PMC 20201223 pmc.key 4841544 CC BY no 1 1 Molecular Basis of NadR Regulation 10.1371/journal.ppat.1005557 4841544 27105075 PPATHOGENS-D-15-00389 e1005557 4 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited. surname:Liguori;given-names:Alessia surname:Malito;given-names:Enrico surname:Nassif;given-names:Xavier surname:Lo Surdo;given-names:Paola surname:Fagnocchi;given-names:Luca surname:Cantini;given-names:Francesca surname:Haag;given-names:Andreas F. surname:Brier;given-names:Sébastien surname:Pizza;given-names:Mariagrazia surname:Delany;given-names:Isabel surname:Bottomley;given-names:Matthew J. The atomic coordinates of the NadR structures (with or without 4-HPA) have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) and have been released with codes 5aip and 5aiq. TITLE Data Availability front 12 2016 0 Molecular Basis of Ligand-Dependent Regulation of NadR, the Transcriptional Repressor of Meningococcal Virulence Factor NadA 0.67065054 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:44Z PR: NadR 0.99641824 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:13:04Z MESH: Transcriptional Repressor 0.66509914 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:15Z DUMMY: Meningococcal 0.9822619 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:59Z PR: NadA ABSTRACT abstract 125 Neisseria adhesin A (NadA) is present on the meningococcal surface and contributes to adhesion to and invasion of human cells. NadA is also one of three recombinant antigens in the recently-approved Bexsero vaccine, which protects against serogroup B meningococcus. The amount of NadA on the bacterial surface is of direct relevance in the constant battle of host-pathogen interactions: it influences the ability of the pathogen to engage human cell surface-exposed receptors and, conversely, the bacterial susceptibility to the antibody-mediated immune response. It is therefore important to understand the mechanisms which regulate nadA expression levels, which are predominantly controlled by the transcriptional regulator NadR (Neisseria adhesin A Regulator) both in vitro and in vivo. NadR binds the nadA promoter and represses gene transcription. In the presence of 4-hydroxyphenylacetate (4-HPA), a catabolite present in human saliva both under physiological conditions and during bacterial infection, the binding of NadR to the nadA promoter is attenuated and nadA expression is induced. NadR also mediates ligand-dependent regulation of many other meningococcal genes, for example the highly-conserved multiple adhesin family (maf) genes, which encode proteins emerging with important roles in host-pathogen interactions, immune evasion and niche adaptation. To gain insights into the regulation of NadR mediated by 4-HPA, we combined structural, biochemical, and mutagenesis studies. In particular, two new crystal structures of ligand-free and ligand-bound NadR revealed (i) the molecular basis of ‘conformational selection’ by which a single molecule of 4-HPA binds and stabilizes dimeric NadR in a conformation unsuitable for DNA-binding, (ii) molecular explanations for the binding specificities of different hydroxyphenylacetate ligands, including 3Cl,4-HPA which is produced during inflammation, (iii) the presence of a leucine residue essential for dimerization and conserved in many MarR family proteins, and (iv) four residues (His7, Ser9, Asn11 and Phe25), which are involved in binding 4-HPA, and were confirmed in vitro to have key roles in the regulatory mechanism in bacteria. Overall, this study deepens our molecular understanding of the sophisticated regulatory mechanisms of the expression of nadA and other genes governed by NadR, dependent on interactions with niche-specific signal molecules that may play important roles during meningococcal pathogenesis. protein PR: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:03:40Z Neisseria adhesin A 0.9674451 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.8832868 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.8363549 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:50Z MESH: human 0.841002 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA taxonomy_domain DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:07:12Z serogroup B meningococcus 0.9365269 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.8454706 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:57Z DUMMY: bacterial 0.5582895 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:51Z MESH: human 0.55552936 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:56Z DUMMY: bacterial 0.9443213 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:00Z GENE: nadA 0.9836204 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:13:08Z MESH: transcriptional regulator 0.9970018 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR protein PR: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:03:46Z Neisseria adhesin A Regulator 0.9965952 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.93591195 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.7677482 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:39:25Z DUMMY: presence of 0.9972517 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:05Z CHEBI: 4-hydroxyphenylacetate 0.9971226 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:11Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.98793995 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:51Z MESH: human 0.9820755 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:57Z DUMMY: bacterial 0.99725217 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.9253285 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.7519901 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.98988193 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.8327364 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.9927263 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.9970572 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9963371 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:58:41Z MESH: structural, biochemical, and mutagenesis studies 0.9963485 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:26:47Z DUMMY: crystal structures 0.9965448 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:38Z DUMMY: ligand-free 0.9960804 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:39:31Z DUMMY: ligand-bound 0.9977785 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.99697524 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9944887 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:05Z DUMMY: dimeric 0.9976907 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.99785906 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:23:28Z CHEBI: hydroxyphenylacetate chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z 3Cl,4-HPA 0.98984224 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:22:53Z SO: leucine 0.9918474 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:39:37Z DUMMY: conserved protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.9988482 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:02:27Z DUMMY: His7 0.99881124 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:04Z DUMMY: Ser9 0.99891496 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:02:37Z DUMMY: Asn11 0.9988734 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:34Z DUMMY: Phe25 0.99702144 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99452037 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:53Z DUMMY: bacteria 0.9725539 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.99542 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.48914933 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal ABSTRACT abstract_title_1 2618 Author Summary ABSTRACT abstract 2633 Serogroup B meningococcus (MenB) causes fatal sepsis and invasive meningococcal disease, particularly in young children and adolescents, as highlighted by recent MenB outbreaks in universities of the United States and Canada. The Bexsero vaccine protects against MenB and has recently been approved in > 35 countries worldwide. Neisseria adhesin A (NadA) present on the meningococcal surface can mediate binding to human cells and is one of the three MenB vaccine protein antigens. The amount of NadA exposed on the meningococcal surface also influences the antibody-mediated serum bactericidal response measured in vitro. A deep understanding of nadA expression is therefore important, otherwise the contribution of NadA to vaccine-induced protection against meningococcal meningitis may be underestimated. The abundance of surface-exposed NadA is regulated by the ligand-responsive transcriptional repressor NadR. Here, we present functional, biochemical and high-resolution structural data on NadR. Our studies provide detailed insights into how small molecule ligands, such as hydroxyphenylacetate derivatives, found in relevant host niches, modulate the structure and activity of NadR, by ‘conformational selection’ of inactive forms. These findings shed light on the regulation of NadR, a key MarR-family virulence factor of this important human pathogen. taxonomy_domain DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:07:13Z Serogroup B meningococcus 0.9293316 species cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:18:39Z MESH: MenB 0.46876094 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal species MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:18:39Z MenB 0.5040738 species cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:18:39Z MESH: MenB protein PR: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:50Z Neisseria adhesin A 0.9725767 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.80491525 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.82990414 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:51Z MESH: human 0.9468687 species cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:18:39Z MESH: MenB 0.97354656 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.5592224 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.9241102 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.9674066 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.51698756 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.99396306 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.99102986 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:14:00Z MESH: ligand-responsive transcriptional repressor 0.9980363 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:27:21Z functional, biochemical and high-resolution structural data 0.998453 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.9978891 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:23:34Z CHEBI: hydroxyphenylacetate 0.9983973 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.9967884 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:39:49Z DUMMY: inactive 0.9979068 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.645245 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:51Z MESH: human INTRO title_1 3999 Introduction INTRO paragraph 4012 The ‘Reverse Vaccinology’ approach was pioneered to identify antigens for a protein-based vaccine against serogroup B Neisseria meningitidis (MenB), a human pathogen causing potentially-fatal sepsis and invasive meningococcal disease. Indeed, Reverse Vaccinology identified Neisseria adhesin A (NadA), a surface-exposed protein involved in epithelial cell invasion and found in ~30% of clinical isolates. Recently, we reported the crystal structure of NadA, providing insights into its biological and immunological functions. Recombinant NadA elicits a strong bactericidal immune response and is therefore included in the Bexsero vaccine that protects against MenB and which was recently approved in over 35 countries worldwide. 0.9534057 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:58:52Z MESH: Reverse Vaccinology species MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:18:01Z serogroup B Neisseria meningitidis 0.97182584 species cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:18:38Z MESH: MenB 0.7824973 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:51Z MESH: human 0.76409507 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.98660016 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:58:58Z MESH: Reverse Vaccinology 0.7993973 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:50Z PR: Neisseria adhesin A 0.99444807 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.9971548 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:27:27Z DUMMY: crystal structure 0.99714524 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.9969074 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.69539905 species cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:18:39Z MESH: MenB INTRO paragraph 4745 Previous studies revealed that nadA expression levels are mainly regulated by the Neisseria adhesin A Regulator (NadR). Although additional factors influence nadA expression, we focused on its regulation by NadR, the major mediator of NadA phase variable expression. Studies of NadR also have broader implications, since a genome-wide analysis of MenB wild-type and nadR knock-out strains revealed that NadR influences the regulation of > 30 genes, including maf genes, from the multiple adhesin family. These genes encode a wide variety of proteins connected to many biological processes contributing to bacterial survival, adaptation in the host niche, colonization and invasion. 0.99617 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA protein PR: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:08:44Z Neisseria adhesin A Regulator 0.9830526 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.9966336 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.99631846 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.9956279 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.97683835 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.997136 species cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:18:39Z MESH: MenB 0.99319696 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:28Z DUMMY: wild-type 0.31171978 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:00Z GENE: nadR 0.6257549 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:41:05Z DUMMY: knock-out 0.9666791 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:30Z adhesin 0.9946519 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:57Z DUMMY: bacterial INTRO paragraph 5427 NadR belongs to the MarR (Multiple Antibiotic Resistance Regulator) family, a group of ligand-responsive transcriptional regulators ubiquitous in bacteria and archaea. MarR family proteins can promote bacterial survival in the presence of antibiotics, toxic chemicals, organic solvents or reactive oxygen species and can regulate virulence factor expression. MarR homologues can act either as transcriptional repressors or as activators. Although > 50 MarR family structures are known, a molecular understanding of their ligand-dependent regulatory mechanisms is still limited, often hampered by lack of identification of their ligands and/or DNA targets. A potentially interesting exception comes from the ligand-free and salicylate-bound forms of the Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum protein MTH313 which revealed that two salicylate molecules bind to one MTH313 dimer and induce large conformational changes, apparently sufficient to prevent DNA binding. However, the homologous archeal Sulfolobus tokodaii protein ST1710 presented essentially the same structure in ligand-free and salicylate-bound forms, apparently contrasting the mechanism proposed for MTH313. Despite these apparent differences, MTH313 and ST1710 bind salicylate in approximately the same site, between their dimerization and DNA-binding domains. However, it is unknown whether salicylate is a relevant in vivo ligand of either of these two proteins, which share ~20% sequence identity with NadR, rendering unclear the interpretation of these findings in relation to the regulatory mechanisms of NadR or other MarR family proteins. 0.9835437 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.9859337 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:31Z MESH: MarR 0.98408157 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:14:12Z MESH: Multiple Antibiotic Resistance Regulator 0.9902781 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:14:21Z MESH: ligand-responsive transcriptional regulators 0.9964108 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:52Z DUMMY: bacteria 0.99622107 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:46Z DUMMY: archaea protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.99675155 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:57Z DUMMY: bacterial 0.99439716 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MESH: MarR protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.9917734 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:27:31Z DUMMY: structures 0.995853 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:38Z DUMMY: ligand-free 0.9960255 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:43Z DUMMY: salicylate-bound 0.995173 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:49Z MESH: Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum 0.99857247 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:56Z PR: MTH313 0.99865437 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:41Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9986519 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:57Z PR: MTH313 0.9956377 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:40Z DUMMY: dimer 0.98779243 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:16Z DUMMY: archeal 0.9956137 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:10Z MESH: Sulfolobus tokodaii 0.99848586 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:05Z PR: ST1710 0.99651754 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:27:36Z DUMMY: structure 0.9961021 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:38Z DUMMY: ligand-free 0.996548 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:43Z DUMMY: salicylate-bound 0.9985191 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:57Z PR: MTH313 0.9986349 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:57Z PR: MTH313 0.9985905 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:06Z PR: ST1710 0.99850345 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9700515 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:15:50Z SO: dimerization and DNA-binding domains 0.9986278 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9977221 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.9915398 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR INTRO paragraph 7037 NadR binds the nadA promoter and represses gene transcription. NadR binds nadA on three different operators (OpI, OpII and OpIII). The DNA-binding activity of NadR is attenuated in vitro upon addition of various hydroxyphenylacetate (HPA) derivatives, including 4-HPA. 4-HPA is a small molecule derived from mammalian aromatic amino acid catabolism and is released in human saliva, where it has been detected at micromolar concentration. In the presence of 4-HPA, NadR is unable to bind the nadA promoter and nadA gene expression is induced. In vivo, the presence of 4-HPA in the host niche of N. meningitidis serves as an inducer of NadA production, thereby promoting bacterial adhesion to host cells. Further, we recently reported that 3Cl,4-HPA, produced during inflammation, is another inducer of nadA expression. 