6 results on '"Megan Sjodt"'
Search Results
2. A central role for PBP2 in the activation of peptidoglycan polymerization by the bacterial cell elongation machinery
- Author
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Megan Sjodt, Thomas G. Bernhardt, Mandy D. Smith, Daniel Kahne, Georgia R. Squyres, Sue I Sim, Suzanne Walker, Hongbaek Cho, Jackson Buss, Ethan C. Garner, Veerasak Srisuknimit, Andrew C. Kruse, and Patricia D. A. Rohs
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,Polymers ,MreB ,Biochemistry ,Polymerases ,Physical Chemistry ,Bacterial cell structure ,Polymerization ,Cell Fusion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mathematical and Statistical Techniques ,Cell Wall ,Morphogenesis ,Cross-Linking ,Materials ,Genetics (clinical) ,Cytoskeleton ,Cell fusion ,Transfer Functions ,biology ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Cell Cycle ,Chemical Reactions ,Cell cycle ,Cell biology ,Chemistry ,Macromolecules ,Physical Sciences ,Cellular Structures and Organelles ,Research Article ,Glycan ,Cell Physiology ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,Imaging Techniques ,030106 microbiology ,Materials Science ,Peptidoglycan ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Cell wall ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cell Walls ,Bacterial Proteins ,Polysaccharides ,DNA-binding proteins ,Fluorescence Imaging ,Genetics ,Escherichia coli ,Penicillin-Binding Proteins ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Cytokinesis ,Biology and life sciences ,Chemical Bonding ,Membrane Proteins ,Proteins ,Cell Biology ,Peptidoglycans ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Polymer Chemistry ,Actins ,lcsh:Genetics ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Mathematical Functions - Abstract
Cell elongation in rod-shaped bacteria is mediated by the Rod system, a conserved morphogenic complex that spatially controls cell wall assembly by the glycan polymerase RodA and crosslinking enzyme PBP2. Using Escherichia coli as a model system, we identified a PBP2 variant that promotes Rod system function when essential accessory components of the machinery are inactivated. This PBP2 variant hyperactivates cell wall synthesis in vivo and stimulates the activity of RodA-PBP2 complexes in vitro. Cells with the activated synthase also exhibited enhanced polymerization of the actin-like MreB component of the Rod system. Our results define an activation pathway governing Rod system function in which PBP2 conformation plays a central role in stimulating both glycan polymerization by its partner RodA and the formation of cytoskeletal filaments of MreB to orient cell wall assembly. In light of these results, previously isolated mutations that activate cytokinesis suggest that an analogous pathway may also control cell wall synthesis by the division machinery., Author summary The cell wall of bacteria determines their shape and protects them from osmotic lysis. Two enzymatic activities are required for cell wall synthesis: glycan polymerization and crosslinking. A major new family of glycan polymerases was recently discovered and was proposed to work in complex with crosslinking enzymes called penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs). How the activities of these enzymes are coordinated to prevent the toxic generation of uncrosslinked glycans has remained unknown. Our analysis of the cell elongation system of Escherichia coli has revealed that this coupling is mediated by changes in the PBP that activate glycan chain synthesis by the polymerase. Furthermore, we present genetic evidence that this activation event is mediated by a component of the elongation machinery with a previously unknown function. Discovery of this activation pathway provides new mechanistic insight into the cell wall biogenesis process and identifies a new avenue to disrupt it for antibiotic development.
