Structures of BmrR-Drug Complexes Reveal a Rigid Multidrug Binding Pocket and Transcription Activation through Tyrosine ExpulsionS
BmrR is a member of the MerR family and a multidrug binding transcription factor that up-regulates the expression of the bmr multidrug efflux transporter gene in response to myriad lipophilic cationic compounds. The structural mechanism by which BmrR binds these chemically and structurally different...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 2008-09, Vol.283 (39), p.26795-26804 |
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Zusammenfassung: | BmrR is a member of the MerR family and a multidrug binding transcription
factor that up-regulates the expression of the
bmr
multidrug efflux
transporter gene in response to myriad lipophilic cationic compounds. The
structural mechanism by which BmrR binds these chemically and structurally
different drugs and subsequently activates transcription is poorly understood.
Here, we describe the crystal structures of BmrR bound to rhodamine 6G (R6G)
or berberine (Ber) and cognate DNA. These structures reveal each drug stacks
against multiple aromatic residues with their positive charges most proximal
to the carboxylate group of Glu-253 and that, unlike other multidrug binding
pockets, that of BmrR is rigid. Substitution of Glu-253 with either alanine
(E253A) or glutamine (E253Q) results in unpredictable binding affinities for
R6G, Ber, and tetraphenylphosphonium. Moreover, these drug binding studies
reveal that the negative charge of Glu-253 is not important for high affinity
binding to Ber and tetraphenylphosphonium but plays a more significant, but
unpredictable, role in R6G binding.
In vitro
transcription data show
that E253A and E253Q are constitutively active, and structures of the
drug-free E253A-DNA and E253Q-DNA complexes support a transcription activation
mechanism requiring the expulsion of Tyr-152 from the multidrug binding
pocket. In sum, these data delineate the mechanism by which BmrR binds
lipophilic, monovalent cationic compounds and suggest the importance of the
redundant negative electrostatic nature of this rigid drug binding pocket that
can be used to discriminate against molecules that are not substrates of the
Bmr multidrug efflux pump. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.M804191200 |