0.9984029 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.85982156 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.99811816 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.99614644 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.99832064 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.99852234 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:23:40Z CHEBI: hydroxyphenylacetate 0.9960388 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:23:45Z CHEBI: HPA 0.9979666 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9978723 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9187701 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:16:45Z DUMMY: mammalian 0.99355847 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:51Z MESH: human 0.9978695 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99806863 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.91204 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.8036804 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.9978263 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99539036 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:02Z MESH: N. meningitidis 0.9113778 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA taxonomy_domain DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:57Z bacterial 0.99766195 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:20Z CHEBI: 3Cl,4-HPA 0.4188783 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA INTRO paragraph 7855 Extending our previous studies based on hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS), here we sought to reveal the molecular mechanisms and effects of NadR/HPA interactions via X-ray crystallography, NMR spectroscopy and complementary biochemical and in vivo mutagenesis studies. We obtained detailed new insights into ligand specificity, how the ligand allosterically influences the DNA-binding ability of NadR, and the regulation of nadA expression, thus also providing a deeper structural understanding of the ligand-responsive MarR super-family. Moreover, these findings are important because the activity of NadR impacts the potential coverage provided by anti-NadA antibodies elicited by the Bexsero vaccine and influences host-bacteria interactions that contribute to meningococcal pathogenesis. 0.99628466 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:14:38Z MESH: hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry 0.9962923 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:14:41Z MESH: HDX-MS 0.45488164 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.7351569 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:15:04Z CHEBI: HPA 0.99648964 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:14:44Z MESH: X-ray crystallography 0.99516284 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:14:34Z MESH: NMR spectroscopy 0.98606044 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:14:48Z MESH: biochemical and in vivo mutagenesis studies 0.99073 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.49103263 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.9970283 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MESH: MarR 0.76515985 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.858279 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA taxonomy_domain DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:53Z bacteria 0.8999263 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal RESULTS title_1 8668 Results RESULTS title_2 8676 NadR is dimeric and is stabilized by specific hydroxyphenylacetate ligands 0.7011899 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.98950446 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:05Z DUMMY: dimeric 0.9979918 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:23:58Z CHEBI: hydroxyphenylacetate RESULTS paragraph 8751 Recombinant NadR was produced in E. coli using an expression construct prepared from N. meningitidis serogroup B strain MC58. Standard chromatographic techniques were used to obtain a highly purified sample of NadR (see Materials and Methods). In analytical size-exclusion high-performance liquid chromatography (SE-HPLC) experiments coupled with multi-angle laser light scattering (MALLS), NadR presented a single species with an absolute molecular mass of 35 kDa (S1 Fig). These data showed that NadR was dimeric in solution, since the theoretical molecular mass of the NadR dimer is 33.73 kDa; and, there was no change in oligomeric state on addition of 4-HPA. 0.9955266 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR species MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:02Z E. coli 0.9589244 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:59:04Z MESH: expression construct species MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:13:44Z N. meningitidis serogroup B strain MC58 0.9976324 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.9955736 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:59:08Z MESH: analytical size-exclusion high-performance liquid chromatography 0.9805386 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:59:12Z MESH: SE-HPLC 0.9925471 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:59:17Z MESH: multi-angle laser light scattering 0.7785794 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:59:22Z MESH: MALLS 0.9957093 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.9982318 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.98969907 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:05Z DUMMY: dimeric 0.9982332 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.99625266 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:45Z DUMMY: dimer 0.9959236 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA RESULTS paragraph 9415 The thermal stability of NadR was examined using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Since ligand-binding often increases protein stability, we also investigated the effect of various HPAs (Fig 1A) on the melting temperature (Tm) of NadR. As a control of specificity, we also tested salicylate, a known ligand of some MarR proteins previously reported to increase the Tm of ST1710 and MTH313. The Tm of NadR was 67.4 ± 0.1°C in the absence of ligand, and was unaffected by salicylate. However, an increased thermal stability was induced by 4-HPA and, to a lesser extent, by 3-HPA. Interestingly, NadR displayed the greatest Tm increase upon addition of 3Cl,4-HPA (Table 1 and Fig 1B). 0.9988651 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.99587494 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:59:27Z MESH: differential scanning calorimetry 0.9905911 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:59:30Z MESH: DSC 0.80012095 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:02Z CHEBI: HPAs 0.99425703 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:27:41Z DUMMY: melting temperature 0.9845307 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:20Z DUMMY: Tm 0.9988589 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.99864787 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.98750615 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:21Z DUMMY: Tm 0.99866354 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:06Z PR: ST1710 0.998628 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:57Z PR: MTH313 0.9938285 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:21Z DUMMY: Tm 0.99881953 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR 0.9731813 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:41:34Z DUMMY: absence of ligand 0.9985411 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9962826 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9964277 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:40Z CHEBI: 3-HPA 0.99867177 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:21Z Tm chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z 3Cl,4-HPA ppat.1005557.g001.jpg ppat.1005557.g001 FIG fig_title_caption 10107 Stability of NadR is increased by small molecule ligands. 0.9982602 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:45Z PR: NadR ppat.1005557.g001.jpg ppat.1005557.g001 FIG fig_caption 10165 (A) Molecular structures of 3-HPA (MW 152.2), 4-HPA (MW 152.2), 3Cl,4-HPA (MW 186.6) and salicylic acid (MW 160.1). (B) DSC profiles, colored as follows: apo-NadR (violet), NadR+salicylate (red), NadR+3-HPA (green), NadR+4-HPA (blue), NadR+3Cl,4-HPA (pink). All DSC profiles are representative of triplicate experiments. 0.99785185 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:41Z CHEBI: 3-HPA 0.9977923 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z 3Cl,4-HPA 0.9974121 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:24:03Z CHEBI: salicylic acid 0.650066 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:59:38Z MESH: DSC 0.61258185 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:27:49Z DUMMY: profiles 0.9971584 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:27Z DUMMY: apo 0.9981931 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:16:02Z NadR+salicylate complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:16:28Z NadR+3-HPA complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:16:50Z NadR+4-HPA complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:17:12Z NadR+3Cl,4-HPA experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:04Z DSC evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:13Z profiles ppat.1005557.t001.xml ppat.1005557.t001 TABLE table_title_caption 10487 Melting-point (Tm) and its ligand-induced increase (ΔTm) derived from DSC thermostability experiments. 0.99452204 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:22Z DUMMY: Melting-point 0.98550236 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:21Z DUMMY: Tm evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:59:55Z ΔTm 0.9887888 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:59:43Z MESH: DSC 0.64275366 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T11:59:45Z MESH: thermostability experiments ppat.1005557.t001.xml ppat.1005557.t001 TABLE table_caption 10594 Dissociation constants (KD) of the NadR/ligand interactions from SPR steady-state binding experiments. 0.96362484 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:25Z DUMMY: Dissociation constants 0.97385705 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:28Z DUMMY: KD 0.8992532 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.9748532 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:06Z MESH: SPR steady-state binding experiments ppat.1005557.t001.xml ppat.1005557.t001 TABLE table <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <table frame="hsides" rules="groups"><colgroup span="1"><col align="left" valign="middle" span="1"/><col align="left" valign="middle" span="1"/><col align="left" valign="middle" span="1"/><col align="left" valign="middle" span="1"/></colgroup><thead><tr><th align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Ligand</th><th align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">T<sub>m</sub> (°C)</th><th align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">ΔT<sub>m</sub> (°C)</th><th align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">K<sub>D</sub> (mM)</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">No ligand</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">67.4 ± 0.1</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">n.a.</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">n.a.</td></tr><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Salicylate</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">67.5 ± 0.1</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">0</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">n.d.</td></tr><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">3-HPA</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">70.0 ± 0.1</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">2.7</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">2.7 ± 0.1</td></tr><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">4-HPA</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">70.7 ± 0.1</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">3.3</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">1.5 ± 0.1</td></tr><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">3Cl,4-HPA</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">71.3 ± 0.2</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">3.9</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">1.1 ± 0.1</td></tr></tbody></table> 10697 Ligand Tm (°C) ΔTm (°C) KD (mM) No ligand 67.4 ± 0.1 n.a. n.a. Salicylate 67.5 ± 0.1 0 n.d. 3-HPA 70.0 ± 0.1 2.7 2.7 ± 0.1 4-HPA 70.7 ± 0.1 3.3 1.5 ± 0.1 3Cl,4-HPA 71.3 ± 0.2 3.9 1.1 ± 0.1 0.98275363 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:21Z DUMMY: Tm 0.98464245 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:33Z DUMMY: ΔTm 0.9940189 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:36Z DUMMY: KD 0.9986681 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: Salicylate 0.997032 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:41Z CHEBI: 3-HPA 0.99667215 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z 3Cl,4-HPA ppat.1005557.t001.xml ppat.1005557.t001 TABLE table_footnote 10911 n.a.: not applicable; n.d.: not determinable RESULTS title_2 10956 NadR displays distinct binding affinities for hydroxyphenylacetate ligands 0.6722496 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.9190013 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:39Z DUMMY: binding affinities 0.9986161 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:24:09Z CHEBI: hydroxyphenylacetate RESULTS paragraph 11031 To further investigate the binding of HPAs to NadR, we used surface plasmon resonance (SPR). The SPR sensorgrams revealed very fast association and dissociation events, typical of small molecule ligands, thus prohibiting a detailed study of binding kinetics. However, steady-state SPR analyses of the NadR-HPA interactions allowed determination of the equilibrium dissociation constants (KD) (Table 1 and S2 Fig). The interactions of 4-HPA and 3Cl,4-HPA with NadR exhibited KD values of 1.5 mM and 1.1 mM, respectively. 3-HPA showed a weaker interaction, with a KD of 2.7 mM, while salicylate showed only a very weak response that did not reach saturation, indicating a non-specific interaction with NadR. A ranking of these KD values showed that 3Cl,4-HPA was the tightest binder, and thus matched the ranking of ligand-induced Tm increases observed in the DSC experiments. Although these KD values indicate rather weak interactions, they are similar to the values reported previously for the MarR/salicylate interaction (KD ~1 mM) and the MTH313/salicylate interaction (KD 2–3 mM), and approximately 20-fold tighter than the ST1710/salicylate interaction (KD ~20 mM). 0.99240065 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:03Z CHEBI: HPAs 0.9953414 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.99554175 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:11Z MESH: surface plasmon resonance 0.99126047 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:15Z MESH: SPR 0.8462134 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:18Z MESH: SPR 0.8488718 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:43Z DUMMY: sensorgrams 0.994028 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:23Z MESH: steady-state SPR 0.977904 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:22:36Z GO: NadR-HPA 0.99436253 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:46Z DUMMY: equilibrium dissociation constants 0.9904281 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:49Z DUMMY: KD 0.99725914 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9930995 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z CHEBI: 3Cl,4-HPA 0.99311405 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.9946077 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:52Z DUMMY: KD 0.9976005 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:41Z CHEBI: 3-HPA 0.9771876 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:55Z DUMMY: KD 0.9987431 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9925982 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.9888996 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:57Z DUMMY: KD 0.99542093 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z CHEBI: 3Cl,4-HPA evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:21Z Tm 0.98787653 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:26Z MESH: DSC 0.99358 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:28:59Z DUMMY: KD 0.722346 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MESH: MarR 0.9977836 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9962682 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:57Z PR: MTH313 0.9972759 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9920671 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:06Z PR: ST1710 0.997875 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate RESULTS title_2 12203 Crystal structures of holo-NadR and apo-NadR 0.9974237 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:29:07Z DUMMY: Crystal structures 0.99786276 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:20Z DUMMY: holo 0.9929733 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.9979085 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:26Z DUMMY: apo 0.9956548 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR RESULTS paragraph 12248 To fully characterize the NadR/HPA interactions, we sought to determine crystal structures of NadR in ligand-bound (holo) and ligand-free (apo) forms. First, we crystallized NadR (a selenomethionine-labelled derivative) in the presence of a 200-fold molar excess of 4-HPA. The structure of the NadR/4-HPA complex was determined at 2.3 Å resolution using a combination of the single-wavelength anomalous dispersion (SAD) and molecular replacement (MR) methods, and was refined to R work/R free values of 20.9/26.0% (Table 2). Despite numerous attempts, we were unable to obtain high-quality crystals of NadR complexed with 3Cl,4-HPA, 3,4-HPA, 3-HPA or DNA targets. However, it was eventually possible to crystallize apo-NadR, and the structure was determined at 2.7 Å resolution by MR methods using the NadR/4-HPA complex as the search model. The apo-NadR structure was refined to R work/R free values of 19.1/26.8% (Table 2). 