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Query: EC:2.7.13.3 (
histidine kinase
)
2,405
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The sequencing data were analyzed for two regions of the 120-MDa plasmid (p120) of Azospirillum brasilense Sp245. The 2420-bp region I, which flanks the omegon insertion in the SK048 mutant defective in production of the polar flagellum (Fla-) and swarming (Swa-), was shown to contain a cluster of two open reading frames (orf) that possess properties of coding sequences (CDSs). The NtrA (sigma 54) boxes were found in their upstream regions. The products of orf1 and orf2 are 16.5 and 15.5 kDa in molecular weight and consist of 151 and 152 amino-acid residues, respectively. The PRF1 polypeptide was found to contain a region homologous to the
cysteine
- and glycine-rich zinc-binding domain of the DnaJ heat-shock protein. ORF2 showed a homology to Haemophilus ducreyi pilin, fragments of Streptomyces and Mycobacterium integral membrane proteins, and eukaryotic transcriptional regulators. The omegon proved to be inserted into orfX1/X2 which possibly has a deletion and shows a GC content untypical for A. brasilense genes. The deduced ORFX2 polypeptide is homologous to fragments of arsenite-translocating ATPase and signal-transducing
histidine kinase
of archaebacteria. Possible causes of the Fla-Swa- phenotype of the A. brasilense SK048 mutant are considered. One coding orf was identified in the 1194-bp region II located approximately 4 kb away from the omegon insertion. The N-terminal region of the deduced product of this partly sequenced orf was shown to contain a signal sequence typical for secreted proteins.
...
PMID:[Characteristics of genes identified in the 120 MDa plasmid DNA in a mutant of Azospirillum brasilense Sp245 bacteria, defective in polar flagellation and swarming]. 1185 90
The aspartate receptor of bacterial chemotaxis is representative of a large family of taxis receptors widespread in prokaryotes. The homodimeric receptor associates with cytoplasmic components to form a receptor-kinase signaling complex. Within this complex the receptor is known to directly contact the
histidine kinase
CheA, the coupling protein CheW, and other receptor dimers. However, the locations and extents of the contact regions on the receptor surface remain ambiguous. The present study applies the protein-interactions-by-
cysteine
-modification (PICM) method to map out surfaces on the aspartate receptor that are essential for kinase stimulation in the assembled receptor-kinase complex. The approach utilizes 52 engineered
cysteine
positions scattered over the surface of the receptor periplasmic and cytoplasmic domains. When the bulky, anionic probe 5-fluorescein-maleimide is coupled to these positions, large effects on receptor-mediated kinase stimulation are observed at eight cytoplasmic locations. By contrast, no large effects are observed for probe attachment at exposed positions in the periplasmic domain. The results indicate that essential receptor surface regions are located near the hairpin turn at the distal end of the cytoplasmic domain and in the cytoplasmic adaptation site region. These surface regions include the docking sites for CheA, CheW, and other receptor dimers, as well as surfaces that transmit information from the receptor adaptation sites to the kinase. Smaller effects observed in the cytoplasmic linker or HAMP region suggest this region may also play a role in kinase regulation. A comparison of the activity perturbations caused by a dianionic, bulky probe (5-fluorescein-maleimide), a zwitterionic, bulky probe (5-tetramethyl-rhodamine-maleimide), and a nonionic, smaller probe (N-ethyl-maleimide) reveals the roles of probe size and charge in generating the observed effects on kinase activity. Overall, the results indicate that interactions between the periplasmic domains of different receptor dimers are not required for kinase activation in the signaling complex. By contrast, the observed spatial distribution of protein contact surfaces on the cytoplasmic domain is consistent with both (i) distinct docking sites for cytoplasmic proteins and (ii) interactions between the cytoplasmic domains of different dimers to form a trimer-of-dimers.
...
