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Combining experiment and energy landscapes to explore anaerobic heme breakdown in multifunctional hemoproteins.

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

To survive, many pathogens extract heme from their host organism and break down the porphyrin scaffold to sequester the Fe2+ ion via a heme oxygenase. Recent studies have revealed that certain pathogens can anaerobically degrade heme. Our own research has shown that one such pathway proceeds via NADH-dependent heme degradation, which has been identified in a family of hemoproteins from a range of bacteria. HemS, from Yersinia enterocolitica, is the main focus of this work, along with HmuS (Yersinia pestis), ChuS (Escherichia coli) and ShuS (Shigella dysenteriae). We combine experiments, Energy Landscape Theory, and a bioinformatic investigation to place these homologues within a wider phylogenetic context. A subset of these hemoproteins are known to bind certain DNA promoter regions, suggesting not only that they can catalytically degrade heme, but that they are also involved in transcriptional modulation responding to heme flux. Many of the bacterial species responsible for these hemoproteins (including those that produce HemS, ChuS and ShuS) are known to specifically target oxygen-depleted regions of the gastrointestinal tract. A deeper understanding of anaerobic heme breakdown processes exploited by these pathogens could therefore prove useful in the development of future strategies for disease prevention.

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Acknowledgements: ADK thanks the Cambridge Commonwealth, European and International Trust for a Cambridge Vice-Chancellor's PhD scholarship. EBS, GSB and OJK thank the EPSRC for studentships. DJW gratefully acknowledges funding from the EPSRC. The authors thank Jonathan Gregory for experiments with Co-PPIX and Zn-PPIX, Joanna Ashton for producing some of the mutant HemS proteins and Chris Whittleston for assistance on initial computational setup. We thank Max Paoli and Sabine Schneider for the original HemS-containing plasmid and for piquing our interest in HemS.

Journal Title

Phys Chem Chem Phys

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Journal ISSN

1463-9076
1463-9084

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Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Sponsorship
Cambridge Trust (Unassigned)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (Unassigned)