scholarly journals Characterization of Escherichia coli ExbD protein modification in vivo

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aruna Kumar ◽  
Kathleen Postle

ABSTRACTThe TonB system of Escherichia coli couples the protonmotive force of the cytoplasmic membrane to active transport of nutrients across the outer membrane. In the cytoplasmic membrane, this system consists of three known proteins, TonB, ExbB, and ExbD. ExbB and ExbD appear to harvest the protonmotive force and transmit it to TonB, which then makes direct physical contact with TonB-dependent active transport proteins in the outer membrane. Using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, we found that ExbD exists as two different species with the same apparent molecular mass but with different pIs. The more basic ExbD species was consistently present, while the more acidic species arose when cells were starved for iron by the addition of iron chelators. The cause of the modification was, however, more complex than simple iron starvation. Absence of either TonB or ExbB protein also gave rise to modified ExbD under iron-replete conditions where the wild-type strain exhibited no ExbD modification. The effect of the tonB or exbB mutations were not entirely due to iron limitation since an equally iron-limited aroB mutation did not replicate the ExbD modification. This constitutes the first report of in vivo modification for any of the TonB system proteins.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathleen Postle ◽  
Kelvin Kho ◽  
Michael Gresock ◽  
Joydeep Ghosh ◽  
Ray Larsen

The TonB system of Gram-negative bacteria uses the protonmotive force of the cytoplasmic membrane to energize active transport of large or scarce nutrients across the outer membrane by means of customized beta-barrels known as TonB-dependent transporters (TBDTs). The lumen of each TBDT is occluded by an amino-terminal domain, called the cork, which must be displaced for transport of nutrients or translocation of the large protein toxins that parasitize the system. A complex of cytoplasmic membrane proteins consisting of TonB, ExbB and ExbD harnesses the protonmotive force that TonB transmits to the TBDT. The specifics of this energy transformation are a source of continuing interest. The amino terminal domain of a TBDT contains a region called the TonB box, that is essential for the reception of energy from TonB. This domain is the only identified site of in vivo interaction between the TBDT and TonB, occurring through a non-essential region centered on TonB residue Q160. Because TonB binds to TBDTs whether or not it is active or even intact, the mechanism and extent of cork movement in vivo has been challenging to discover. In this study, we used in vivo disulfide crosslinking between eight engineered Cys residues in Escherichia coli TonB and 42 Cys substitutions in the TBDT FepA, including the TonB box, to identify novel sites of interaction in vivo. The TonB Cys substitutions in the core of an essential carboxy terminal amphipathic helix (residues 199-216) were compared to TonB Q160C interactions. Functionality of the in vivo interactions was established when the presence of the inactive TonB H20A mutation inhibited them. A previously unknown functional interaction between the hydrophilic face of the amphipathic helix and the FepA TonB box was identified. Interaction of Q160C with the FepA TonB box appeared to be less functionally important. The two different parts of TonB also differed in their interactions with the FepA cork and barrel turns. While the TonB amphipathic helix Cys residues interacted only with Cys residues on the periplasmic face of the FepA cork, TonB Q160C interacted with buried Cys substitutions within the FepA cork, the first such interactions seen with any TBDT. Both sets of interactions required active TonB. Taken together, these data suggest a model where the amphipathic helix binds to the TonB box, causing the mechanically weak domain of the FepA cork to dip sufficiently into the periplasmic space for interaction with the TonB Q160 region, which is an interaction that does not occur if the TonB box is deleted. The TonB amphipathic helix also interacted with periplasmic turns between FepA β-strands in vivo supporting a surveillance mechanism where TonB searched for TBDTs on the periplasmic face of the outer membrane.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale R. Kopp ◽  
Kathleen Postle

