Structural Characterization of the Nickel-binding Properties of Bacillus pasteurii Urease Accessory Protein (Ure)E in Solution

Urease activation is critical to the virulence of many human and animal pathogens. Urease possesses multiple, nickel-containing active sites, and UreE, the only nickel-binding protein among the urease accessory proteins, activates urease by transporting nickel ions. We performed NMR experiments to i...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2004-04, Vol.279 (17), p.17466-17472
Hauptverfasser: Won, Hyung-Sik, Lee, Yeon-Hee, Kim, Ji-Hun, Shin, In Seon, Lee, Mann Hyung, Lee, Bong-Jin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Urease activation is critical to the virulence of many human and animal pathogens. Urease possesses multiple, nickel-containing active sites, and UreE, the only nickel-binding protein among the urease accessory proteins, activates urease by transporting nickel ions. We performed NMR experiments to investigate the solution structure and the nickel-binding properties of Bacillus pasteurii (Bp) UreE. The secondary structures and global folds of BpUreE were determined for its metal-free and nickel-bound forms. The results indicated that no major structural change of BpUreE arises from the nickel binding. In addition to the previously identified nickel-binding site (Gly97–Cys103), the C-terminal tail region (Lys141–His147) was confirmed for the first time to be involved in the nickel binding. The C-terminally conserved sequence (144GHQH147) was confirmed to have an inherent nickel-binding ability. Nickel addition to 1.6 mm subunit, a concentration where BpUreE predominantly forms a tetramer upon the nickel binding, induced a biphasic spectral change consistent with binding of up to at least three nickel ions per tetrameric unit. In contrast, nickel addition to 0.1 mm subunit, a concentration at which the protein is primarily a dimer, caused a monophasic spectral change consistent with more than 1 equivalent per dimeric unit. Combined with the equilibrium dialysis results, which indicated 2.5 nickel equivalents binding per dimer at a micromolar protein concentration, the nickel-binding stoichiometry of BpUreE at a physiological concentration could be three nickel ions per dimer. Altogether, the present results provide the first detailed structural data concerning the nickel-binding properties of intact, wild-type BpUreE in solution.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M308390200