University of Leicester
Browse

A Dimeric Chlorite Dismutase Exhibits O2-Generating Activity and Acts as a Chlorite Antioxidant in Klebsiella pneumoniae MGH 78578

Download (5.87 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2016-02-10, 16:39 authored by A. I. Celis, Z. Geeraerts, D. Ngmenterebo, M. M. Machovina, Richard C. Kurker, K. Rajakumar, A. Ivancich, K. R. Rodgers, G. S. Lukat-Rodgers, J. L. DuBois
Chlorite dismutases (Clds) convert chlorite to O2 and Cl–, stabilizing heme in the presence of strong oxidants and forming the O═O bond with high efficiency. The enzyme from the pathogen Klebsiella pneumoniae (KpCld) represents a subfamily of Clds that share most of their active site structure with efficient O2-producing Clds, even though they have a truncated monomeric structure, exist as a dimer rather than a pentamer, and come from Gram-negative bacteria without a known need to degrade chlorite. We hypothesized that KpCld, like others in its subfamily, should be able to make O2 and may serve an in vivo antioxidant function. Here, it is demonstrated that it degrades chlorite with limited turnovers relative to the respiratory Clds, in part because of the loss of hypochlorous acid from the active site and destruction of the heme. The observation of hypochlorous acid, the expected leaving group accompanying transfer of an oxygen atom to the ferric heme, is consistent with the more open, solvent-exposed heme environment predicted by spectroscopic measurements and inferred from the crystal structures of related proteins. KpCld is more susceptible to oxidative degradation under turnover conditions than the well-characterized Clds associated with perchlorate respiration. However, wild-type K. pneumoniae has a significant growth advantage in the presence of chlorate relative to a Δcld knockout strain, specifically under nitrate-respiring conditions. This suggests that a physiological function of KpCld may be detoxification of endogenously produced chlorite.

Funding

Support by National Institutes of Health Grants R01GM090260 (to J.L.D.), GM094039 (to G.S.L.-R.), and AI072719 (to K.R.R.) and by the CNRS (UMR 8221), CEASaclay, and the French Infrastructure for Integrated Structural Biology (FRISBI, ANR-10-INSB-05-01) (to A. I.) is gratefully acknowledged.

History

Citation

Biochemistry, 2015, 54 (2), pp 434–446

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Biochemistry

Publisher

American Chemical Society

issn

0006-2960

eissn

1520-4995

Copyright date

2014

Available date

2016-02-10

Publisher version

http://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/bi501184c

Notes

Further description of K. pneumoniae mutant generation (Figure S1), rR spectra of ferrous KpCld (Figure S2), temperature dependence of the rR spectrum of KpCld (Figure S3), pH–rate profiles (Figure S4), NaOCl/KpCld titration data (Figure S5), reaction between NaOCl and KpCld monitored over time (Figure S6), and reaction between DaCld and chlorite in the presence of MCD (Figure S7). This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.

Language

en

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC