diploma thesis . Universität Tübingen, Tübingen,
Germany.
- Endriß, F., and V . Braun. 2004 . Loop deletions indicate
regions important for FhuA transport and receptor functions in Escherichia
coli. J . Bacteriol . 186:4818-4823 .
- Endriß, F., M . Braun, H . Killmann, and V . Braun. 2003 .
Mutant analysis of the Escherichia coli FhuA protein reveals sites of
FhuA activity . J . Bacteriol . 185:4683-4692 .
- Enz, S., H . Brand, C . Orellana, S . Mahren, and V . Braun.
2003 . Sites of interaction between the FecA and FecR signal transduction
proteins of ferric citrate transport in Escherichia coli K-12 . J .
Bacteriol . 185:3745-3752 .
- Enz, S., S . Mahren, U . H . Stroeher, and V . Braun. 2000 .
Surface signaling in ferric citrate transport gene induction: interaction of
the FecA, FecR, and FecI regulatory proteins . J . Bacteriol . 182:637-646 .
- Faraldo-Gómez, J . D., and M . S . P . Sansom. 2003 .
Acquisition of siderophores in gram-negative bacteria . Nat . Rev . Mol . Cell
Biol . 4:105-116.
- Ferguson, A . D., E . Hofmann, J . W . Coulton, K . Diederichs,
and W . Welte. 1998 . Siderophore-mediated iron transport: crystal structure
of FhuA with bound lipopolysaccharide . Science 282:2215-2220 .
- Ferguson, A . D., R . Chakraborty, B . S . Smith, L . Esser, D .
van der Helm, and J . Deisenhofer. 2002 . Structural basis of gating by the
outer membrane transporter FecA . Science 295:1715-1719 .
- Giacomini, A., B . Corich, F . J . Ollero, A . Squartini, and M .
P . Nuti. 1992 . Experimental conditions may affect reproducibility of the
ß-galactosidase assay . FEMS Microbiol . Lett . 100:87-90.
- Hantke, K. 1981 . Regulation of the ferric iron transport
in Escherichia coli K-12: isolation of a constitutive mutant . Mol . Gen .
Genet . 182:288-292.
- Härle, C., I . Kim, A . Angerer, and V . Braun. 1995 .
Signal transfer through three compartments: transcription initiation of the
Escherichia coli ferric citrate transport system from the cell surface .
EMBO J . 14:1430-1438.
- Hussein, S., K . Hantke, and V . Braun. 1981 .
Citrate-dependent iron transport system in Escherichia coli K-12 . Eur .
J . Biochem . 117:431-437.
- Jiang, X., M . A . Payne, Z . Cao, S . B . Foster, J . B . Feix, S .
M . C . Newton, and P . E . Klebba. 1997 . Ligand specific opening of a
gated-porin channel in the outer membrane of living bacteria . Science 276:1261-1264 .
- Killmann, H., R . Benz, and V . Braun. 1993 . Conversion of
the FhuA transport protein into a diffusion channel through the outer membrane
of Escherichia coli. EMBO J . 12:3007-3016.
- Kim, I., A . Stiefel, S . Plantör, A . Angerer, and V . Braun.
1997 . Transcription induction of the ferric citrate transport genes via the
N-terminus of the FecA outer membrane protein, the Ton system and the
electrochemical potential of the cytoplasmic membrane . Mol . Microbiol . 23:333-344.
- Klebba, P . E. 2003 . Three paradoxes of ferric
enterobactin uptake . Front . Biosc . 8:1422-1436.
- Koebnik, R., and V . Braun. 1993 . Insertion derivatives
containing segments of up to 16 amino acids identify surface- and
periplasm-exposed regions of the FhuA outer membrane receptor of
Escherichia coli K-12 . J . Bacteriol . 175:826-839.
- Köster, W., A . Gudmundsdottir, M . D . Lundrigan, A . Seiffert,
and R . J . Kadner. 1991 . Deletions or duplications in the BtuB protein
affect its level in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. J .
Bacteriol . 173:5639-5647.
