tryptophan repressor
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Author(s):  
Janina Sprenger ◽  
Catherine L. Lawson ◽  
Claes von Wachenfeldt ◽  
Leila Lo Leggio ◽  
Jannette Carey

The crystal structures of domain-swapped tryptophan repressor (TrpR) variant Val58Ile before and after soaking with the physiological ligand L-tryptophan (L-Trp) indicate that L-Trp occupies the same location in the domain-swapped form as in native dimeric TrpR and makes equivalent residue contacts. This result is unexpected because the ligand binding-site residues arise from three separate polypeptide chains in the domain-swapped form. This work represents the first published structure of a domain-swapped form of TrpR with L-Trp bound. The presented structures also show that the protein amino-terminus, whether or not it bears a disordered extension of about 20 residues, is accessible in the large solvent channels of the domain-swapped crystal form, as in the structures reported previously in this form for TrpR without N-terminal extensions. These findings inspire the exploration of L-Trp analogs and N-terminal modifications as labels to orient guest proteins that cannot otherwise be crystallized in the solvent channels of crystalline domain-swapped TrpR hosts for potential diffraction analysis.


mBio ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sankhya Bommana ◽  
Naraporn Somboonna ◽  
Gracie Richards ◽  
Maryam Tarazkar ◽  
Deborah Dean

ABSTRACT The obligate intracellular pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) is the leading cause of bacterial sexually transmitted infections and blindness globally. To date, Ct urogenital strains are considered tryptophan prototrophs, utilizing indole for tryptophan synthesis within a closed-conformation tetramer comprised of two α (TrpA)- and two β (TrpB)-subunits. In contrast, ocular strains are auxotrophs due to mutations in TrpA, relying on host tryptophan pools for survival. It has been speculated that there is strong selective pressure for urogenital strains to maintain a functional operon. Here, we performed genetic, phylogenetic, and novel functional modeling analyses of 595 geographically diverse Ct ocular, urethral, vaginal, and rectal strains with complete operon sequences. We found that ocular and urogenital, but not lymphogranuloma venereum, TrpA-coding sequences were under positive selection. However, vaginal and urethral strains exhibited greater nucleotide diversity and a higher ratio of nonsynonymous to synonymous substitutions [Pi(a)/Pi(s)] than ocular strains, suggesting a more rapid evolution of beneficial mutations. We also identified nonsynonymous amino acid changes for an ocular isolate with a urogenital backbone in the intergenic region between TrpR and TrpB at the exact binding site for YtgR—the only known iron-dependent transcription factor in Chlamydia—indicating that selective pressure has disabled the response to fluctuating iron levels. In silico effects on protein stability, ligand-binding affinity, and tryptophan repressor (TrpR) affinity for single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) measured by calculating free energy changes (ΔΔG) between Ct reference and mutant tryptophan operon proteins were also analyzed. We found that tryptophan synthase function was likely suboptimal compared to other bacterial tryptophan prototrophs and that a diversity of urogenital strain mutations rendered the synthase nonfunctional or inefficient. The novel mutations identified here affected active sites in an orthosteric manner but also hindered α- and β-subunit allosteric interactions from distant sites, reducing efficiency of the tryptophan synthase. Importantly, strains with mutant proteins were inclined toward energy conservation by exhibiting an altered affinity for their respective ligands compared to reference strains, indicating greater fitness. This is not surprising as l-tryptophan is one of the most energetically costly amino acids to synthesize. Mutations in the tryptophan repressor gene (trpR) among urogenital strains were similarly detrimental to function. Our findings indicate that urogenital strains are evolving more rapidly than previously recognized with mutations that impact tryptophan operon function in a manner that is energetically beneficial, providing a novel host-pathogen evolutionary mechanism for intracellular survival. IMPORTANCE Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) is a major global public health concern causing sexually transmitted and ocular infections affecting over 130 million and 260 million people, respectively. Sequelae include infertility, preterm birth, ectopic pregnancy, and blindness. Ct relies on available host tryptophan pools and/or substrates to synthesize tryptophan to survive. Urogenital strains synthesize tryptophan from indole using their intact tryptophan synthase (TS). Ocular strains contain a trpA frameshift mutation that encodes a truncated TrpA with loss of TS function. We found that TS function is likely suboptimal compared to other tryptophan prototrophs and that urogenital stains contain diverse mutations that render TS nonfunctional/inefficient, evolve more rapidly than previously recognized, and impact operon function in a manner that is energetically beneficial, providing an alternative host-pathogen evolutionary mechanism for intracellular survival. Our research has broad scientific appeal since our approach can be applied to other bacteria that may explain evolution/survival in host-pathogen interactions.


Author(s):  
Andre C. Stiel ◽  
Sooruban Shanmugaratnam ◽  
Ole Herud-Sikimic ◽  
Gerd Jürgens ◽  
Birte Höcker

AbstractReceptors that promiscuously bind a range of ligands provide insights into how nature mediates affinity and biological functioning. Moreover, such receptors provide vantage points for the rational design of specific binding for biotechnological applications. Here we describe the molecular details of the ligand binding promiscuity of the well-known tryptophan repressor TrpR. We elucidated high-resolution structures of TrpR bound to the co-repressors 5-methyl-tryptophan and 5-methyl-tryptamine as well as the pseudo-repressors indole-3-propionic and indole-3-acetic acid. Furthermore, using isothermal titration calorimetry we procure the corresponding thermodynamic parameters. Together this data provides molecular explanations for the strongly varied affinities and biological effects of the ligands providing insights into how nature shapes specificity and affinity. Beyond this we use these insights to exemplarily showcase knowledge-based design of TrpR by swapping its specificity from its native ligand tryptophan to indole-3-acetic acid. Finally, we elucidate the structures of the variant bound to indole-3-acetic and indole-3-propionic acid to retrace our design rationale.


2009 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 322a
Author(s):  
Valerie Copie ◽  
Brian Tripet ◽  
Anupam Goel ◽  
Lucas Nerbert ◽  
Jannette Carey

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