ABSTRACTThe TonB system energizes transport of essential nutrients, such as iron siderophores, across unenergized outer membranes of Gram-negative bacteria. The integral cytoplasmic membrane proteins of the TonB system--ExbB, ExbD, and TonB--transduce the protonmotive force of the cytoplasmic membrane to TonB-dependent outer membrane transporters for active transport. ExbD protein is anchored in the cytoplasmic membrane, with the majority of it occupying the periplasm. We previously identified a conserved motif within a periplasmic disordered domain that is essential for TonB system function. Here we demonstrated that export of a peptide derived from that motif into the periplasm prevented TonB system function and inhibited all known ExbD interactions in vivo. Formaldehyde crosslinking captured the ExbD peptide in multiple ExbD and TonB complexes. Furthermore, peptides with mutations in the conserved motif not only had significantly reduced ability to inhibit TonB system activity, but they also altered interactions with ExbD and TonB, indicating the specificity of the interaction. Conserved motif peptide interactions with ExbD and TonB mostly occurred between Stage II and Stage III of the TonB energy transduction cycle, a transition that is characterized by the use of protonmotive force. Taken together, the data suggest that the ExbD disordered domain motif has multiple interactions with TonB and ExbD during between Stage II and III of the TonB energization cycle. Because of the essentiality of the motif, it may be a potential template for design of novel antibiotics that target the TonB system.IMPORTANCEGram-negative bacteria are intrinsically antibiotic-resistant due to the diffusion barrier posed by their outer membranes. The TonB system allows them to circumvent this barrier for their own nutritional needs, including iron. The ability of bacteria to acquire iron is a virulence factor for many Gram-negative pathogens. However, no antibiotics currently target the TonB system. Because TonB and ExbD must interact productively in the periplasm for transport across the outer membrane, they constitute attractive targets for potential antibiotic development where chemical characteristics need not accommodate the need to cross the hydrophobic cytoplasmic membrane. Here we show that a small ExbD-derived peptide can interfere with the TonB-ExbD interaction to inhibit the TonB system in vivo.


mBio ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathleen Postle ◽  
Kyle A. Kastead ◽  
Michael G. Gresock ◽  
Joydeep Ghosh ◽  
Cheryl D. Swayne

ABSTRACTThe TonB system energizes transport of nutrients across the outer membrane ofEscherichia coliusing cytoplasmic membrane proton motive force (PMF) for energy. Integral cytoplasmic membrane proteins ExbB and ExbD appear to harvest PMF and transduce it to TonB. The carboxy terminus of TonB then physically interacts with outer membrane transporters to allow translocation of ligands into the periplasmic space. The structure of the TonB carboxy terminus (residues ~150 to 239) has been solved several times with similar results. Our previous results hinted thatin vitrostructures might not mimic the dimeric conformations that characterize TonBin vivo. To test structural predictions and to identify irreplaceable residues, the entire carboxy terminus of TonB was scanned with Cys substitutions. TonB I232C and N233C, predicted to efficiently form disulfide-linked dimers in the crystal structures, did not do so. In contrast, Cys substitutions positioned at large distances from one another in the crystal structures efficiently formed dimers. Cys scanning identified seven functionally important residues. However, no single residue was irreplaceable. The phenotypes conferred by changes of the seven residues depended on both the specific assay used and the residue substituted. All seven residues were synergistic with one another. The buried nature of the residues in the structures was also inconsistent with these properties. Taken together, these results indicate that the solved dimeric crystal structures of TonB do not exist. The most likely explanation for the aberrant structures is that they were obtained in the absence of the TonB transmembrane domain, ExbB, ExbD, and/or the PMF.IMPORTANCEThe TonB system of Gram-negative bacteria is an attractive target for development of novel antibiotics because of its importance in iron acquisition and virulence. Logically, therefore, the structure of TonB must be accurately understood. TonB functions as a dimerin vivo, and two different but similar crystal structures of the dimeric carboxy-terminal ~90 amino acids gave rise to mechanistic models. Here we demonstrate that the crystal structures, and therefore the models based on them, are not biologically relevant. The idiosyncratic phenotypes conferred by substitutions at the only seven functionally important residues in the carboxy terminus suggest that similar to interaction of cytochromes P450 with numerous substrates, these residues allow TonB to differentially interact with different outer membrane transporters. Taken together, data suggest that TonB is maintained poised between order and disorder by ExbB, ExbD, and the proton motive force (PMF) before energy transduction to the outer membrane transporters.


