Structural and Functional Investigation of the Periplasmic
Arsenate-Binding Protein ArrX from Chrysiogenes arsenatis
Posted on 2021-02-04 - 15:09
The
anaerobic bacterium Chrysiogenes arsenatis respires
using the oxyanion arsenate (AsO43–)
as the terminal electron acceptor, where it is reduced to arsenite
(AsO33–) while concomitantly oxidizing
various organic (e.g., acetate) electron donors. This respiratory
activity is catalyzed in the periplasm of the bacterium by the enzyme
arsenate reductase (Arr), with expression of the enzyme controlled
by a sensor histidine kinase (ArrS) and a periplasmic-binding protein
(PBP), ArrX. Here, we report for the first time, the molecular structure
of ArrX in the absence and presence of bound ligand arsenate. Comparison
of the ligand-bound structure of ArrX with other PBPs shows a high
level of conservation of critical residues for ligand binding by these
proteins; however, this suite of PBPs shows different structural alterations
upon ligand binding. For ArrX and its homologue AioX (from Rhizobium sp. str. NT-26), which specifically binds arsenite,
the structures of the substrate-binding sites in the vicinity of a
conserved and critical cysteine residue contribute to the discrimination
of binding for these chemically similar ligands.
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Poddar, Nilakhi; Badilla, Consuelo; Maghool, Shadi; Osborne, Thomas H.; Santini, Joanne M.; Maher, Megan J. (2021). Structural and Functional Investigation of the Periplasmic
Arsenate-Binding Protein ArrX from Chrysiogenes arsenatis. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.0c00555