0.9539873 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.9201813 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:24:19Z CHEBI: HPA 0.9969667 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:29:11Z DUMMY: crystal structures 0.9985066 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.9969062 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:41:39Z DUMMY: ligand-bound 0.99781823 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.99661463 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:38Z DUMMY: ligand-free 0.997442 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:27Z DUMMY: apo 0.9914547 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:30Z MESH: crystallized 0.99856746 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.8083253 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:34Z MESH: selenomethionine-labelled derivative 0.99723 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9960259 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:29:15Z DUMMY: structure 0.9751709 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:40Z GO: NadR/4-HPA 0.99386454 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:38Z MESH: single-wavelength anomalous dispersion 0.83583677 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:41Z MESH: SAD 0.9825908 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:44Z MESH: molecular replacement 0.48077685 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:48Z MESH: MR 0.99208534 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:29:20Z DUMMY: R work/R free 0.99488586 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:29:24Z DUMMY: crystals 0.9974232 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.99201286 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:41:46Z DUMMY: complexed with chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z 3Cl,4-HPA 0.99713355 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:24:34Z CHEBI: 3,4-HPA 0.99740076 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:41Z CHEBI: 3-HPA 0.8414009 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:59Z MESH: crystallize 0.99761933 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:27Z DUMMY: apo 0.9981098 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.990086 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:29:27Z DUMMY: structure 0.699113 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:00:55Z MESH: MR 0.953306 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:40Z GO: NadR/4-HPA 0.99776614 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:27Z DUMMY: apo 0.99626714 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:46Z PR: NadR 0.99615306 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:29:29Z DUMMY: structure evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:29:46Z R work/R free ppat.1005557.t002.xml ppat.1005557.t002 TABLE table_title_caption 13176 Data collection and refinement statistics for NadR structures. 0.99552464 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.99634415 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:29:50Z DUMMY: structures ppat.1005557.t002.xml ppat.1005557.t002 TABLE table <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <table frame="hsides" rules="groups"><colgroup span="1"><col align="left" valign="middle" span="1"/><col align="left" valign="middle" span="1"/><col align="left" valign="middle" span="1"/></colgroup><thead><tr><th align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"/><th align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">NadR SeMet + 4-HPA (SAD peak) (PDB code 5aip)</th><th align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">NadR apo-form (PDB code 5aiq)</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"> <bold><italic>Data collection</italic></bold> </td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"/><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"/></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Wavelength (Å)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">0.9792</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">1.0</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Beamline</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">SLS (PXII-X10SA)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">SLS (PXII-X10SA)</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Resolution range (Å)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">39.2–2.3</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">48.2–2.7</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Space group</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">P 43 21 2</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">P 43 21 2</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Unit cell dimensions (Å)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">75.3, 75.3, 91.8</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">69.4, 69.4, 253.8</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Total reflections</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">291132 (41090)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">225521 (35809)</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Unique reflections</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">12320 (1773)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">17700 (2780)</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Multiplicity</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">23.6 (23.2)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">12.7 (12.8)</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Completeness (%)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">100.0 (100.00)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">99.9 (99.7)</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Mean I/sigma(I)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">25.5 (9.0)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">22.6 (3.8)</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Wilson B-factor</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">23.9</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">49.1</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"> <italic>R</italic> <sub>sym</sub> <xref ref-type="table-fn" rid="t002fn002">*</xref> </td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">10.9 (39.4)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">11.4 (77.6)</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"> <italic>R</italic> <sub>meas</sub> <xref ref-type="table-fn" rid="t002fn003">**</xref> </td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">11.3</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">11.8</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"> <bold><italic>Refinement</italic></bold> </td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"/><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"/></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"> <italic>R</italic> <sub>work</sub> <xref ref-type="table-fn" rid="t002fn004"> <sup>♯</sup> </xref> </td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">20.9</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">21.7</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"> <italic>R</italic> <sub>free</sub> <xref ref-type="table-fn" rid="t002fn005"> <sup>♯♯</sup> </xref> </td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">26.0</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">27.2</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"> <italic>Number of atoms</italic> </td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"/><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"/></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">  Non-hydrogen atoms</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">2263</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">4163</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">  Macromolecules</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">2207</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">4144</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">  Ligands</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">11</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">0</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">  Water</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">45</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">19</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Protein residues</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">275</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">521</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">RMS(bonds)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">0.008</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">0.003</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">RMS(angles)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">1.09</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">0.823</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"> <italic>Ramachandran (%)</italic> <xref ref-type="table-fn" rid="t002fn006"> <sup>§</sup> </xref> </td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"/><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"/></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">  Favored</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">100</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">98.4</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">  Outliers</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">0</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">0</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Clash score</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">5.0</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">3.9</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"> <italic>Average B-factor</italic> </td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"/><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1"/></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">  Macromolecules</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">34.8</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">53.3</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">  Ligands</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">32.9</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">-</td></tr><tr><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">  Solvent</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">37.3 (H<sub>2</sub>O)</td><td align="left" rowspan="1" colspan="1">29.0 (H<sub>2</sub>O)</td></tr></tbody></table> 13239 NadR SeMet + 4-HPA (SAD peak) (PDB code 5aip) NadR apo-form (PDB code 5aiq) Data collection Wavelength (Å) 0.9792 1.0 Beamline SLS (PXII-X10SA) SLS (PXII-X10SA) Resolution range (Å) 39.2–2.3 48.2–2.7 Space group P 43 21 2 P 43 21 2 Unit cell dimensions (Å) 75.3, 75.3, 91.8 69.4, 69.4, 253.8 Total reflections 291132 (41090) 225521 (35809) Unique reflections 12320 (1773) 17700 (2780) Multiplicity 23.6 (23.2) 12.7 (12.8) Completeness (%) 100.0 (100.00) 99.9 (99.7) Mean I/sigma(I) 25.5 (9.0) 22.6 (3.8) Wilson B-factor 23.9 49.1 Rsym* 10.9 (39.4) 11.4 (77.6) Rmeas** 11.3 11.8 Refinement Rwork♯ 20.9 21.7 Rfree♯♯ 26.0 27.2 Number of atoms   Non-hydrogen atoms 2263 4163   Macromolecules 2207 4144   Ligands 11 0   Water 45 19 Protein residues 275 521 RMS(bonds) 0.008 0.003 RMS(angles) 1.09 0.823 Ramachandran (%)§   Favored 100 98.4   Outliers 0 0 Clash score 5.0 3.9 Average B-factor   Macromolecules 34.8 53.3   Ligands 32.9 -   Solvent 37.3 (H2O) 29.0 (H2O) ppat.1005557.t002.xml ppat.1005557.t002 TABLE table_footnote 14314 Statistics for the highest-resolution shell are shown in parentheses. ppat.1005557.t002.xml ppat.1005557.t002 TABLE table_footnote 14384 *R sym = Σhkl Σi |Ii(hkl)—<I(hkl)>| / Σhkl Σi Ii(hkl) ppat.1005557.t002.xml ppat.1005557.t002 TABLE table_footnote 14454 ** R meas = redundancy-independent (multiplicity-weighted) R merge as reported from AIMLESS. ppat.1005557.t002.xml ppat.1005557.t002 TABLE table_footnote 14547 ♯ R work = Σ||F(obs)|- |F(calc)||/Σ|F(obs)| ppat.1005557.t002.xml ppat.1005557.t002 TABLE table_footnote 14600 ♯♯ R free = as for R work, calculated for 5.0% of the total reflections, chosen at random, and omitted from refinement. ppat.1005557.t002.xml ppat.1005557.t002 TABLE table_footnote 14725 § Values obtained using Molprobity. RESULTS paragraph 14763 The asymmetric unit of the NadR/4-HPA crystals (holo-NadR) contained one NadR homodimer, while the apo-NadR crystals contained two homodimers. In the apo-NadR crystals, the two homodimers were related by a rotation of ~90°; the observed association of the two dimers was presumably merely an effect of crystal packing, since the interface between the two homodimers is small (< 550 Å2 of buried surface area), and is not predicted to be physiologically relevant by the PISA software. Moreover, our SE-HPLC/MALLS analyses (see above) revealed that in solution NadR is dimeric, and previous studies using native mass spectrometry (MS) revealed dimers, not tetramers. complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:35Z NadR/4-HPA 0.86533326 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:13Z DUMMY: crystals 0.9976197 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.98081243 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.99743205 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9954763 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:48Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.9976458 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:27Z DUMMY: apo 0.97368956 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.95074636 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:15Z DUMMY: crystals 0.99451524 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers 0.99760973 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:27Z DUMMY: apo 0.9667072 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9422732 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:18Z DUMMY: crystals 0.99336135 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers 0.9952251 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:58Z DUMMY: dimers 0.9958224 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:08:25Z SO: interface 0.9900866 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers 0.98433065 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:01:05Z MESH: SE-HPLC/MALLS 0.997324 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9947507 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:04Z DUMMY: dimeric 0.99470735 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:01:09Z MESH: native mass spectrometry 0.9927449 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:01:12Z MESH: MS 0.9962018 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:59Z DUMMY: dimers 0.9957474 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:10Z DUMMY: tetramers RESULTS paragraph 15430 The NadR homodimer bound to 4-HPA has a dimerization interface mostly involving the top of its ‘triangular’ form, while the two DNA-binding domains are located at the base (Fig 2A). High-quality electron density maps allowed clear identification of the bound ligand, 4-HPA (Fig 2B). The overall structure of NadR shows dimensions of ~50 × 65 × 50 Å and a large homodimer interface that buries a total surface area of ~ 4800 Å2. Each NadR monomer consists of six α-helices and two short β-strands, with helices α1, α5, and α6 forming the dimer interface. Helices α3 and α4 form a helix-turn-helix motif, followed by the “wing motif” comprised of two short antiparallel β-strands (β1-β2) linked by a relatively long and flexible loop. Interestingly, in the α4-β2 region, the stretch of residues from R64-R91 presents seven positively-charged side chains, all available for potential interactions with DNA. Together, these structural elements constitute the winged helix-turn-helix (wHTH) DNA-binding domain and, together with the dimeric organization, are the hallmarks of MarR family structures. 