2002 ◽  
Vol 184 (6) ◽  
pp. 1640-1648 ◽  
Author(s):  
Penelope I. Higgs ◽  
Tracy E. Letain ◽  
Kelley K. Merriam ◽  
Neal S. Burke ◽  
HaJeung Park ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The Escherichia coli TonB protein serves to couple the cytoplasmic membrane proton motive force to active transport of iron-siderophore complexes and vitamin B12 across the outer membrane. Consistent with this role, TonB has been demonstrated to participate in strong interactions with both the cytoplasmic and outer membranes. The cytoplasmic membrane determinants for that interaction have been previously characterized in some detail. Here we begin to examine the nature of TonB interactions with the outer membrane. Although the presence of the siderophore enterochelin (also known as enterobactin) greatly enhanced detectable cross-linking between TonB and the outer membrane receptor, FepA, the absence of enterochelin did not prevent the localization of TonB to the outer membrane. Furthermore, the absence of FepA or indeed of all the iron-responsive outer membrane receptors did not alter this association of TonB with the outer membrane. This suggested that TonB interactions with the outer membrane were not limited to the TonB-dependent outer membrane receptors. Hydrolysis of the murein layer with lysozyme did not alter the distribution of TonB, suggesting that peptidoglycan was not responsible for the outer membrane association of TonB. Conversely, the interaction of TonB with the outer membrane was disrupted by the addition of 4 M NaCl, suggesting that these interactions were proteinaceous. Subsequently, two additional contacts of TonB with the outer membrane proteins Lpp and, putatively, OmpA were identified by in vivo cross-linking. These contacts corresponded to the 43-kDa and part of the 77-kDa TonB-specific complexes described previously. Surprisingly, mutations in these proteins individually did not appear to affect TonB phenotypes. These results suggest that there may be multiple redundant sites where TonB can interact with the outer membrane prior to transducing energy to the outer membrane receptors.


2015 ◽  
Vol 197 (21) ◽  
pp. 3433-3445 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael G. Gresock ◽  
Kyle A. Kastead ◽  
Kathleen Postle

ABSTRACTThe TonB system actively transports large, scarce, and important nutrients through outer membrane (OM) transporters of Gram-negative bacteria using the proton gradient of the cytoplasmic membrane (CM). InEscherichia coli, the CM proteins ExbB and ExbD harness and transfer proton motive force energy to the CM protein TonB, which spans the periplasmic space and cyclically binds OM transporters. TonB has two activity domains: the amino-terminal transmembrane domain with residue H20 and the periplasmic carboxy terminus, through which it binds to OM transporters. TonB is inactivated by all substitutions at residue H20 except H20N. Here, we show that while TonB trapped as a homodimer through its amino-terminal domain retained full activity, trapping TonB through its carboxy terminus inactivated it by preventing conformational changes needed for interaction with OM transporters. Surprisingly, inactive TonB H20A had little effect on homodimerization through the amino terminus and instead decreased TonB carboxy-terminal homodimer formation prior to reinitiation of an energy transduction cycle. That result suggested that the TonB carboxy terminus ultimately interacts with OM transporters as a monomer. Our findings also suggested the existence of a separate equimolar pool of ExbD homodimers that are not in contact with TonB. A model is proposed where interaction of TonB homodimers with ExbD homodimers initiates the energy transduction cycle, and, ultimately, the ExbD carboxy terminus modulates interactions of a monomeric TonB carboxy terminus with OM transporters. After TonB exchanges its interaction with ExbD for interaction with a transporter, ExbD homodimers undergo a separate cycle needed to re-energize them.IMPORTANCECanonical mechanisms of active transport across cytoplasmic membranes employ ion gradients or hydrolysis of ATP for energy. Gram-negative bacterial outer membranes lack these resources. The TonB system embodies a novel means of active transport across the outer membrane for nutrients that are too large, too scarce, or too important for diffusion-limited transport. A proton gradient across the cytoplasmic membrane is converted by a multiprotein complex into mechanical energy that drives high-affinity active transport across the outer membrane. This system is also of interest since one of its uses in pathogenic bacteria is for competition with the host for the essential element iron. Understanding the mechanism of the TonB system will allow design of antibiotics targeting iron acquisition.


