Search results for "PAS domain"

showing 9 items of 9 documents

The cytoplasmic PASC domain of the sensor kinase DcuS of Escherichia coli : role in signal transduction, dimer formation, and DctA interaction

2013

The cytoplasmic PAS(C) domain of the fumarate responsive sensor kinase DcuS of Escherichia coli links the transmembrane to the kinase domain. PAS(C) is also required for interaction with the transporter DctA serving as a cosensor of DcuS. Earlier studies suggested that PAS(C) functions as a hinge and transmits the signal to the kinase. Reorganizing the PAS(C) dimer interaction and, independently, removal of DctA, converts DcuS to the constitutive ON state (active without fumarate stimulation). ON mutants were categorized with respect to these two biophysical interactions and the functional state of DcuS: type I-ON mutations grossly reorganize the homodimer, and decrease interaction with Dct…

PAS domainDicarboxylic Acid TransportersModels MolecularfumarateProtein ConformationEscherichia coli ProteinsDNA Mutational AnalysisDctAModels Biological570 Life sciencessignal transduction.Escherichia coliProtein Interaction Domains and MotifsProtein MultimerizationDcuS sensor kinaseProtein KinasesOriginal ResearchSignal Transduction570 Biowissenschaften
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Oligomeric Sensor Kinase DcuS in the Membrane of Escherichia coli and in Proteoliposomes: Chemical Cross-linking and FRET Spectroscopy

2010

The DcuSR (dicarboxylate uptake sensor and regulator) system of Escherichia coli is a typical two-component system consisting of a membranous sensor kinase (DcuS) and a cytoplasmic response regulator (DcuR) (11, 26, 48). DcuS responds to C4-dicarboxylates like fumarate, malate, or succinate (19). In the presence of the C4-dicarboxlates, the expression of the genes of anaerobic fumarate respiration (dcuB, fumB, and frdABCD) and of aerobic C4-dicarboxylate uptake (dctA) is activated. DcuS is a histidine protein kinase composed of two transmembrane helices with an intermittent sensory PAS domain in the periplasm (PASP) that was also termed the PDC domain (for PhoQ/DcuS/DctB/CitA domain or fold…

Escherichia coli ProteinsProteolipidsCell MembraneGreen Fluorescent ProteinsHistidine kinaseAutophosphorylationBiologyMicrobiologyLuminescent ProteinsResponse regulatorTransmembrane domainSpectrometry FluorescenceProtein kinase domainBiochemistryPAS domainEscherichia coliFluorescence Resonance Energy TransferKinase activityProtein kinase AProtein KinasesMolecular BiologySignal TransductionJournal of Bacteriology
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2013

The cytoplasmic PASC domain of the fumarate responsive sensor kinase DcuS of Escherichia coli links the transmembrane to the kinase domain. PASC is also required for interaction with the transporter DctA serving as a cosensor of DcuS. Earlier studies suggested that PASC functions as a hinge and transmits the signal to the kinase. Reorganizing the PASC dimer interaction and, independently, removal of DctA, converts DcuS to the constitutive ON state (active without fumarate stimulation). ON mutants were categorized with respect to these two biophysical interactions and the functional state of DcuS: type I-ON mutations grossly reorganize the homodimer, and decrease interaction with DctA. Type …

Protein structureStructural biologyBiochemistryProtein kinase domainPAS domainKinaseMutantBiologySignal transductionMicrobiologyTransmembrane proteinMicrobiologyOpen
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Plasticity of the PAS domain and a potential role for signal transduction in the histidine kinase DcuS

2008

The mechanistic understanding of how membrane-embedded sensor kinases recognize signals and regulate kinase activity is currently limited. Here we report structure-function relationships of the multidomain membrane sensor kinase DcuS using solid-state NMR, structural modeling and mutagenesis. Experimental data of an individual cytoplasmic Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) domain were compared to structural models generated in silico. These studies, together with previous NMR work on the periplasmic PAS domain, enabled structural investigations of a membrane-embedded 40-kDa construct by solid-state NMR, comprising both PAS segments and the membrane domain. Structural alterations are largely limited to prot…

Models MolecularCytoplasmHistidine KinaseMolecular Sequence DataHAMP domainStructural BiologyPAS domainEscherichia coliAmino Acid SequenceKinase activityProtein Structure QuaternaryNuclear Magnetic Resonance BiomolecularMolecular BiologybiologyEscherichia coli ProteinsHistidine kinaseProtein Structure TertiaryCell biologyTransmembrane domainBiochemistryProtein kinase domainCyclic nucleotide-binding domainbiology.proteinGRB2Protein KinasesSignal Transduction
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Sensory domain contraction in histidine kinase CitA triggers transmembrane signaling in the membrane-bound sensor

2017

Bacteria use membrane-integral sensor histidine kinases (HK) to perceive stimuli and transduce signals from the environment to the cytosol. Information on how the signal is transmitted across the membrane by HKs is still scarce. Combining both liquid- and solid-state NMR, we demonstrate that structural rearrangements in the extracytoplasmic, citrate-sensing Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) domain of HK CitA are identical for the isolated domain in solution and in a longer construct containing the membrane-embedded HK and lacking only the kinase core. We show that upon citrate binding, the PAS domain contracts, resulting in a shortening of the C-terminal β-strand. We demonstrate that this contraction of t…

0301 basic medicineModels MolecularHistidine Kinase030106 microbiologyMolecular ConformationCitric Acid03 medical and health sciencesStructure-Activity RelationshipBacterial ProteinsPAS domainProtein Interaction Domains and MotifsAmino Acid SequenceHistidineMultidisciplinaryChemistryKinaseHistidine kinaseGeobacillusMembrane ProteinsBiological SciencesTransmembrane proteinCell biologyCytosolHelixSignal transductionProtein BindingSignal Transduction
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A PAS domain with an oxygen labile [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster in the oxygen sensor kinase NreB of Staphylococcus carnosus.

