Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
3vok;
DSSR-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- transcription-DNA
- Method
- X-ray (2.0 Å)
- Summary
- X-ray crystal structure of wild type hrtr in the apo
form with the target DNA.
- Reference
-
Sawai H, Yamanaka M, Sugimoto H, Shiro Y, Aono S (2012):
"Structural
Basis for the Transcriptional Regulation of Heme
Homeostasis in Lactococcus lactis."
J.Biol.Chem., 287, 30755-30768.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.M112.370916.
- Abstract
- Although heme is a crucial element for many biological
processes including respiration, heme homeostasis should be
regulated strictly due to the cytotoxicity of free heme
molecules. Numerous lactic acid bacteria, including
Lactococcus lactis, acquire heme molecules exogenously to
establish an aerobic respiratory chain. A heme efflux
system plays an important role for heme homeostasis to
avoid cytotoxicity of acquired free heme, but its
regulatory mechanism is not clear. Here, we report that the
transcriptional regulator heme-regulated transporter
regulator (HrtR) senses and binds a heme molecule as its
physiological effector to regulate the expression of the
heme-efflux system responsible for heme homeostasis in L.
lactis. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms of how HrtR
senses a heme molecule and regulates gene expression for
the heme efflux system, we determined the crystal
structures of the apo-HrtR·DNA complex, apo-HrtR, and
holo-HrtR at a resolution of 2.0, 3.1, and 1.9 Å,
respectively. These structures revealed that HrtR is a
member of the TetR family of transcriptional regulators.
The residue pair Arg-46 and Tyr-50 plays a crucial role for
specific DNA binding through hydrogen bonding and a CH-π
interaction with the DNA bases. HrtR adopts a unique
mechanism for its functional regulation upon heme sensing.
Heme binding to HrtR causes a coil-to-helix transition of
the α4 helix in the heme-sensing domain, which triggers a
structural change of HrtR, causing it to dissociate from
the target DNA for derepression of the genes encoding the
heme efflux system. HrtR uses a unique heme-sensing motif
with bis-His (His-72 and His-149) ligation to the heme,
which is essential for the coil-to-helix transition of the
α4 helix upon heme sensing.