0.99825007 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9960361 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.9944947 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:41:54Z DUMMY: bound to 0.9968419 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99718595 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:08:28Z SO: dimerization interface 0.48700365 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:42:03Z DUMMY: triangular 0.9804043 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:16:29Z SO: DNA-binding domains 0.9945665 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:20Z DUMMY: electron density maps 0.9670418 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:42:17Z DUMMY: bound 0.9967594 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9968761 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:26Z DUMMY: structure 0.99832994 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.99712276 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:08:31Z SO: homodimer interface 0.9982451 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.99608815 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:33Z DUMMY: monomer 0.96665907 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:16:37Z SO: α-helices 0.9856715 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:16:41Z SO: short β-strands 0.96922195 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:16:44Z SO: helices 0.99701667 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:16:47Z SO: α1 0.99716765 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:16:50Z SO: α5 0.99717206 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:16:53Z SO: α6 0.9954803 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:08:37Z SO: dimer interface 0.9688121 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:16:56Z SO: Helices 0.99735874 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:16:59Z SO: α3 0.9970772 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:02Z SO: α4 0.99675316 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:05Z SO: helix-turn-helix motif 0.9934369 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:08Z SO: wing motif 0.9623122 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:12Z SO: short antiparallel β-strands 0.9967703 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:15Z SO: β1-β2 0.99074954 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:18Z SO: loop 0.9239757 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:21Z SO: α4-β2 region 0.49355826 residue_range cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:38:03Z DUMMY: R64-R91 0.9922071 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:24:47Z CHEBI: DNA 0.99746746 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:25Z SO: winged helix-turn-helix 0.9777044 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:28Z SO: wHTH 0.9843573 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:30Z SO: DNA-binding domain 0.9876031 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:05Z DUMMY: dimeric protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.98246956 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:29Z DUMMY: structures ppat.1005557.g002.jpg ppat.1005557.g002 FIG fig_title_caption 16568 The crystal structure of NadR in complex with 4-HPA. 0.99741197 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:33Z DUMMY: crystal structure 0.99870706 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9840052 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:42:22Z DUMMY: in complex with 0.99743825 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA ppat.1005557.g002.jpg ppat.1005557.g002 FIG fig_caption 16621 (A) The holo-NadR homodimer is depicted in green and blue for chains A and B respectively, while yellow sticks depict the 4-HPA ligand (labelled). For simplicity, secondary structure elements are labelled for chain B only. Red dashes show hypothetical positions of chain B residues 88–90 that were not modeled due to lack of electron density. (B) A zoom into the pocket occupied by 4-HPA shows that the ligand contacts both chains A and B; blue mesh shows electron density around 4-HPA calculated from a composite omit map (omitting 4-HPA), using phenix. The map is contoured at 1σ and the figure was prepared with a density mesh carve factor of 1.7, using Pymol (www.pymol.org). protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z holo 0.99378645 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9962703 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:43Z chains A and B 0.9972606 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:13Z chain B structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:13Z chain B 0.97810286 residue_range cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:38:08Z DUMMY: 88–90 0.98408073 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:38Z DUMMY: electron density 0.9705171 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:08:43Z SO: pocket 0.99676806 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:43Z chains A and B 0.9881984 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:42Z DUMMY: electron density 0.996697 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9852703 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:46Z DUMMY: composite omit map 0.9935761 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.96732014 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:01:20Z MESH: phenix 0.99295795 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:49Z DUMMY: map 0.6867331 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:54Z DUMMY: density mesh RESULTS title_2 17306 A single conserved leucine residue (L130) is crucial for dimerization protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:42:44Z conserved 0.9880569 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:22:59Z SO: leucine 0.9985177 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:20:21Z DUMMY: L130 RESULTS paragraph 17376 The NadR dimer interface is formed by at least 32 residues, which establish numerous inter-chain salt bridges or hydrogen bonds, and many hydrophobic packing interactions (Fig 3A and 3B). To determine which residues were most important for dimerization, we studied the interface in silico and identified several residues as potential mediators of key stabilizing interactions. Using site-directed mutagenesis, a panel of eight mutant NadR proteins was prepared (including mutations H7A, S9A, N11A, D112A, R114A, Y115A, K126A, L130K and L133K), sufficient to explore the entire dimer interface. Each mutant NadR protein was purified, and then its oligomeric state was examined by analytical SE-HPLC. Almost all the mutants showed the same elution profile as the wild-type (WT) NadR protein. Only the L130K mutation induced a notable change in the oligomeric state of NadR (Fig 3C). Further, in SE-MALLS analyses, the L130K mutant displayed two distinct species in solution, approximately 80% being monomeric (a 19 kDa species), and only 20% retaining the typical native dimeric state (a 35 kDa species) (Fig 3D), demonstrating that Leu130 is crucial for stable dimerization. It is notable that L130 is usually present as Leu, or an alternative bulky hydrophobic amino acid (e.g. Phe, Val), in many MarR family proteins, suggesting a conserved role in stabilizing the dimer interface. In contrast, most of the other residues identified in the NadR dimer interface were poorly conserved in the MarR family. 0.5062376 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.99676085 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:08:47Z SO: dimer interface 0.97324896 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:08:50Z SO: interface 0.994365 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:01:24Z MESH: site-directed mutagenesis 0.5038502 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:10Z DUMMY: mutant 0.7035019 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9982158 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:18Z MESH: H7A 0.99785584 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:23Z MESH: S9A 0.99816763 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:28Z MESH: N11A 0.9981578 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:33Z MESH: D112A 0.99808407 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:38Z MESH: R114A 0.99788886 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:43Z MESH: Y115A 0.99800426 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:48Z MESH: K126A 0.9981881 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:54Z MESH: L130K 0.99821556 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:59Z MESH: L133K 0.9961478 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:08:54Z SO: dimer interface 0.8433007 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:10Z DUMMY: mutant 0.6565402 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9888089 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:01:28Z MESH: analytical SE-HPLC 0.9974766 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:27Z DUMMY: wild-type 0.99762636 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:32Z DUMMY: WT 0.99548244 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.99832827 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:55Z MESH: L130K 0.9947925 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.99607325 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:01:31Z MESH: SE-MALLS 0.99842083 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:55Z MESH: L130K 0.98589516 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:09Z DUMMY: mutant 0.6365736 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:59Z DUMMY: monomeric 0.87424535 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:05Z DUMMY: dimeric 0.99873704 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:20:25Z DUMMY: Leu130 0.9986596 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:20:28Z DUMMY: L130 0.99059427 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:23:04Z SO: Leu 0.9906516 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:23:07Z SO: Phe 0.9905082 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:23:09Z SO: Val protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.8940407 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:42:52Z DUMMY: conserved 0.99682724 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:08:57Z SO: dimer interface 0.39978522 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9964477 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:09:01Z SO: dimer interface 0.9971421 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:42:56Z DUMMY: poorly conserved protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR ppat.1005557.g003.jpg ppat.1005557.g003 FIG fig_title_caption 18880 Analysis of the NadR dimer interface. 0.8886324 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.99709916 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:09:07Z SO: dimer interface ppat.1005557.g003.jpg ppat.1005557.g003 FIG fig_caption 18918 (A) Both orientations show chain A, green backbone ribbon, colored red to highlight all locations involved in dimerization; namely, inter-chain salt bridges or hydrogen bonds involving Q4, S5, K6, H7, S9, I10, N11, I15, Q16, R18, D36, R43, A46, Q59, C61, Y104, D112, R114, Y115, D116, E119, K126, E136, E141, N145, and the hydrophobic packing interactions involving I10, I12, L14, I15, R18, Y115, I118, L130, L133, L134 and L137. Chain B, grey surface, is marked blue to highlight residues probed by site-directed mutagenesis (E136 only makes a salt bridge with K126, therefore it was sufficient to make the K126A mutation to assess the importance of this ionic interaction; the H7 position is labelled for monomer A, since electron density was lacking for monomer B). (B) A zoom into the environment of helix α6 to show how residue L130 chain B (blue side chain) is a focus of hydrophobic packing interactions with L130, L133, L134 and L137 of chain A (red side chains). (C) SE-HPLC analyses of all mutant forms of NadR are compared with the wild-type (WT) protein. The WT and most of the mutants show a single elution peak with an absorbance maximum at 17.5 min. Only the mutation L130K has a noteworthy effect on the oligomeric state, inducing a second peak with a longer retention time and a second peak maximum at 18.6 min. To a much lesser extent, the L133K mutation also appears to induce a ‘shoulder’ to the main peak, suggesting very weak ability to disrupt the dimer. (D) SE-HPLC/MALLS analyses of the L130K mutant, shows 20% dimer and 80% monomer. The curves plotted correspond to Absorbance Units (mAU) at 280nm wavelength (green), light scattering (red), and refractive index (blue). structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:34:01Z chain A 0.99885666 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:25Z DUMMY: Q4 0.99869007 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:30Z DUMMY: S5 0.99884427 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:35Z DUMMY: K6 0.9984061 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:41Z DUMMY: H7 0.9984659 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:48Z DUMMY: S9 0.99881685 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:53Z DUMMY: I10 0.9988582 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:59Z DUMMY: N11 0.99883896 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:27:05Z DUMMY: I15 0.9989189 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:27:11Z DUMMY: Q16 0.99889046 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:27:17Z DUMMY: R18 0.9989405 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:27:24Z DUMMY: D36 0.99892056 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:27:33Z DUMMY: R43 0.99886984 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:27:38Z DUMMY: A46 0.99889106 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:27:44Z DUMMY: Q59 0.9988123 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:27:50Z DUMMY: C61 0.9988758 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:27:55Z DUMMY: Y104 0.9988651 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:01Z DUMMY: D112 0.99886703 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:08Z DUMMY: R114 0.99889946 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:14Z DUMMY: Y115 0.9988416 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:20Z DUMMY: D116 0.99883765 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:25Z DUMMY: E119 0.99891067 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:30Z DUMMY: K126 0.9989189 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:35Z DUMMY: E136 0.9989262 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:41Z DUMMY: E141 0.99893135 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:46Z DUMMY: N145 0.9988618 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:54Z DUMMY: I10 0.99886155 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:20:34Z DUMMY: I12 0.9988972 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:20:37Z DUMMY: L14 0.9988487 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:27:06Z DUMMY: I15 0.9988752 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:27:18Z DUMMY: R18 0.9988952 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:15Z DUMMY: Y115 0.99885106 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:20:43Z DUMMY: I118 0.9989354 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:20:47Z DUMMY: L130 0.9989448 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:20:51Z DUMMY: L133 0.99895287 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:20:54Z DUMMY: L134 0.9989623 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:20:58Z DUMMY: L137 structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:13Z Chain B 0.98969185 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:01:37Z MESH: site-directed mutagenesis 0.9988722 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:36Z DUMMY: E136 0.9989114 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:28:31Z DUMMY: K126 0.99832875 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:49Z MESH: K126A 0.96227586 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:42Z DUMMY: H7 oligomeric_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z monomer 0.17348053 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:35:54Z SO: A 0.9874846 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:31:59Z DUMMY: electron density oligomeric_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z monomer 0.19094652 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:36:15Z SO: B 0.98470205 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:36Z SO: helix 0.94984627 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:39Z SO: α6 0.9989864 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:21:04Z DUMMY: L130 structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:13Z chain B 0.9989598 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:21:08Z DUMMY: L130 0.998961 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:21:12Z DUMMY: L133 0.998955 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:21:15Z DUMMY: L134 0.99896586 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:21:18Z DUMMY: L137 structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:34:02Z chain A 0.99414223 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:01:42Z MESH: SE-HPLC 0.71256983 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:10Z DUMMY: mutant 0.99403435 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9974262 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:28Z DUMMY: wild-type 0.9963147 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:33Z DUMMY: WT 0.99613416 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:33Z DUMMY: WT 0.998431 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:55Z MESH: L130K 0.9983797 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:00Z MESH: L133K 0.9958579 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:49Z DUMMY: dimer 0.9769496 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:01:45Z MESH: SE-HPLC/MALLS 0.99842215 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:55Z MESH: L130K 0.9901176 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:10Z DUMMY: mutant 0.99585176 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:53Z DUMMY: dimer 0.9947885 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer RESULTS title_2 20621 The holo-NadR structure presents only one occupied ligand-binding pocket 0.9975821 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.77789515 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9968785 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:32:23Z DUMMY: structure 0.9981352 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:09:12Z SO: ligand-binding pocket RESULTS paragraph 20694 The NadR/4-HPA structure revealed the ligand-binding site nestled between the dimerization and DNA-binding domains (Fig 2). The ligand showed a different position and orientation compared to salicylate complexed with MTH313 and ST1710 (see Discussion). The binding pocket was almost entirely filled by 4-HPA and one water molecule, although there also remained a small tunnel 2-4Å in diameter and 5-6Å long leading from the pocket (proximal to the 4-hydroxyl position) to the protein surface. The tunnel was lined with rather hydrophobic amino acids, and did not contain water molecules. Unexpectedly, only one monomer of the holo-NadR homodimer contained 4-HPA in the binding pocket, whereas the corresponding pocket of the other monomer was unoccupied by ligand, despite the large excess of 4-HPA used in the crystallization conditions. complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:40Z NadR/4-HPA 0.9955249 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:32:28Z DUMMY: structure 0.99813354 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:09:16Z SO: ligand-binding site structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:17:57Z dimerization and DNA-binding domains 0.9985886 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.7387806 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:43:01Z DUMMY: complexed with 0.99255496 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:57Z PR: MTH313 0.97436315 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:06Z PR: ST1710 0.9978281 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:09:19Z SO: binding pocket 0.9974978 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9983492 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:24:52Z CHEBI: water 0.9884349 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:09:36Z SO: tunnel 0.98912305 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:09:38Z SO: pocket 0.9682272 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:09:41Z SO: tunnel 0.99737287 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:24:55Z CHEBI: water 0.9947184 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z holo 0.996798 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.9954543 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.9967265 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9977387 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:09:45Z SO: binding pocket 0.60767347 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:09:55Z SO: pocket 0.9937448 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer 0.99742675 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA RESULTS paragraph 21535 Inspection of the protein-ligand interaction network revealed no bonds from NadR backbone groups to the ligand, but several key side chain mediated hydrogen (H)-bonds and ionic interactions, most notably between the carboxylate group of 4-HPA and Ser9 of chain A (SerA9), and chain B residues TrpB39, ArgB43 and TyrB115 (Fig 4A). At the other ‘end’ of the ligand, the 4-hydroxyl group was proximal to AspB36, with which it may establish an H-bond (see bond distances in Table 3). The water molecule observed in the pocket was bound by the carboxylate group and the side chains of SerA9 and AsnA11. 