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Oxygen-Induced Conformational Changes in the PAS-Heme Domain of the <i>Pseudomonas aeruginosa</i> Aer2 Receptor

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posted on 2021-08-12, 19:04 authored by Emilie Orillard, Selina Anaya, Mark S. Johnson, Kylie J. Watts
The Aer2 receptor from <i>Pseudomonas aeruginosa</i> has an O<sub>2</sub>-binding PAS-heme domain that stabilizes O<sub>2</sub> via a Trp residue in the distal heme pocket. Trp rotates ∼90° to bond with the ligand and initiate signaling. Although the isolated PAS domain is monomeric, both in solution and in a cyanide-bound crystal structure, an unliganded structure forms a dimer. An overlay of the two structures suggests possible signaling motions but also predicts implausible clashes at the dimer interface when the ligand is bound. Moreover, in a full-length Aer2 dimer, PAS is sandwiched between multiple N- and C-terminal HAMP domains, which would feasibly restrict PAS motions. To explore the PAS dimer interface and signal-induced motions in full-length Aer2, we introduced Cys substitutions and used thiol-reactive probes to examine in vivo accessibility and residue proximities under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. In vivo, PAS dimers were retained in full-length Aer2 in the presence and absence of O<sub>2</sub>, and the dimer interface was consistent with the isolated PAS dimer structure. O<sub>2</sub>-mediated changes were also consistent with structural predictions in which the PAS N-terminal caps move apart and the C-terminal DxT region moves closer together. The DxT motif links PAS to the C-terminal HAMP domains and was critical for PAS-HAMP signaling. Removing the N-terminal HAMP domains altered the distal PAS dimer interface and prevented signaling, even after signal-on lesions were introduced into PAS. The N-terminal HAMP domains thus facilitate the O<sub>2</sub>-dependent shift of PAS to the signal-on conformation, clarifying their role upstream of the PAS-sensing domain.

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