- Laemmli, U . K. 1970 . Cleavage of structural proteins
during the assembly of the head of bacteriophage T4 . Nature 227:680-685.
- Locher, K . P., B . Rees, R . Koebnik, A . Mitschler, L .
Moulinier, J . P . Rosenbusch, and D . Moras. 1998 . Transmembrane signaling
across the ligand-gated FhuA receptor: crystal structures of free and
ferrichrome-bound states reveal allosteric changes . Cell 95:771-778.
- Martinez-Bueno, M . A., R . Tobes, M . Rey, and J.-L . Ramos.
2002 . Detection of multiple extracytoplasmic function (ECF) sigma factors in
the genome of Pseudomonas putida KT2440 and their counterparts in
Pseudomonas aeruginosa PA01 . Environ . Microbiol . 4:842-855.
- Miller, J . H. 1972 . Experiments in molecular genetics .
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.
- Moeck, G . S., B . S . F . Bazzaz, M . F . Gras, T . S . Ravi, M . J .
Ratcliffe, and J . W . Coulton. 1994 . Genetic insertion and exposure of a
reporter epitope in the ferrichrome-iron receptor of Escherichia coli
K-12 . J . Bacteriol . 176:4250-4259.
- Newton, S . M . C., J . D . Igo, D . C . Scott, and P . E . Klebba.
1999 . Effect of loop deletions on the binding and transport of ferric
enterobactin by FepA . Mol . Microbiol . 32:1153-1165.
- Ochs, M., S . Veitinger, K . InSook, D . Welz, A . Angerer, and
V . Braun. 1995 . Regulation of citrate-dependent iron transport of
Escherichia coli: FecR is required for transcription activation by FecI .
Mol . Microbiol . 15:119-132.
- Ogierman, M., and V . Braun. 2003 . Interactions between
the outer membrane ferric citrate transporter FecA and TonB: studies of the
FecA TonB box . J . Bacteriol . 185:1870-1885 .
- Pierre, J . L., and I . Gautier-Luneau. 2000 . Iron and
citric acid: a fuzzy chemistry of ubiquitous biological relevance . BioMetals
13:91-96.
- Sambrook, J., E . F . Fritsch, and T . Maniatis. 1989 .
Molecular cloning, 2nd ed . Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring
Harbor, N.Y.
- Scott, D . C., S . M . C . Newton, and P . E . Klebba. 2002 .
Surface loop motion in FepA . J . Bacteriol . 184:4906-4911 .
- Stiefel, A., S . Mahren, M . Ochs, P . T . Schindler, S . Enz,
and V . Braun. 2001 . Control of the ferric citrate transport system of
Escherichia coli: mutations in region 2.1 of the FecI
extracytoplasmic-function sigma factor suppress mutations in the FecR
transmembrane regulatory protein . J . Bacteriol . 183:162-170 .
- Tabor, S., and C . C . Richardson. 1985 . A bacteriophage
T7 RNA polymerase/promoter system for controlled exclusive expression of
specific genes . Proc . Natl . Acad . Sci . USA 82:1074-1078.
- Takeshita, S., S . Masahiro, M . Toba, W . Masahashi, and T .
Hashimoto-Gotoh. 1987 . High-copy-number and low-copy-number plasmid
vectors for lacZ
-complementation
and chloramphenicol- or kanamycin-resistance selection . Gene 61:63-74.
- Visca, P., L . Leoni, M . J . Wilson, and I . L . Lamont.
2002 . Iron transport and regulation, cell signalling and genomics: lessons
from Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas. Mol . Microbiol . 45:1177-1190.
- Wagegg, W., and V . Braun. 1981 . Ferric citrate transport
in Escherichia coli requires outer membrane receptor protein FecA . J .
Bacteriol . 145:156-163.
- Yue, W . W., S . Grizot, and S . K . Buchanan. 2003 .
Structural evidence for iron-free citrate and ferric citrate binding to the
TonB-dependent outer membrane transporter FecA . J . Mol . Biol . 332:353-368.
Free Online Full-text Article
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
|