- Published
- 2018
3. Energetics underlying hemin extraction from human hemoglobin by Staphylococcus aureus
- Author
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Joseph Clayton, John S. Olson, Martin L. Phillips, David A. Gell, Jeff Wereszczynski, Joanna D. Marshall, Robert T. Clubb, Megan Sjodt, and Ramsay Macdonald
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,bacterial pathogenesis ,IsdH ,Protein Conformation ,IsdB ,receptor ,Mutant ,iron-regulated surface determinant system ,Biochemistry ,Medical and Health Sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hemoglobins ,Biopolymers ,Receptors ,Receptor ,Cation Transport Proteins ,Hydrolysis ,Bacterial ,Hematology ,Biological Sciences ,isothermal titration calorimetry ,Infectious Diseases ,Cell Surface ,Hemin ,Thermodynamics ,Protein Binding ,NEAT domain ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Biochemistry & Molecular Biology ,Nuclear Magnetic Resonance ,Calorimetry ,Molecular Dynamics Simulation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Humans ,Antigens ,Molecular Biology ,Binding Sites ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,stopped-flow spectrophotometry ,Solvation ,Isothermal titration calorimetry ,Transporter ,Cell Biology ,hemoglobin ,molecular dynamics ,Kinetics ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Chemical Sciences ,Biophysics ,Hemoglobin ,Energy Metabolism ,Linker ,Biomolecular - Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus is a leading cause of life-threatening infections in the United States. It actively acquires the essential nutrient iron from human hemoglobin (Hb) using the iron-regulated surface-determinant (Isd) system. This process is initiated when the closely related bacterial IsdB and IsdH receptors bind to Hb and extract its hemin through a conserved tri-domain unit that contains two NEAr iron Transporter (NEAT) domains that are connected by a helical linker domain. Previously, we demonstrated that the tri-domain unit within IsdH (IsdHN2N3) triggers hemin release by distorting Hb's F-helix. Here, we report that IsdHN2N3 promotes hemin release from both the α- and β-subunits. Using a receptor mutant that only binds to the α-subunit of Hb and a stopped-flow transfer assay, we determined the energetics and micro-rate constants of hemin extraction from tetrameric Hb. We found that at 37 °C, the receptor accelerates hemin release from Hb up to 13,400-fold, with an activation enthalpy of 19.5 ± 1.1 kcal/mol. We propose that hemin removal requires the rate-limiting hydrolytic cleavage of the axial HisF8 Nϵ-Fe3+ bond, which, based on molecular dynamics simulations, may be facilitated by receptor-induced bond hydration. Isothermal titration calorimetry experiments revealed that two distinct IsdHN2N3·Hb protein·protein interfaces promote hemin release. A high-affinity receptor·Hb(A-helix) interface contributed ∼95% of the total binding standard free energy, enabling much weaker receptor interactions with Hb's F-helix that distort its hemin pocket and cause unfavorable changes in the binding enthalpy. We present a model indicating that receptor-introduced structural distortions and increased solvation underlie the IsdH-mediated hemin extraction mechanism.
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- 2018
4. Structure and function of the SEDS:bPBP bacterial cell wall synthesis machinery
- Author
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Thomas A. Hopf, Anna G. Green, Veerasak Srisuknimit, Thomas G. Bernhardt, Patricia D. A. Rohs, Debora S. Marks, Alexander J. Meeske, Genevieve S Dobihal, Andrew C. Kruse, Daniel Kahne, Megan Sjodt, David Z. Rudner, Kelly P Brock, and Suzanne Walker
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,010407 polymers ,Chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Bacterial cell structure ,0104 chemical sciences ,Structure and function ,Inorganic Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Structural Biology ,Biophysics ,General Materials Science ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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5. Novel mechanism of hemin capture by Hbp2, the hemoglobin-binding hemophore from Listeria monocytogenes
- Author
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Robert T. Clubb, G. Reza Malmirchegini, Michael R. Sawaya, Sergey Shnitkind, Justin Rosinski, Phillip E. Klebba, Megan Sjodt, and Salete M. C. Newton