0.68997246 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:00Z SO: protein-ligand interaction network 0.97603875 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.996655 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.999091 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:03Z DUMMY: Ser9 structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:34:01Z chain A 0.7951284 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:00Z DUMMY: SerA9 structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:13Z chain B 0.9991043 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:09Z DUMMY: TrpB39 0.999084 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:14Z DUMMY: ArgB43 0.99910814 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:19Z DUMMY: TyrB115 0.99911577 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:27Z DUMMY: AspB36 0.99828917 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:24:58Z CHEBI: water 0.9987155 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:00Z DUMMY: SerA9 0.99903935 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:36Z DUMMY: AsnA11 ppat.1005557.g004.jpg ppat.1005557.g004 FIG fig_title_caption 22137 Atomic details of NadR/HPA interactions. 0.9616745 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.5170488 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:15:18Z CHEBI: HPA ppat.1005557.g004.jpg ppat.1005557.g004 FIG fig_caption 22178 A) A stereo-view zoom into the binding pocket showing side chain sticks for all interactions between NadR and 4-HPA. Green and blue ribbons depict NadR chains A and B, respectively. 4-HPA is shown in yellow sticks, with oxygen atoms in red. A water molecule is shown by the red sphere. H-bonds up to 3.6Å are shown as dashed lines. The entire set of residues making H-bonds or non-bonded contacts with 4-HPA is as follows: SerA9, AsnA11, LeuB21, MetB22, PheB25, LeuB29, AspB36, TrpB39, ArgB43, ValB111 and TyrB115 (automated analysis performed using PDBsum and verified manually). Residues AsnA11 and ArgB18 likely make indirect yet local contributions to ligand binding, mainly by stabilizing the position of AspB36. Bond distances for interacting polar atoms are provided in Table 3. Side chains mediating hydrophobic interactions are shown in orange. (B) A model was prepared to visualize putative interactions of 3Cl,4-HPA (pink) with NadR, revealing the potential for additional contacts (dashed lines) of the chloro moiety (green stick) with LeuB29 and AspB36. 0.9978131 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:06Z SO: binding pocket 0.99591124 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.99723047 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99690944 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:43Z chains A and B 0.9973424 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99820757 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:25:03Z CHEBI: water 0.9970533 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9989214 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:59Z DUMMY: SerA9 0.9991154 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:37Z DUMMY: AsnA11 0.9990701 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:08Z DUMMY: LeuB21 0.999102 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:14Z DUMMY: MetB22 0.9990681 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:20Z DUMMY: PheB25 0.99906904 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:26Z DUMMY: LeuB29 0.9991032 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:30Z DUMMY: AspB36 0.999113 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:10Z DUMMY: TrpB39 0.9991092 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:15Z DUMMY: ArgB43 0.9991091 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:48Z DUMMY: ValB111 0.9991191 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:20Z DUMMY: TyrB115 0.59851336 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:01:54Z MESH: PDBsum 0.9991345 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:37Z DUMMY: AsnA11 0.9991111 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:32:02Z DUMMY: ArgB18 0.9991405 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:30Z DUMMY: AspB36 chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z 3Cl,4-HPA 0.9978667 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.99910825 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:26Z DUMMY: LeuB29 0.99913305 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:30Z DUMMY: AspB36 ppat.1005557.t003.xml ppat.1005557.t003 TABLE table_title_caption 23247 List of 4-HPA atoms bound to NadR via ionic interactions and/or H-bonds. 0.9970317 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.996888 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR ppat.1005557.t003.xml ppat.1005557.t003 TABLE table <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <table frame="hsides" rules="groups"><colgroup span="1"><col align="left" valign="middle" span="1"/><col align="left" valign="middle" span="1"/><col align="left" valign="middle" span="1"/></colgroup><thead><tr><th align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">4-HPA atom</th><th align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">NadR residue/atom</th><th align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Distance (Å)</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">O2</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">TrpB39/NE1</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">2.83</td></tr><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">O2</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">ArgB43/NH1</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">2.76</td></tr><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">O1</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">ArgB43/NH1</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">3.84</td></tr><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">O1</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">SerA9/OG</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">2.75</td></tr><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">O1</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">TyrB115/OH</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">2.50</td></tr><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">O2</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Water (<xref ref-type="table-fn" rid="t003fn001">*</xref>Ser9/Asn11)</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">2.88</td></tr><tr><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">OH</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">AspB36/OD1/OD2</td><td align="center" rowspan="1" colspan="1">3.6/3.7</td></tr></tbody></table> 23320 4-HPA atom NadR residue/atom Distance (Å) O2 TrpB39/NE1 2.83 O2 ArgB43/NH1 2.76 O1 ArgB43/NH1 3.84 O1 SerA9/OG 2.75 O1 TyrB115/OH 2.50 O2 Water (*Ser9/Asn11) 2.88 OH AspB36/OD1/OD2 3.6/3.7 0.99659586 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA protein PR: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z NadR 0.99603003 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:10Z DUMMY: TrpB39 0.99567515 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:15Z DUMMY: ArgB43 0.99616563 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:15Z DUMMY: ArgB43 0.9866859 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:00Z DUMMY: SerA9 0.996403 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:20Z DUMMY: TyrB115 0.9975382 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:25:17Z CHEBI: Water 0.9978388 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:05Z DUMMY: Ser9 0.99788034 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:02:37Z DUMMY: Asn11 0.99583423 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:30Z DUMMY: AspB36 ppat.1005557.t003.xml ppat.1005557.t003 TABLE table_footnote 23527 * Bond distance between the ligand carboxylate group and the water molecule, which in turn makes H-bond to the SerA9 and AsnA11 side chains. 0.9985153 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:25:25Z CHEBI: water 0.9948244 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:00Z DUMMY: SerA9 0.99785656 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:37Z DUMMY: AsnA11 RESULTS paragraph 23668 In addition to the H-bonds involving the carboxylate and hydroxyl groups of 4-HPA, binding of the phenyl moiety appeared to be stabilized by several van der Waals’ contacts, particularly those involving the hydrophobic side chain atoms of LeuB21, MetB22, PheB25, LeuB29 and ValB111 (Fig 4A). Notably, the phenyl ring of PheB25 was positioned parallel to the phenyl ring of 4-HPA, potentially forming π-π parallel-displaced stacking interactions. Consequently, residues in the 4-HPA binding pocket are mostly contributed by NadR chain B, and effectively created a polar ‘floor’ and a hydrophobic ‘ceiling’, which house the ligand. Collectively, this mixed network of polar and hydrophobic interactions endows NadR with a strong recognition pattern for HPAs, with additional medium-range interactions potentially established with the hydroxyl group at the 4-position. 0.99728394 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9991007 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:09Z DUMMY: LeuB21 0.99911135 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:15Z DUMMY: MetB22 0.9991079 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:21Z DUMMY: PheB25 0.99910295 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:26Z DUMMY: LeuB29 0.9991049 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:48Z DUMMY: ValB111 0.9991109 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:21Z DUMMY: PheB25 0.99720365 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:12Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9981514 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:13Z SO: 4-HPA binding pocket 0.9982968 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:13Z chain B 0.9981133 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.98768824 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:03Z CHEBI: HPAs RESULTS title_2 24546 Structure-activity relationships: molecular basis of enhanced stabilization by 3Cl,4-HPA chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z 3Cl,4-HPA RESULTS paragraph 24635 We modelled the binding of other HPAs by in silico superposition onto 4-HPA in the holo-NadR structure, and thereby obtained molecular explanations for the binding specificities of diverse ligands. For example, similar to 4-HPA, the binding of 3Cl,4-HPA could involve multiple bonds towards the carboxylate group of the ligand and some to the 4-hydroxyl group. Additionally, the side chains of LeuB29 and AspB36 would be only 2.6–3.5 Å from the chlorine atom, thus providing van der Waals’ interactions or H-bonds to generate the additional binding affinity observed for 3Cl,4-HPA (Fig 4B). The presence of a single hydroxyl group at position 2, as in 2-HPA, rather than at position 4, would eliminate the possibility of favorable interactions with AspB36, resulting in the lack of NadR regulation by 2-HPA described previously. Finally, salicylate is presumably unable to specifically bind NadR due to the 2-hydroxyl substitution and the shorter aliphatic chain connecting its carboxylate group (Fig 1A): the compound simply seems too small to simultaneously establish the network of beneficial bonds observed in the NadR/HPA interactions. 0.9514532 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:02:02Z MESH: modelled 0.9974298 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:03Z CHEBI: HPAs 0.83580416 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:02:05Z MESH: in silico superposition 0.9979047 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99764794 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.99511176 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.99702317 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:32:33Z DUMMY: structure 0.997828 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9963824 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z CHEBI: 3Cl,4-HPA 0.9990632 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:31:26Z DUMMY: LeuB29 0.9991033 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:30Z DUMMY: AspB36 0.84820175 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:32:38Z DUMMY: binding affinity 0.9964987 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z CHEBI: 3Cl,4-HPA 0.9977615 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:25:31Z CHEBI: 2-HPA 0.99911207 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:30Z DUMMY: AspB36 protein PR: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z NadR 0.9978326 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:25:47Z CHEBI: 2-HPA 0.99866676 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.99530065 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR protein PR: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:34:50Z NadR chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:34:59Z HPA RESULTS title_2 25781 Analysis of the pockets reveals the molecular basis for asymmetric binding and stoichiometry 0.9929965 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:20Z SO: pockets RESULTS paragraph 25874 We attempted to investigate further the binding stoichiometry using solution-based techniques. However, studies based on tryptophan fluorescence were confounded by the fluorescence of the HPA ligands, and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) was unfeasible due to the need for very high concentrations of NadR in the ITC chamber (due to the relatively low affinity), which exceeded the solubility limits of the protein. However, it was possible to calculate the binding stoichiometry of the NadR-HPA interactions using an SPR-based approach. In SPR, the signal measured is proportional to the total molecular mass proximal to the sensor surface; consequently, if the molecular weights of the interactors are known, then the stoichiometry of the resulting complex can be determined. This approach relies on the assumption that the captured protein (‘the ligand’, according to SPR conventions) is 100% active and freely-accessible to potential interactors (‘the analytes’). This assumption is likely valid for this pair of interactors, for two main reasons. Firstly, NadR is expected to be covalently immobilized on the sensor chip as a dimer in random orientations, since it is a stable dimer in solution and has sixteen lysines well-distributed around its surface, all able to act as potential sites for amine coupling to the chip, and none of which are close to the ligand-binding pocket. Secondly, the HPA analytes are all very small (MW 150–170, Fig 1A) and therefore are expected to be able to diffuse readily into all potential binding sites, irrespective of the random orientations of the immobilized NadR dimers on the chip.The stoichiometry of the NadR-HPA interactions was determined using Eq 1 (see Materials and Methods), and revealed stoichiometries of 1.13 for 4-HPA, 1.02 for 3-HPA, and 1.21 for 3Cl,4-HPA, strongly suggesting that one NadR dimer bound to 1 HPA analyte molecule. 