PMID:Mapping out regions on the surface of the aspartate receptor that are essential for kinase activation. 1262 61
EnvZ
, a dimeric transmembrane
histidine kinase
, belongs to the family of His-Asp phosphorelay signal transduction systems. The cytoplasmic kinase domain of
EnvZ
can be dissected into two independently functioning domains, A and B, whose NMR solution structures have been individually determined. Here, we examined the topological arrangement of these two domains in the
EnvZ
dimer, a structure that is key to understanding the mechanism underlying the autophosphorylation activity of the kinase. A series of
cysteine
substitution mutants were constructed to test the feasibility of chemical crosslinking between the two domains. These crosslinking data demonstrate that helix I of domain A of one subunit in the EnvZc dimer is in close proximity to domain B of the other subunit in the same dimer, while helix II of domain A of one subunit interacts with domain B of the same subunit in the EnvZc dimer. This is the first demonstration of the topological arrangement between the central dimerization domain containing the active center His residues (domain A) and the ATP-binding catalysis assisting domain (domain B) in a class I
histidine kinase
.
...
PMID:Probing catalytically essential domain orientation in histidine kinase EnvZ by targeted disulfide crosslinking. 1269 49
EnvZ
and OmpR are a transmembrane sensor and its cognate response regulator, respectively, regulating the transcription of porin genes in response to medium osmolarity in Escherichia coli. The cytoplasmic domain of
EnvZ
(EnvZc) possesses both kinase and phosphatase activities and can be dissected into two functional domains, A and B. Here, we performed a
cysteine
-scanning analysis of domain A, a 67-residue central dimerization and phosphatase domain containing His-243 as the phosphorylation site, and we examined the effects of the
cysteine
substitution mutations on the enzymatic activities of domain A. The substitution mutations were made at 31 residues, from which 24 mutant domain A proteins were biochemically characterized. From the analysis of the phosphatase activity of purified mutant proteins, it was found that there are two regions in domain A which are important for this activity.
Cysteine
mutations in these regions dramatically reduce or completely abolish the phosphatase activity of domain A. The mutations that have the most-severe effects on domain A phosphatase activity also significantly reduce the phosphatase activity of EnvZc containing the same mutation. Using an in vitro complementation system with EnvZc(H243V), these
cysteine
mutants were further characterized for their autophosphorylation activities as well as their phosphotransfer activities. The results indicate that some mutations are specific either for the phosphatase activity or for the kinase activity.
...
PMID:Cysteine-scanning analysis of the dimerization domain of EnvZ, an osmosensing histidine kinase. 1275 42
The
EnvZ
/OmpR histidyl-aspartyl phosphorelay (HAP) system in Escherichia coli regulates the expression of ompF and ompC, the major outer membrane porin genes, in response to environmental osmolarity changes. Here, we report that dimers of EnvZc, the cytoplasmic domain of
EnvZ
, undergo spontaneous subunit exchange in solution. By introducing a
cysteine
substitution (S260C) in the dimerization domain of EnvZc, we were able to crosslink the two subunits in a dimer and trap the heterodimer formed between two different mutant EnvZc. By using a complementing system with two autophosphorylation-defective EnvZc mutants, one containing the H243V mutation at the autophosphorylation site and the other containing the G405A mutation in the ATP-binding domain, we demonstrated that an EnvZc(G405A) subunit can be phosphorylated by an EnvZc(H243V) subunit only when a heterodimer is formed. The rate of subunit exchange is concentration-dependent, with higher rates at higher concentrations of protein. The disulfide-crosslinked EnvZc(G405A) homodimer could not be phosphorylated by EnvZc(H243V), since the heterodimer formation between the two mutant proteins was blocked, indicating that autophosphorylation cannot occur by dimer-dimer interaction. By using MBP-deltaL-EnvZc(S260C) fusion protein (deltaL: the linker region, spanning residues 180-222, was deleted), it was found that in the disulfide-crosslinked MBP-deltaL-EnvZc(S260C)/deltaL-EnvZc(S260C/G405A) heterodimer, only the deltaL-EnvZc(S260C/G405A) subunit was phosphorylated but not the MBP-deltaL-EnvZc(S260C) subunit. Together, the present results provide biochemical evidence that
EnvZ
autophosphorylation occurs in trans and only within an
EnvZ
dimer.