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Hemoglobin binding ,Models, Molecular ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Plasma protein binding ,Biology ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hemoglobins ,Bacterial Proteins ,polycyclic compounds ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Tyrosine ,Molecular Biology ,Heme ,Peptide sequence ,Binding protein ,Cell Biology ,equipment and supplies ,Listeria monocytogenes ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Kinetics ,chemistry ,Protein Structure and Folding ,Hemin ,Hemoglobin ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Iron is an essential nutrient that is required for the growth of the bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes. In cell cultures, this microbe secretes hemin/hemoglobin-binding protein 2 (Hbp2; Lmo2185) protein, which has been proposed to function as a hemophore that scavenges heme from the environment. Based on its primary sequence, Hbp2 contains three NEAr transporter (NEAT) domains of unknown function. Here we show that each of these domains mediates high affinity binding to ferric heme (hemin) and that its N- and C-terminal domains interact with hemoglobin (Hb). The results of hemin transfer experiments are consistent with Hbp2 functioning as an Hb-binding hemophore that delivers hemin to other Hbp2 proteins that are attached to the cell wall. Surprisingly, our work reveals that the central NEAT domain in Hbp2 binds hemin even though its primary sequence lacks a highly conserved YXXXY motif that is used by all other previously characterized NEAT domains to coordinate iron in the hemin molecule. To elucidate the mechanism of hemin binding by Hbp2, we determined crystal structures of its central NEAT domain (Hbp2(N2); residues 183-303) in its free and hemin-bound states. The structures reveal an unprecedented mechanism of hemin binding in which Hbp2(N2) undergoes a major conformational rearrangement that facilitates metal coordination by a non-canonical tyrosine residue. These studies highlight previously unrecognized plasticity in the hemin binding mechanism of NEAT domains and provide insight into how L. monocytogenes captures heme iron.
- Published
- 2014
6. Staphylococcus aureus Uses a Novel Multidomain Receptor to Break Apart Human Hemoglobin and Steal Its Heme*
- Author
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G. Reza Malmirchegini, David A. Gell, Kaavya Krishna Kumar, Jiang Zhang, Thomas Spirig, Benfang Lei, Mengyao Liu, Claire F. Dickson, Joseph A. Loo, Robert T. Clubb, Scott A. Robson, and Megan Sjodt
- Subjects
Staphylococcus aureus ,Receptors, Cell Surface ,Heme ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hemoglobins ,Protein structure ,Tetramer ,medicine ,Humans ,Cloning, Molecular ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,Cation Transport Proteins ,Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular ,Antigens, Bacterial ,Chemistry ,Cell Biology ,Transport protein ,Protein Structure and Folding ,Proteolysis ,Hemoglobin ,Linker - Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus is a leading cause of life-threatening infections in the United States. It requires iron to grow, which must be actively procured from its host to successfully mount an infection. Heme-iron within hemoglobin (Hb) is the most abundant source of iron in the human body and is captured by S. aureus using two closely related receptors, IsdH and IsdB. Here we demonstrate that each receptor captures heme using two conserved near iron transporter (NEAT) domains that function synergistically. NMR studies of the 39-kDa conserved unit from IsdH (IsdHN2N3, Ala326–Asp660) reveals that it adopts an elongated dumbbell-shaped structure in which its NEAT domains are properly positioned by a helical linker domain, whose three-dimensional structure is determined here in detail. Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and heme transfer measurements indicate that IsdHN2N3 extracts heme from Hb via an ordered process in which the receptor promotes heme release by inducing steric strain that dissociates the Hb tetramer. Other clinically significant Gram-positive pathogens capture Hb using receptors that contain multiple NEAT domains, suggesting that they use a conserved mechanism. Background: During infections, Staphylococcus aureus acquires heme-iron from human hemoglobin using the receptor proteins IsdH and IsdB. Results: A conserved multidomain unit in IsdH and IsdB synergistically captures heme and destabilizes the hemoglobin tetramer. Conclusion: Receptor domain synergy and hemoglobin dissociation allow efficient heme uptake by S. aureus. Significance: IsdH and IsdB may represent novel targets for antibiotics that limit microbial access to iron.
- Published
- 2012
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