0.51442033 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:02:17Z MESH: tryptophan fluorescence 0.95978224 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:25:51Z CHEBI: HPA 0.9953435 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:02:20Z MESH: isothermal titration calorimetry 0.98154825 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:02:23Z MESH: ITC 0.9986652 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:47Z PR: NadR 0.48151696 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:02:27Z MESH: ITC 0.6601409 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:32:43Z DUMMY: binding stoichiometry 0.9863785 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:22:40Z GO: NadR-HPA 0.9919219 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:02:30Z MESH: SPR 0.9925154 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:02:34Z MESH: SPR 0.9252812 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:02:39Z MESH: SPR 0.997682 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.9963148 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:58Z DUMMY: dimer 0.9510204 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:43:25Z DUMMY: stable 0.99628484 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:02Z DUMMY: dimer 0.9714164 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:23:16Z SO: lysines 0.9982489 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:27Z SO: ligand-binding pocket 0.93585426 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:25:57Z CHEBI: HPA 0.992237 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:29Z SO: binding sites 0.9982815 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99626595 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:59Z DUMMY: dimers 0.98445946 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:22:44Z GO: NadR-HPA 0.578732 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:32:51Z DUMMY: stoichiometries 0.99664 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9967003 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:14:41Z CHEBI: 3-HPA 0.8855335 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z CHEBI: 3Cl,4-HPA 0.998278 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99647456 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:05Z DUMMY: dimer protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:43:42Z bound to 0.99778146 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:26:00Z CHEBI: HPA RESULTS paragraph 27780 The crystallographic data, supported by the SPR studies of binding stoichiometry, revealed the lack of a second 4-HPA molecule in the homodimer, suggesting negative co-operativity, a phenomenon previously described for the MTH313/salicylate interaction and for other MarR family proteins. To explore the molecular basis of asymmetry in holo-NadR, we superposed its ligand-free monomer (chain A) onto the ligand-occupied monomer (chain B). Overall, the superposition revealed a high degree of structural similarity (Cα root mean square deviation (rmsd) of 1.5Å), though on closer inspection a rotational difference of ~9 degrees along the long axis of helix α6 was observed, suggesting that 4-HPA induced a slight conformational change (Fig 5A). However, since residues of helix α6 were not directly involved in ligand binding, an explanation for the lack of 4-HPA in monomer A did not emerge by analyzing only these backbone atom positions, suggesting that a more complex series of allosteric events may occur. Indeed, we noted interesting differences in the side chains of Met22, Phe25 and Arg43, which in monomer B are used to contact the ligand while in monomer A they partially occupied the pocket and collectively reduced its volume significantly. Specifically, upon analysis with the CASTp software, the pocket in chain B containing the 4-HPA exhibited a total volume of approximately 370 Å3, while the pocket in chain A was occupied by these three side chains that adopted ‘inward’ positions and thereby divided the space into a few much smaller pockets, each with volume < 50 Å3, evidently rendering chain A unfavorable for ligand binding. Most notably, atomic clashes between the ligand and the side chains of MetA22, PheA25 and ArgA43 would occur if 4-HPA were present in the monomer A pocket (Fig 5B). Subsequently, analyses of the pockets in apo-NadR revealed that in the absence of ligand the long Arg43 side chain was always in the open ‘outward’ position compatible with binding to the 4-HPA carboxylate group. In contrast, the apo-form Met22 and Phe25 residues were still encroaching the spaces of the 4-hydroxyl group and the phenyl ring of the ligand, respectively (Fig 5C). The ‘outward’ position of Arg43 generated an open apo-form pocket with volume approximately 380Å3. Taken together, these observations suggest that Arg43 is a major determinant of ligand binding, and that its ‘inward’ position inhibits the binding of 4-HPA to the empty pocket of holo-NadR. 0.9309345 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:32:54Z DUMMY: crystallographic data 0.9882294 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:03:00Z MESH: SPR 0.961169 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:32:57Z DUMMY: binding stoichiometry 0.99608153 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9959656 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.80875015 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:58Z PR: MTH313 0.99761474 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.9970886 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9930714 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99597245 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:03:04Z MESH: superposed 0.99558645 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:38Z DUMMY: ligand-free 0.99573404 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:34:02Z chain A 0.99643254 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:43:48Z DUMMY: ligand-occupied 0.9957568 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:13Z chain B 0.9947714 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:03:08Z MESH: superposition 0.8987919 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:33:09Z DUMMY: root mean square deviation 0.9872866 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:11Z DUMMY: rmsd 0.98954785 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:04Z SO: helix 0.870803 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:06Z SO: α6 0.9959488 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9914029 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:08Z SO: helix 0.8272526 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:11Z SO: α6 0.99483943 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.56652486 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer 0.3225745 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:35:52Z SO: A 0.9989826 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:27Z DUMMY: Met22 0.9989274 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:33Z DUMMY: Phe25 0.99899143 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:39Z DUMMY: Arg43 oligomeric_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z monomer 0.27231634 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:36:14Z SO: B 0.43374527 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer 0.27271384 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:35:54Z SO: A 0.7804215 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:35Z SO: pocket 0.9258107 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:03:13Z MESH: CASTp 0.9522308 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:38Z SO: pocket structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:13Z chain B 0.995066 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.89990324 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:41Z SO: pocket structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:34:02Z chain A protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:44:58Z inward structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:34:02Z chain A 0.9989052 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:48Z DUMMY: MetA22 0.99899954 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:52Z DUMMY: PheA25 0.99904007 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:58Z DUMMY: ArgA43 0.9953595 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.55017084 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer 0.2799846 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:35:55Z SO: A 0.89701104 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:45Z SO: pocket 0.90599453 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:48Z SO: pockets 0.997891 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:27Z DUMMY: apo 0.99532133 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.94971794 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:43:55Z DUMMY: absence of ligand 0.9989594 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:40Z DUMMY: Arg43 protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:45:05Z outward 0.9965679 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9979519 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:27Z DUMMY: apo 0.99890244 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:28Z DUMMY: Met22 0.99886096 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:34Z DUMMY: Phe25 protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:45:05Z outward 0.99894184 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:40Z DUMMY: Arg43 0.9927199 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:44:20Z DUMMY: open 0.99767154 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:27Z DUMMY: apo 0.9245357 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:51Z SO: pocket 0.9989795 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:40Z DUMMY: Arg43 protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:44:58Z inward 0.99592376 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9391805 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:10:53Z SO: pocket 0.9977241 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo protein PR: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z NadR ppat.1005557.g005.jpg ppat.1005557.g005 FIG fig_title_caption 30286 Structural differences of NadR in ligand-bound or free forms. 0.99626154 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.9965341 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:44:36Z DUMMY: ligand-bound 0.99479055 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:44:40Z DUMMY: free ppat.1005557.g005.jpg ppat.1005557.g005 FIG fig_caption 30348 (A) Aligned monomers of holo-NadR (chain A: green; chain B: blue), reveal major overall differences by the shift of helix α6. (B) Comparison of the two binding pockets in holo-NadR shows that in the ligand-free monomer A (green) residues Met22, Phe25 and Arg43 adopt ‘inward’ positions (highlighted by arrows) compared to the ligand-occupied pocket (blue residues); these ‘inward’ conformations appear unfavorable for binding of 4-HPA due to clashes with the 4-hydroxyl group, the phenyl ring and the carboxylate group, respectively. In these crystals, the ArgA43 side chain showed two alternate conformations, modelled with 50% occupancy in each state, as indicated by the two ‘mirrored’ arrows. The inner conformer is the one that would display major clashes if 4-HPA were present. (C) Comparison of the empty pocket from holo-NadR (green residues) with the four empty pockets of apo-NadR (grey residues), shows that in the absence of 4-HPA the Arg43 side chain is always observed in the ‘outward’ conformation. 0.8240444 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:03:19Z MESH: Aligned 0.9941704 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:15Z DUMMY: monomers 0.9975924 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9966384 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:34:02Z chain A structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:13Z chain B 0.9901239 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:17Z SO: helix 0.991663 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:20Z SO: α6 experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:11:16Z Comparison 0.9876643 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:11:05Z SO: binding pockets 0.99701047 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9959848 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99530977 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:38Z DUMMY: ligand-free 0.95212543 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer 0.34092307 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:35:55Z SO: A 0.9991235 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:28Z DUMMY: Met22 0.9990852 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:34Z DUMMY: Phe25 0.9991242 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:40Z DUMMY: Arg43 protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:44:58Z inward 0.7328055 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:44:44Z DUMMY: ligand-occupied 0.92590094 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:11:21Z SO: pocket 0.50661314 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:44:58Z DUMMY: inward 0.9969907 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.98822 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:33:23Z DUMMY: crystals 0.9991375 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:59Z DUMMY: ArgA43 0.99679786 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA site SO: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:45:44Z pocket 0.997463 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9966234 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.923355 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:11:25Z SO: pockets 0.9979037 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:27Z DUMMY: apo 0.99683505 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.9961276 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:45:55Z DUMMY: absence of 0.9955799 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99911577 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:40Z DUMMY: Arg43 0.50120544 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:45:04Z DUMMY: outward RESULTS paragraph 31380 Finally, we applied 15N heteronuclear solution NMR spectroscopy to examine the interaction of 4-HPA with apo NadR. We collected NMR spectra on NadR in the presence and absence of 4-HPA (see Materials and Methods). The 1H-15N TROSY-HSQC spectrum of apo-NadR, acquired at 25°C, displayed approximately 140 distinct peaks (Fig 6A), most of which correspond to backbone amide N-H groups. The broad spectral dispersion and the number of peaks observed, which is close to the number of expected backbone amide N-H groups for this polypeptide, confirmed that apo-NadR is well-folded under these conditions and exhibits one conformation appreciable on the NMR timescale, i.e. in the NMR experiments at 25°C, two or more distinct conformations of apo-NadR monomers were not readily apparent. Upon the addition of 4-HPA, over 45 peaks showed chemical shift perturbations, i.e. changed position in the spectrum or disappeared, while the remaining peaks remained unchanged. This observation showed that 4-HPA was able to bind NadR and induce notable changes in specific regions of the protein. 0.9907934 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:03:23Z MESH: 15N heteronuclear solution NMR spectroscopy 0.99501413 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99779665 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9982626 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:48:33Z NMR evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:48:22Z spectra 0.998331 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:46:17Z in the presence 0.9639535 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:46:22Z DUMMY: absence of 0.9935445 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9916582 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:03:30Z MESH: 1H-15N TROSY-HSQC 0.94737655 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:33:30Z DUMMY: spectrum 0.9978265 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9972324 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.9978796 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9976908 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:46:44Z well-folded experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:48:34Z NMR 0.9822833 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:48:34Z MESH: NMR 0.99777395 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.99778455 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.9940479 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:18Z DUMMY: monomers 0.9915989 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9925506 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.998434 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR ppat.1005557.g006.jpg ppat.1005557.g006 FIG fig_title_caption 32464 NMR spectra of NadR in the presence and absence of 4-HPA. experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:48:34Z NMR evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:49:00Z spectra 0.9984425 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:47:17Z in the presence 0.9574306 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:47:20Z DUMMY: absence of 0.99724704 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA ppat.1005557.g006.jpg ppat.1005557.g006 FIG fig_caption 32522 (A) Superposition of two 1H-15N TROSY-HSQC spectra recorded at 25°C on apo-NadR (cyan) and on NadR in the presence of 4-HPA (red). (B,C) Overlay of selected regions of the 1H-15N TROSY-HSQC spectra acquired at 25°C of apo-NadR (cyan) and NadR/4-HPA (red) superimposed with the spectra acquired at 10°C of apo-NadR (blue) and NadR/4-HPA (green). The spectra acquired at 10°C are excluded from panel A for simplicity. 0.9234609 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:03:48Z MESH: Superposition 0.98206204 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:03:51Z MESH: 1H-15N TROSY-HSQC 0.4906918 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:49:01Z DUMMY: spectra 0.9975116 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9983646 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99781954 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.6589855 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:47:24Z DUMMY: presence of 0.996272 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.6536667 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:03:55Z MESH: Overlay 0.9817009 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:03:59Z MESH: 1H-15N TROSY-HSQC evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:49:01Z spectra 0.9968502 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9982101 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:40Z NadR/4-HPA 0.5712608 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:04:03Z MESH: superimposed evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:49:01Z spectra 0.99734455 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.99837685 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:40Z NadR/4-HPA evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:49:02Z spectra RESULTS paragraph 32943 However, in the presence of 4-HPA, the 1H-15N TROSY-HSQC spectrum of NadR displayed approximately 140 peaks, as for apo-NadR, i.e. two distinct stable conformations (that might have potentially revealed the molecular asymmetry observed crystallographically) were not notable. Considering the small size, fast diffusion and relatively low binding affinity of 4-HPA, it would not be surprising if the ligand associates and dissociates rapidly on the NMR time scale, resulting in only one set of peaks whose chemical shifts represent the average environment of the bound and unbound states. Interestingly, by cooling the samples to 10°C, we observed that a number of those peaks strongly affected by 4-HPA (and therefore likely to be in the ligand-binding site) demonstrated evidence of peak splitting, i.e. a tendency to become two distinct peaks rather than one single peak (Fig 6B and 6C). These doubled peaks may therefore reveal that the cooler temperature partially trapped the existence in solution of two distinct states, in presence or absence of 4-HPA, with minor conformational differences occurring at least in proximity to the binding pocket. Although more comprehensive NMR experiments and full chemical shift assignment of the spectra would be required to precisely define this multi-state behavior, the NMR data clearly demonstrate that NadR exhibits conformational flexibility which is modulated by 4-HPA in solution. 