...
PMID:Spontaneous subunit exchange and biochemical evidence for trans-autophosphorylation in a dimer of Escherichia coli histidine kinase (EnvZ). 1276 31
The cheA gene of Escherichia coli encodes two proteins from in-frame tandem translation start sites. The long form of CheA (CheA(L)) is the
histidine kinase
responsible for phosphorylating the response regulator, CheY. The short form of CheA (CheA(S)) is identical in domain structure to CheA(L) except that it is missing the first 97 amino acids. Reduced CheA(S) bound to and enhanced the activity of the phosphatase of phospho-CheY, CheZ. Oxidized CheA(S) was unable to interact with CheZ. Oxidized CheA(S) formed covalent dimers, whereas CheA(L) did not. This property was believed to be the result of an intermolecular disulfide bond. The CheA proteins contain three
cysteine
residues, one of which likely lies within the CheZ binding region of CheA(S) and is exposed to solvent. We identified the CheZ binding domain of CheA(S) by testing the various fragments of CheA(S) that contain
cysteine
residues for CheZ binding activity in an ELISA-based CheA(S)-CheZ binding assay. Fragments of CheA(S) lacking the truncated P1 domain of CheA(S) ('P1) were unable to bind CheZ. We also found that a fusion of the first 42 amino acids of CheA(S) ('P1 domain) to GST bound CheZ and enhanced its activity. The interaction between the GST-CheA[98-139] fusion protein and CheZ was dependent on the accessibility of a
cysteine
residue (Cys-120) located in the 'P1 domain.
...
PMID:The accessibility of cys-120 in CheA(S) is important for the binding of CheZ and enhancement of CheZ phosphatase activity. 1517 Mar 28
We review and analyze the growing family of bacterial proteins carrying the LOV (light oxygen voltage) motif, a flavin-binding photoactive domain first characterized in plant blue-light receptors, the phototropins. A total of 29 sequences encoding LOV-proteins can be detected in the genomes of 24 bacterial species. In the bacterial LOV domains, the majority of the amino acids known to interact with the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) chromophore in phototropin LOVs are conserved, supporting the suggestion of their possible role as blue-light sensors. The Bacillus subtilis protein YtvA has been the first bacterial LOV-protein shown to bind FMN and to undergo the same light-induced reactions as plant phototropins. The photocycle involves the reversible formation of a covalent adduct between FMN and a conserved
cysteine
. In this work we report preliminary results on a Caulobacter crescentus LOV-kinase, that undergoes the same photochemistry as YtvA. The bacterial LOV-proteins exhibit a variety of effector domains associated to the light-responsive LOV-domain, e.g.
histidine kinase
, transcriptional regulators, putative phosphodiesterases and regulators of stress factors, pointing to their physiological role as sensing and signalling proteins.
...
PMID:The bacterial counterparts of plant phototropins. 1517 Apr 86
Circadian oscillators are endogenous biological systems that generate the approximately 24 hour temporal pattern of biological processes and confer a reproductive fitness advantage to their hosts. The cyanobacterial clock is the simplest known and the only clock system for which structural information for core component proteins, in this case KaiA, KaiB and KaiC, is available. SasA, a clock-associated
histidine kinase
, is necessary for robustness of the circadian rhythm of gene expression and implicated in clock output. The N-terminal domain of SasA (N-SasA) interacts directly with KaiC and likely functions as the sensory domain controlling the SasA
histidine kinase
activity. N-SasA and KaiB share significant sequence similarity and, thus, it has been proposed that they would be structurally similar and may even compete for KaiC binding. Here, we report the NMR structure of N-SasA and show it to be different from that of KaiB. The structural comparisons provide no clear details to suggest competition of SasA and KaiB for KaiC binding. N-SasA adopts a canonical thioredoxin fold but lacks the catalytic
cysteine
residues. A patch of conserved, solvent-exposed residues is found near the canonical thioredoxin active site. We suggest that this surface is used by N-SasA for protein-protein interactions. Our analysis suggests that the structural differences between N-SasA and KaiB are the result of only a few critical amino acid substitutions.