2020 ◽  
Vol 202 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale R. Kopp ◽  
Kathleen Postle

ABSTRACT The TonB system actively transports vital nutrients across the unenergized outer membranes of the majority of Gram-negative bacteria. In this system, integral membrane proteins ExbB, ExbD, and TonB work together to transduce the proton motive force (PMF) of the inner membrane to customized active transporters in the outer membrane by direct and cyclic binding of TonB to the transporters. A PMF-dependent TonB-ExbD interaction is prevented by 10-residue deletions within a periplasmic disordered domain of ExbD adjacent to the cytoplasmic membrane. Here, we explored the function of the ExbD disordered domain in more detail. In vivo photo-cross-linking through sequential pBpa substitutions in the ExbD disordered domain captured five different ExbD complexes, some of which had been previously detected using in vivo formaldehyde cross-linking, a technique that lacks the residue-specific information that can be achieved through photo-cross-linking: two ExbB-ExbD heterodimers (one of which had not been detected previously), previously detected ExbD homodimers, previously detected PMF-dependent ExbD-TonB heterodimers, and for the first time, a predicted, ExbD-TonB PMF-independent interaction. The fact that multiple complexes were captured by the same pBpa substitution indicated the dynamic nature of ExbD interactions as the energy transduction cycle proceeded in vivo. In this study, we also discovered that a conserved motif—V45, V47, L49, and P50—within the disordered domain was required for signal transduction to TonB and to the C-terminal domain of ExbD and was the source of motif essentiality. IMPORTANCE The TonB system is a virulence factor for Gram-negative pathogens. The mechanism by which cytoplasmic membrane proteins of the TonB system transduce an electrochemical gradient into mechanical energy is a long-standing mystery. TonB, ExbB, and ExbD primary amino acid sequences are characterized by regions of predicted intrinsic disorder, consistent with a proposed multiplicity of protein-protein contacts as TonB proceeds through an energy transduction cycle, a complex process that has yet to be recapitulated in vitro. This study validates a region of intrinsic disorder near the ExbD transmembrane domain and identifies an essential conserved motif embedded within it that transduces signals to distal regions of ExbD suggested to configure TonB for productive interaction with outer membrane transporters.


2012 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 1475-1479 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas G. Housden ◽  
Colin Kleanthous

We are investigating how protein bacteriocins import their toxic payload across the Gram-negative cell envelope, both as a means of understanding the translocation process itself and as a means of probing the organization of the cell envelope and the function of the protein machines within it. Our work focuses on the import mechanism of the group A endonuclease (DNase) colicin ColE9 into Escherichia coli, where we combine in vivo observations with structural, biochemical and biophysical approaches to dissect the molecular mechanism of colicin entry. ColE9 assembles a multiprotein ‘translocon’ complex at the E. coli outer membrane that triggers entry of the toxin across the outer membrane and the simultaneous jettisoning of its tightly bound immunity protein, Im9, in a step that is dependent on the protonmotive force. In the present paper, we focus on recent work where we have uncovered how ColE9 assembles its translocon complex, including isolation of the complex, and how this leads to subversion of a signal intrinsic to the Tol–Pal assembly within the periplasm and inner membrane. In this way, the externally located ColE9 is able to ‘connect’ to the inner membrane protonmotive force via a network of protein–protein interactions that spans the entirety of the E. coli cell envelope to drive dissociation of Im9 and initiate entry of the colicin into the cell.


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