The molecular basis of protein toxin HicA-dependent binding of the protein antitoxin HicB to DNA
Winter, AJ; Williams, C; Isupov, MN; et al.Crocker, H; Gromova, M; Marsh, P; Wilkinson, OJ; Dillingham, MS; Harmer, NJ; Titball, RW; Crump, MP
Date: 18 October 2018
Journal
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Publisher
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Publisher DOI
Related links
Abstract
Toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems are present in many bacteria and play important roles in bacterial growth, physiology, and pathogenicity. Those that are best studied are the type II TA systems, in which both toxins and antitoxins are proteins. The HicAB system is one of the prototypic TA systems, found in many bacterial species. Complex ...
Toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems are present in many bacteria and play important roles in bacterial growth, physiology, and pathogenicity. Those that are best studied are the type II TA systems, in which both toxins and antitoxins are proteins. The HicAB system is one of the prototypic TA systems, found in many bacterial species. Complex interactions between the protein toxin (HicA), the protein antitoxin (HicB), and the DNA upstream of the encoding genes regulate the activity of this system, but few structural details are available about how HicA destabilizes the HicB-DNA complex. Here, we determined the X-ray structures of HicB and the HicAB complex to 1.8 and 2.5 Å resolution respectively and characterized their DNA interactions. This revealed that HicB forms a tetramer and HicA and HicB form a hetero-octameric complex that involves structural reorganization of the C-terminal (DNA-binding) region of HicB. Our observations indicated that HicA has a profound impact on binding of HicB to DNA sequences upstream of hicAB in a stoichiometric-dependent way. At low ratios of HicA:HicB, there was no effect on DNA binding, but at higher ratios, the affinity for DNA declined cooperatively, driving dissociation of the HicA:HicB:DNA complex.These results reveal the structural mechanisms by which HicA de-represses the HicB-DNA complex.
Biosciences - old structure
Collections of Former Colleges
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Crystal structure of the type IV secretion system component CagX from Helicobacter pylori.
Zhang, J; Fan, F; Zhao, Y; et al. (International Union of Crystallography, 28 February 2017)Helicobacter pylori, a Gram-negative bacterial pathogen prevalent in the human population, is the causative agent of severe gastric diseases. An H. pylori type IV secretion (T4S) system encoded by the cytotoxin-associated ... -
The bicoid mRNA localization factor Exuperantia is an RNA-binding pseudonuclease.
Lazzaretti, D; Veith, K; Kramer, K; et al. (Nature Research, 4 July 2016)Anterior patterning in Drosophila is mediated by the localization of bicoid (bcd) mRNA at the anterior pole of the oocyte. Exuperantia (Exu) is a putative exonuclease (EXO) associated with bcd and required for its localization. ... -
Prevalence and architecture of de novo mutations in developmental disorders
Deciphering Developmental Disorders Study (Springer Nature, 25 January 2017)The genomes of individuals with severe, undiagnosed developmental disorders are enriched in damaging de novo mutations (DNMs) in developmentally important genes. Here we have sequenced the exomes of 4,293 families containing ...