...
PMID:Structure of the N-terminal domain of the circadian clock-associated histidine kinase SasA. 1531 3
The aspartate receptor of the bacterial chemotaxis pathway serves as a scaffold for the formation of a multiprotein signaling complex containing the receptor and the cytoplasmic pathway components. Within this complex, the receptor regulates the autophosphorylation activity of
histidine kinase
CheA, thereby controlling the signals sent to the flagellar motor and the receptor adaptation system. The receptor cytoplasmic domain, which controls the on-off switching of CheA, possesses 14 glycine residues that are highly conserved in related receptors. In principle, these conserved glycines could be required for static turns, bends, or close packing in the cytoplasmic domain, or they could be required for conformational dynamics during receptor on-off switching. To determine which glycines are essential and to probe their functional roles, we have substituted each conserved glycine with both alanine and
cysteine
, and then measured the effects on receptor function in vivo and in vitro. The results reveal a subset of six glycines which are required for receptor function during cellular chemotaxis. Two of these essential glycines (G388 and G391) are located at a hairpin turn at the distal end of the folded cytoplasmic domain, where they are required for the tertiary fold of the signaling subdomain and for CheA kinase activation. Three other essential glycines (G338, G339, and G437) are located at the border between the adaptation and signaling subdomains, where they play key roles in CheA kinase activation and on-off switching. These three glycines form a ring around the four-helix bundle that comprises the receptor cytoplasmic domain, yielding a novel architectural feature termed a bundle hinge. The final essential glycine (G455) is located in the adaptation subdomain where it is required for on-off switching. Overall, the findings confirm that six of the 14 conserved cytoplasmic glycines are essential for receptor function because they enable helix turns and bends required for native receptor structure, and in some cases for switching between the on and off signaling states. An initial working model proposes that the novel bundle hinge enables the four-helix bundle to bend, perhaps during the assembly of the receptor trimer of dimers or during on-off switching. More generally, the findings predict that certain human disease states, including specific cancers, could be triggered by lock-on mutations at essential glycine positions that control the on-off switching of receptors and signaling proteins.
...
PMID:Conserved glycine residues in the cytoplasmic domain of the aspartate receptor play essential roles in kinase coupling and on-off switching. 1590 83
In Escherichia coli, the
EnvZ
/OmpR two-component regulatory system regulates expression of the porin genes ompF and ompC in response to changes in osmolarity. It has recently become apparent that OmpR functions as a global regulator, by regulating the expression of many genes in addition to the porin genes. OmpR consists of two domains; phosphorylation of the N-terminal receiver domain increases DNA binding affinity of the C-terminal domain and vice versa. Many response regulators including PhoB and FixJ dimerize upon phosphorylation. Here, we demonstrate that OmpR dimerization is stimulated by phosphorylation or by DNA binding. The dimerization interface revealed here was unanticipated and had previously not been predicted. Using the accepted head-to-tail tandem-binding model as a guide, we set out to examine the intermolecular interactions between OmpR dimers bound to DNA by protein-protein cross-linking methods. Surprisingly, amino acid positions that we expected to form cross-linked dimers did not. Conversely, positions predicted not to form dimers did. Because of these results, we designed a series of 23
cysteine
-substituted OmpR mutants that were used to investigate dimer interfaces formed via the beta-sheet region. This four-stranded beta-sheet is a unique feature of the OmpR group of winged helix-turn-helix proteins. Many of the
cysteine
-substituted mutants are dominant to wild-type OmpR, are phosphorylated by acetyl phosphate as well as the cognate kinase
EnvZ
, and the cross-linked proteins are capable of binding to DNA. Our results are consistent with a model in which OmpR binds to DNA in a head-to-head orientation, in contrast to the previously proposed asymmetric head-to-tail model. They also raise the possibility that OmpR may be capable of adopting more than one orientation as it binds to a vast array of genes to activate or repress transcription.
...
PMID:The response regulator OmpR oligomerizes via beta-sheets to form head-to-head dimers. 1597 41
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