Title of article
Crystal Structures of the Streptomyces coelicolor TetR-Like Protein ActR Alone and in Complex with Actinorhodin or the Actinorhodin Biosynthetic Precursor (S)-DNPA
Author/Authors
A.R. Willems، نويسنده , , K. Tahlan، نويسنده , , T. Taguchi، نويسنده , , K. Zhang، نويسنده , , Z.Z. Lee، نويسنده , , K. Ichinose، نويسنده , , M.S. Junop، نويسنده , , J.R. Nodwell، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
11
From page
1377
To page
1387
Abstract
Actinorhodin, an antibiotic produced by Streptomyces coelicolor, is exported from the cell by the ActA efflux pump. actA is divergently transcribed from actR, which encodes a TetR-like transcriptional repressor. We showed previously that ActR represses transcription by binding to an operator from the actA/actR intergenic region. Importantly, actinorhodin itself or various actinorhodin biosynthetic intermediates can cause ActR to dissociate from its operator, leading to derepression. This suggests that ActR may mediate timely self-resistance to an endogenously produced antibiotic by responding to one of its biosynthetic precursors. Here, we report the structural basis for this precursor-mediated derepression with crystal structures of homodimeric ActR by itself and in complex with either actinorhodin or the actinorhodin biosynthetic intermediate (S)-DNPA [4-dihydro-9-hydroxy-1-methyl-10-oxo-3-H-naphtho-[2,3-c]-pyran-3-(S)-acetic acid]. The ligand-binding tunnel in each ActR monomer has a striking hydrophilic/hydrophobic/hydrophilic arrangement of surface residues that accommodate either one hexacyclic actinorhodin molecule or two back-to-back tricyclic (S)-DNPA molecules. Moreover, our work also reveals the strongest structural evidence to date that TetR-mediated antibiotic resistance may have been acquired from an antibiotic-producer organism.
Keywords
antibiotic export , Streptomyces coelicolor , TetR transcriptional regulators , X-ray crystal structures , protein/ligand interactions
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number
1256352
Link To Document