2008

The cytoplasmic histidine sensor kinase NreB of Staphylococcus carnosus responds to O(2) and controls together with the response regulator NreC the expression of genes of nitrate/nitrite respiration. nreBC homologous genes were found in Staphylococcus strains and Bacillus clausii, and a modified form was found in some Lactobacillus strains. NreB contains a sensory domain with similarity to heme B binding PAS domains. Anaerobically prepared NreB of S. carnosus exhibited a (diamagnetic) [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster when assessed by Mossbauer spectroscopy. Upon reaction with air, the cluster was degraded with a half-life of approximately 2.5 min. No significant amounts of Mossbauer or EPR detectable i…

Iron-Sulfur ProteinsbiologyHistidine KinaseChemistryLigandAirStaphylococcusHistidine kinasebiology.organism_classificationBiochemistrylaw.inventionOxygenHeme Bchemistry.chemical_compoundCrystallographyMagneticsSpectroscopy MossbauerPAS domainlawKinase activityElectron paramagnetic resonanceProtein KinasesHistidineStaphylococcus carnosusHalf-LifeBiochemistry
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Characterization of aCandida albicansgene encoding a putative transcriptional factor required for cell wall integrity

2003

After screening a Candida albicans genome database the product of an open reading frame (ORF) (CA2880) with 49% homology to the product of Saccharomyces cerevisiae YPL133c, a putative transcriptional factor, was identified. The disruption of the C. albicans gene leads to a major sensitivity to calcofluor white and Congo red, a minor sensitivity to sodium dodecyl sulfate, a major resistance to zymolyase, and an alteration of the chemical composition of the cell wall. For these reasons we called it CaCWT1 (for C. albicans cell wall transcription factor). CaCwt1p contains a putative Zn(II) Cys(6) DNA binding domain characteristic of some transcriptional factors and a PAS domain. The CaCWT1 gen…

Models MolecularTranscription GeneticGenes FungalMolecular Sequence DataSaccharomyces cerevisiaeSequence HomologyMicrobiologyFungal ProteinsCell WallPAS domainGene Expression Regulation FungalCandida albicansGenes RegulatorGeneticsAmino Acid SequenceColoring AgentsCandida albicansMolecular BiologyGeneTranscription factorbiologyReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionGlucan Endo-13-beta-D-GlucosidaseComputational BiologySodium Dodecyl SulfateDNA-binding domainbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyCorpus albicansDNA-Binding ProteinsMutagenesis InsertionalOpen reading frameGenome FungalGene DeletionTranscription FactorsFEMS Microbiology Letters
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The sensor kinase DcuS of Escherichia coli: two stimulus input sites and a merged signal pathway in the DctA/DcuS sensor unit

2012

Abstract The membrane-integral sensor kinase DcuS of Escherichia coli consists of a periplasmically located sensory PASP domain, transmembrane helices TM1 and TM2, a cytoplasmic PASC domain and the kinase domain. Stimulus (C4-dicarboxylate) binding at PASP is required to stimulate phosphorylation of the kinase domain, resulting in phosphoryl transfer to the response regulator DcuR. PASC functions as a signaling device or a relay in signal transfer from TM2 to the kinase. Phosphorylated DcuR induces the expression of the target genes. Sensing by DcuS requires the presence of the C4-dicarboxylate transporter DctA during aerobic growth. DctA forms a sensor unit with DcuS, and a short C-termina…

Dicarboxylic Acid TransportersChemistryKinaseEscherichia coli ProteinsAntiporterClinical Biochemistrymedicine.disease_causeModels BiologicalBiochemistryCell biologyResponse regulatorTransmembrane domainBiochemistryProtein kinase domainPAS domainmedicinePhosphorylationProtein KinasesMolecular BiologyEscherichia coliSignal Transductionbchm
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Sensing by the membrane-bound sensor kinase DcuS: exogenous versus endogenous sensing of C(4)-dicarboxylates in bacteria.

2010

Bacteria are able to grow at the expense of both common (succinate, L-malate, fumarate and aspartate) and uncommon (L-tartrate and D-malate) C4-dicarboxylates, which are components of central metabolism. Two types of sensors/regulators responding to the C4-dicarboxylates function in Escherichia coli, Bacillus, Lactobacillus and related bacteria. The first type represents membrane-integral two-component systems, while the second includes cytoplasmic LysR-type transcriptional regulators. The difference in location and substrate specificity allows the exogenous induction of metabolic genes by common C4-dicarboxylates, and endogenous induction by uncommon C4-dicarboxylates. The two-component s…

Microbiology (medical)Dicarboxylic Acid TransportersModels MolecularBacteriaEscherichia coli ProteinsCell MembraneRegulatory siteGene Expression Regulation BacterialBiologyLigand (biochemistry)MicrobiologyTransmembrane domainBiochemistryProtein kinase domainBacterial ProteinsPAS domainExtracellularEscherichia coliDicarboxylic AcidsBinding siteSignal transductionProtein KinasesSignal TransductionFuture microbiology
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