0.98322904 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:47:27Z DUMMY: presence of 0.9958422 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9887062 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:04:07Z MESH: 1H-15N TROSY-HSQC 0.96818626 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:33:35Z DUMMY: spectrum 0.99864155 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99783957 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.99860746 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.90495 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:04:10Z MESH: crystallographically evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:33:54Z binding affinity 0.99629325 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.97597426 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:48:34Z MESH: NMR 0.99651694 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:47:32Z DUMMY: bound 0.99608624 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:47:35Z DUMMY: unbound 0.9951579 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9980556 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:11:30Z SO: ligand-binding site 0.94725573 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:47:42Z DUMMY: presence 0.9762615 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:47:44Z DUMMY: absence of 0.9945387 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9978014 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:11:33Z SO: binding pocket 0.9899743 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:48:34Z MESH: NMR evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:49:02Z spectra 0.9846875 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:48:34Z MESH: NMR 0.99864143 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99530214 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA RESULTS title_2 34376 Apo-NadR structures reveal intrinsic conformational flexibility 0.9978946 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: Apo 0.8863035 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99732757 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:02Z DUMMY: structures RESULTS paragraph 34440 The apo-NadR crystal structure contained two homodimers in the asymmetric unit (chains A+B and chains C+D). Upon overall structural superposition, these dimers revealed a few minor differences in the α6 helix (a major component of the dimer interface) and the helices α4-α5 (the DNA binding region), and an rmsd of 1.55Å (Fig 7A). Similarly, the entire holo-homodimer could be closely superposed onto each of the apo-homodimers, showing rmsd values of 1.29Å and 1.31Å, and with more notable differences in the α6 helix positions (Fig 7B). The slightly larger rmsd between the two apo-homodimers, rather than between apo- and holo-homodimers, further indicate that apo-NadR possesses a notable degree of intrinsic conformational flexibility. 0.99693346 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9919003 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.9970949 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:05Z DUMMY: crystal structure 0.9959527 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:19Z DUMMY: homodimers structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:50:42Z chains A+B structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:50:52Z chains C+D 0.995749 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:04:22Z MESH: structural superposition 0.9959527 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:59Z DUMMY: dimers 0.9938742 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:28Z SO: α6 helix 0.988893 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:11:36Z SO: dimer interface 0.93791986 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:36Z SO: helices 0.9968322 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:39Z SO: α4-α5 0.9906445 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:11:39Z SO: DNA binding region 0.9954869 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:09Z DUMMY: rmsd 0.99730045 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.99183285 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.9215127 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:04:29Z MESH: closely superposed 0.9976131 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.98759776 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers 0.9925884 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:11Z DUMMY: rmsd 0.9951743 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:42Z SO: α6 helix 0.9944622 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:11Z DUMMY: rmsd 0.99771786 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.989388 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers 0.9976179 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9975793 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.98964864 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers 0.9975782 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9933122 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR ppat.1005557.g007.jpg ppat.1005557.g007 FIG fig_title_caption 35197 Overall apo- and holo-NadR structures are similar. 0.9978346 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9977877 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9330376 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.9972395 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:10Z DUMMY: structures ppat.1005557.g007.jpg ppat.1005557.g007 FIG fig_caption 35248 (A) Pairwise alignment of the two distinct apo-NadR homodimers (AB and CD) present in the apo-NadR crystals. (B) Alignment of the holo-NadR homodimer (green and blue chains) onto the apo-NadR homodimers. Here, larger differences are observed in the α6 helices (top). 0.9300884 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:04:33Z MESH: Pairwise alignment 0.99730194 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.98105603 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99527574 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers 0.96431 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:53:24Z SO: AB 0.98471916 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:54:33Z SO: CD 0.9975815 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9542532 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.988332 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:14Z DUMMY: crystals 0.979324 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:04:35Z MESH: Alignment 0.997494 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.99012506 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.9950531 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.9975956 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9803587 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99435633 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers 0.995286 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:47Z SO: α6 helices RESULTS title_2 35520 4-HPA stabilizes concerted conformational changes in NadR that prevent DNA-binding 0.9963954 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9955106 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR RESULTS paragraph 35603 To further investigate the conformational rearrangements of NadR, we performed local structural alignments using only a subset of residues in the DNA-binding helix (α4). By selecting and aligning residues Arg64-Ala77 of one α4 helix per dimer, superposition of the holo-homodimer onto the two apo-homodimers revealed differences in the monomer conformations of each structure. While one monomer from each structure was closely superimposable (Fig 8A, left side), the second monomer displayed quite large differences (Fig 8A, right side). Most notably, the position of the DNA-binding helix α4 shifted by as much as 6 Å (Fig 8B). Accordingly, helix α4 was also found to be one of the most dynamic regions in previous HDX-MS analyses of apo-NadR in solution. 0.9982886 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99280906 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:04:41Z MESH: local structural alignments 0.91794753 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:52Z SO: DNA-binding helix 0.99741924 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:18:57Z SO: α4 0.52089626 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:04:51Z MESH: selecting 0.6833694 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:04:54Z MESH: aligning 0.9459782 residue_range cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:38:14Z DUMMY: Arg64-Ala77 0.99575436 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:05Z SO: α4 helix 0.9961479 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:24Z DUMMY: dimer 0.9952786 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:04:57Z MESH: superposition 0.99776876 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9934657 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.9978448 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9930607 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers oligomeric_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z monomer 0.99148434 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:18Z DUMMY: structure 0.9931491 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer 0.9811638 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:20Z DUMMY: structure 0.9917691 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:11:59Z DNA 0.9013841 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:00Z SO: helix 0.99405414 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:02Z SO: α4 0.9898205 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:07Z SO: helix 0.99336183 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:10Z SO: α4 0.9958964 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:14:42Z MESH: HDX-MS 0.9979127 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9984351 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR ppat.1005557.g008.jpg ppat.1005557.g008 FIG fig_title_caption 36376 Structural comparisons of NadR and modelling of interactions with DNA. 0.98863584 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:05:13Z MESH: Structural comparisons 0.9943613 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.9958268 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:26:05Z CHEBI: DNA ppat.1005557.g008.jpg ppat.1005557.g008 FIG fig_caption 36447 (A) The holo-homodimer structure is shown as green and blue cartoons, for chain A and B, respectively, while the two homodimers of apo-NadR are both cyan and pale blue for chains A/C and B/D, respectively. The three homodimers (chains AB holo, AB apo, and CD apo) were overlaid by structural alignment exclusively of all heavy atoms in residues R64-A77 (shown in red, with side chain sticks) of chains A holo, A apo, and C apo, belonging to helix α4 (left). The α4 helices aligned closely, Cα rmsd 0.2Å for 14 residues. (B) The relative positions of the α4 helices of the 4-HPA-bound holo homodimer chain B (blue), and of apo homodimers AB and CD (showing chains B and D) in pale blue. Dashes indicate the Ala77 Cα atoms, in the most highly shifted region of the ‘non-fixed’ α4 helix. (C) The double-stranded DNA molecule (grey cartoon) from the OhrR-ohrA complex is shown after superposition with NadR, to highlight the expected positions of the NadR α4 helices in the DNA major grooves. The proteins share ~30% amino acid sequence identity. For clarity, only the α4 helices are shown in panels (B) and (C). (D) Upon comparison with the experimentally-determined OhrR:ohrA structure (grey), the α4 helix of holo-NadR (blue) is shifted ~8Å out of the major groove. 0.99718 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9837816 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.99679875 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:25Z DUMMY: structure structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:52:30Z chain A and B 0.99501824 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers 0.99778533 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9952924 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:52:48Z A/C structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:53:05Z B/D 0.9940654 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers 0.9471725 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:53:23Z SO: AB 0.99380106 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9343996 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:53:24Z SO: AB 0.99271977 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.90673345 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:54:33Z SO: CD 0.99611545 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.52363145 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:05:17Z MESH: overlaid experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:05:44Z structural alignment 0.97950435 residue_range cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:38:20Z DUMMY: R64-A77 structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:35:55Z A 0.9969573 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:35:55Z A 0.99714524 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:53:39Z C 0.9969393 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.8825526 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:15Z SO: helix 0.9969965 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:18Z SO: α4 0.9915956 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:21Z SO: α4 helices 0.95211196 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:11Z DUMMY: rmsd 0.9872302 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:24Z SO: α4 helices 0.9448308 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:47:49Z DUMMY: 4-HPA-bound 0.99755234 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9775006 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:13Z chain B 0.9976858 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.96839976 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:20Z DUMMY: homodimers 0.86218876 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:53:24Z SO: AB 0.87432945 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:54:32Z SO: CD structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:54:16Z chains B and D 0.99893063 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:21:23Z DUMMY: Ala77 0.97499454 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:27Z SO: α4 helix 0.99629563 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:26:09Z CHEBI: DNA 0.9949884 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:12:42Z GO: OhrR-ohrA 0.9925903 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:05:51Z MESH: superposition 0.99717915 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.9952188 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.98921365 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:32Z SO: α4 helices 0.9845547 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:26:14Z CHEBI: DNA 0.98696077 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:35Z SO: α4 helices 0.99406904 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:12:51Z GO: OhrR:ohrA 0.99007696 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:28Z DUMMY: structure 0.988043 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:38Z SO: α4 helix 0.99767274 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9952963 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR RESULTS paragraph 37749 However, structural comparisons revealed that the shift of holo-NadR helix α4 induced by the presence of 4-HPA was also accompanied by several changes at the holo dimer interface, while such extensive structural differences were not observed in the apo dimer interfaces, particularly notable when comparing the α6 helices (S3 Fig). In summary, compared to ligand-stabilized holo-NadR, apo-NadR displayed an intrinsic flexibility focused in the DNA-binding region. This was also evident in the greater disorder (i.e. less well-defined electron density) in the β1-β2 loops of the apo dimers (density for 16 residues per dimer was missing) compared to the holo dimer (density for only 3 residues was missing). 0.9929446 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:05:54Z MESH: structural comparisons 0.9967393 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.99476093 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.952134 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:42Z SO: helix 0.99507433 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:45Z SO: α4 protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:48:23Z presence of 0.99623346 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9973326 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9907912 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:12:06Z SO: dimer interface 0.9975399 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9863324 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:12:10Z SO: dimer interfaces 0.9945024 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:48Z SO: α6 helices 0.9942922 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:48:28Z DUMMY: ligand-stabilized 0.99697816 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9928624 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99738103 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.99429804 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.9873474 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:12:14Z SO: DNA-binding region 0.9962344 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:32Z DUMMY: electron density 0.9968533 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:52Z SO: β1-β2 loops 0.99763954 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.98444253 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:59Z DUMMY: dimers 0.9690363 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:35Z DUMMY: density 0.9940493 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:28Z DUMMY: dimer 0.9976184 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.9817718 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:32Z DUMMY: dimer 0.9886591 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:37Z DUMMY: density RESULTS paragraph 38470 In holo-NadR, the distance separating the two DNA-binding α4 helices was 32 Å, while in apo-NadR it was 29 Å for homodimer AB, and 34 Å for homodimer CD (Fig 8C). Thus, the apo-homodimer AB presented the DNA-binding helices in a conformation similar to that observed in the protein:DNA complex of OhrR:ohrA from Bacillus subtilis (Fig 8C). Interestingly, OhrR contacts ohrA across 22 base pairs (bp), and similarly the main NadR target sites identified in the nadA promoter (the operators Op I and Op II) both span 22 bp. Pairwise superpositions showed that the NadR apo-homodimer AB was the most similar to OhrR (rmsd 2.6 Å), while the holo-homodimer was the most divergent (rmsd 3.3 Å) (Fig 8C). Assuming the same DNA-binding mechanism is used by OhrR and NadR, the apo-homodimer AB seems ideally pre-configured for DNA binding, while 4-HPA appeared to stabilize holo-NadR in a conformation poorly suited for DNA binding. Specifically, in addition to the different inter-helical translational distances, the α4 helices in the holo-NadR homodimer were also reoriented, resulting in movement of α4 out of the major groove, by up to 8Å, and presumably preventing efficient DNA binding in the presence of 4-HPA (Fig 8D). When aligned with OhrR, the apo-homodimer CD presented yet another different intermediate conformation (rmsd 2.9Å), apparently not ideally pre-configured for DNA binding, but which in solution can presumably readily adopt the AB conformation due to the intrinsic flexibility described above. 0.99745196 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z DUMMY: holo 0.99483335 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.97909606 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:19:56Z SO: α4 helices 0.997521 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9924177 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.98887575 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.9837299 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:53:24Z SO: AB 0.9894264 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.9882554 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:54:33Z SO: CD 0.9966793 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.6534773 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.9956454 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:53:24Z SO: AB 0.9174837 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:01Z SO: DNA-binding helices complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:56:09Z OhrR:ohrA 0.9951938 species cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:18:51Z MESH: Bacillus subtilis 0.99838316 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:56:42Z PR: OhrR 0.99838257 gene cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:11:09Z GENE: ohrA 0.39123315 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.7473986 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:12:25Z SO: target sites gene GENE: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z nadA 0.99486613 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:00Z MESH: Pairwise superpositions 0.9952264 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z apo oligomeric_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z homodimer 0.99704534 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:53:24Z SO: AB 0.99840873 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:56:43Z PR: OhrR 0.9321035 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:11Z DUMMY: rmsd protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:21Z holo 0.581259 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.79532903 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:11Z DUMMY: rmsd chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:49:17Z DNA 0.9984114 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:56:43Z PR: OhrR 0.9982993 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.99724054 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.79037267 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.9975526 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:53:24Z SO: AB chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:48:50Z DNA 0.9900882 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9970386 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:22Z DUMMY: holo 0.9963247 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:49:07Z DNA 0.9482872 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:46Z DUMMY: inter-helical translational distances 0.99293673 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:12Z SO: α4 helices protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:22Z holo 0.9932461 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:48Z PR: NadR 0.992219 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.99768054 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:18Z SO: α4 chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:48:58Z DNA 0.9934158 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9555606 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:04Z MESH: aligned 0.9983878 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:56:43Z PR: OhrR 0.99690175 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.78264475 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:49Z DUMMY: homodimer 0.993802 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:54:33Z SO: CD 0.93124425 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:11Z DUMMY: rmsd chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:49:31Z DNA 0.6082675 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:53:24Z SO: AB RESULTS title_2 39993 NadR residues His7, Ser9, Asn11 and Phe25 are essential for regulation of NadA expression in vivo 0.944478 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.99892396 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:02:27Z DUMMY: His7 0.99898106 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:05Z DUMMY: Ser9 0.9990349 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:02:37Z DUMMY: Asn11 0.9990089 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:35Z DUMMY: Phe25 0.9928429 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA RESULTS paragraph 40092 While previous studies had correctly suggested the involvement of several NadR residues in ligand binding, the crystal structures presented here revealed additional residues with previously unknown roles in dimerization and/or binding to 4-HPA. To explore the functional involvement of these residues, we characterized the behavior of four new NadR mutants (H7A, S9A, N11A and F25A) in an in vivo assay using the previously described MC58-Δ1843 nadR-null mutant strain, which was complemented either by wild-type nadR or by the nadR mutants. NadA protein abundance levels were assessed by Western blotting to evaluate the ability of the NadR mutants to repress the nadA promoter, in the presence or absence of 4-HPA. The nadR H7A, S9A and F25A complemented strains showed hyper-repression of nadA expression in vivo, i.e. these mutants repressed nadA more efficiently than the NadR WT protein, either in the presence or absence of 4-HPA, while complementation with wild-type nadR resulted in high production of NadA only in the presence of 4-HPA (Fig 9). Interestingly, and on the contrary, the nadR N11A complemented strain showed hypo-repression (i.e. exhibited high expression of nadA both in absence and presence of 4-HPA). This mutagenesis data revealed that NadR residues His7, Ser9, Asn11 and Phe25 play key roles in the ligand-mediated regulation of NadR; they are each involved in the controlled de-repression of the nadA promoter and synthesis of NadA in response to 4-HPA in vivo. 0.92497444 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.99734956 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:34:50Z DUMMY: crystal structures 0.9965666 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.45507443 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9967115 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:19Z MESH: H7A 0.9961534 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:24Z MESH: S9A 0.9967585 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:29Z MESH: N11A 0.99725634 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:21:39Z MESH: F25A 0.9463827 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:21:44Z MESH: MC58-Δ1843 gene GENE: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:01Z nadR protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:10Z mutant 0.9969253 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:28Z DUMMY: wild-type 0.9982344 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:01Z GENE: nadR 0.41754237 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:01Z GENE: nadR 0.6736878 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:21:59Z DUMMY: mutants 0.93231297 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.94588625 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:07Z MESH: Western blotting 0.33933762 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.5745186 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:22:12Z DUMMY: mutants gene GENE: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z nadA 0.99555683 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9613765 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:01Z GENE: nadR 0.99275607 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:19Z MESH: H7A 0.994399 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:24Z MESH: S9A 0.99687046 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:22:16Z MESH: F25A gene GENE: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z nadA gene GENE: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z nadA 0.9222919 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.98351914 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:33Z DUMMY: WT 0.9954092 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9972098 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:28Z DUMMY: wild-type 0.99799526 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:01Z GENE: nadR 0.96869344 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.9950135 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99465454 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:01Z GENE: nadR 0.99013466 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:29Z MESH: N11A 0.81234396 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.9941128 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9766634 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:12Z MESH: mutagenesis 0.77991426 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9988035 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:02:27Z DUMMY: His7 0.99889284 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:05Z DUMMY: Ser9 0.99894816 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:02:37Z DUMMY: Asn11 0.9988921 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:35Z DUMMY: Phe25 0.9938478 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.7965298 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.9934442 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.99594617 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA ppat.1005557.g009.jpg ppat.1005557.g009 FIG fig_title_caption 41588 Structure-based point mutations shed light on ligand-induced regulation of NadR. 0.99432194 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:17Z MESH: Structure-based point mutations 0.9983051 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR ppat.1005557.g009.jpg ppat.1005557.g009 FIG fig_caption 41669 Western blot analyses of wild-type (WT) strain (lanes 1–2) or isogenic nadR knockout strains (ΔNadR) complemented to express the indicated NadR WT or mutant proteins (lanes 3–12) or not complemented (lanes 13–14), grown in the presence (even lanes) or absence (odd lanes) of 5mM 4-HPA, showing NadA and NadR expression. Complementation of ΔNadR with WT NadR enables induction of nadA expression by 4-HPA. The H7A, S9A and F25A mutants efficiently repress nadA expression but are less ligand-responsive than WT NadR. The N11A mutant does not efficiently repress nadA expression either in presence or absence of 4-HPA. (The protein abundance levels of the meningococcal factor H binding protein (fHbp) were used as a gel loading control). 0.97901464 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:20Z MESH: Western blot 0.995406 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:28Z DUMMY: wild-type 0.9735041 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:33Z DUMMY: WT 0.6550133 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:01Z GENE: nadR 0.9981198 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:22:21Z MESH: ΔNadR 0.99103373 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.99277824 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:33Z DUMMY: WT protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:10Z mutant 0.99599695 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.4534085 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.47945735 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9983777 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:22:25Z MESH: ΔNadR 0.9974239 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:33Z DUMMY: WT 0.9969547 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.74495965 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.9963741 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99826473 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:19Z MESH: H7A 0.99798965 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:24Z MESH: S9A 0.9983475 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:22:29Z MESH: F25A 0.7451092 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.99741817 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:24:33Z DUMMY: WT 0.9977149 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9984787 mutant cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:29Z MESH: N11A 0.9429268 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:26:10Z DUMMY: mutant 0.47659972 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.9960682 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.84731996 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal protein PR: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:12:12Z factor H binding protein 0.9949124 protein cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:12:15Z PR: fHbp DISCUSS title_1 42414 Discussion DISCUSS paragraph 42425 NadA is a surface-exposed meningococcal protein contributing to pathogenesis, and is one of three main antigens present in the vaccine Bexsero. A detailed understanding of the in vitro repression of nadA expression by the transcriptional regulator NadR is important, both because it is a relevant disease-related model of how small-molecule ligands can regulate MarR family proteins and thereby impact bacterial virulence, and because nadA expression levels are linked to the prediction of vaccine coverage. The repressive activity of NadR can be relieved by hydroxyphenylacetate (HPA) ligands, and HDX-MS studies previously indicated that 4-HPA stabilizes dimeric NadR in a configuration incompatible with DNA binding. Despite these and other studies, the molecular mechanisms by which ligands regulate MarR family proteins are relatively poorly understood and likely differ depending on the specific ligand. Given the importance of NadR-mediated regulation of NadA levels in the contexts of meningococcal pathogenesis, we sought to characterize NadR, and its interaction with ligands, at atomic resolution. 0.97509515 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.55074143 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.9294955 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.9943236 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:15:27Z MESH: transcriptional regulator 0.99856794 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.99289215 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:57Z DUMMY: bacterial 0.473951 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.9984724 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9982064 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:26:21Z CHEBI: hydroxyphenylacetate 0.99808073 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:26:25Z CHEBI: HPA 0.9962147 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:14:42Z MESH: HDX-MS 0.997154 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9923085 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:05Z DUMMY: dimeric 0.9986915 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.9868035 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.6850392 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.72020483 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.99818844 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR DISCUSS paragraph 43534 Firstly, we confirmed that NadR is dimeric in solution and demonstrated that it retains its dimeric state in the presence of 4-HPA, indicating that induction of a monomeric status is not the manner by which 4-HPA regulates NadR. These observations were in agreement with (i) a previous study of NadR performed using SEC and mass spectrometry, and (ii) crystallographic studies showing that several MarR homologues are dimeric. We also used structure-guided site-directed mutagenesis to identify an important conserved residue, