HutZ from Aliivibrio fischeri Inhibits
HutW-Mediated Anaerobilin Formation by Sequestering Heme
Posted on 2024-12-06 - 18:04
Anaerobilin synthase catalyzes the decyclization of the
heme protoporphyrin
ring, an O2-independent reaction that liberates iron and
produces the linear tetrapyrrole, anaerobilin. The marine bacterium Aliivibrio fischeri, the enteric pathogen Escherichia coli O157:H7,
and the opportunistic oral pathogen Fusobacterium nucleatum encode anaerobilin synthase as part of their heme uptake/utilization
operons, designated chu (E. coli O157:H7), hmu (F. nucleatum), and hut (A. fischeri). F. nucleatum and E. coli O157:H7 contain accessory proteins (ChuS,
ChuY, and HmuF) encoded in their respective operons that mitigate
against the cytotoxicity of labile heme and anaerobilin by functioning
in heme trafficking and anaerobilin reduction. However, the hut operon of A. fischeri and other members of the Vibrionaceae family including
the enteric pathogen Vibrio cholerae do not contain homologues to these accessory proteins, raising questions
as to how members of this family mitigate against anaerobilin and
heme toxicity. Herein, we show that HutW (anaerobilin synthase) from A. fischeri produces anaerobilin, but that HutX and
HutZ, encoded downstream of HutW, do not catalyze anaerobilin reduction
in the presence of excess NAD(P)H, FAD, and FMN. However, we show
that HutZ prevents labile heme and anaerobilin cytotoxicity by binding
tightly to heme, sequestering it from HutW, and preventing anaerobilin
formation. Thus, A. fischeri is seemingly
unable to extract iron from heme using the hutWXZ gene products. Our results further suggest that the structurally
distinct chu, hmu, and hut operons
have functionally converged to protect the cell from anaerobilin accumulation
and heme cytotoxicity.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
McGregor, Alexandra
K.; Wolthers, Kirsten R. (2024). HutZ from Aliivibrio fischeri Inhibits
HutW-Mediated Anaerobilin Formation by Sequestering Heme. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.4c00624