Title of article
Solution Structure and Dynamics of LuxU from Vibrio harveyi, a Phosphotransferase Protein Involved in Bacterial Quorum Sensing Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Dagny L. Ulrich، نويسنده , , Douglas Kojetin، نويسنده , , Bonnie L. Bassler، نويسنده , , Dr. John Cavanagh، نويسنده , , J. Patrick Loria، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
11
From page
297
To page
307
Abstract
The marine bacterium Vibrio harveyi controls its bioluminescence by a process known as quorum sensing. In this process, autoinducer molecules are detected by membrane-bound sensor kinase/response regulator proteins (LuxN and LuxQ) that relay a signal via a series of protein phosphorylation reactions to another response regulator protein, LuxO. Phosphorylated LuxO indirectly represses the expression of the proteins responsible for bioluminescence. Integral to this quorum sensing process is the function of the phosphotransferase protein, LuxU. LuxU acts to shuttle the phosphate from the membrane-bound proteins, LuxN and LuxQ, to LuxO. LuxU is a 114 amino acid residue monomeric protein. Solution NMR was used to determine the three-dimensional structure of LuxU. LuxU contains a four-helix bundle topology with the active-site histidine residue (His58) located on α-helix C and exposed to solution. The active site represents a cluster of positively charged residues located on an otherwise hydrophobic protein face. NMR spin-relaxation experiments identify a collection of flexible residues localized on the same region of LuxU as His58. The studies described here represent the first structural characterization of an isolated, monomeric bacterial phosphotransferase protein.
Keywords
quorum-sensing , NMR , solution structure , bioluminescence , LuxU
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number
692369
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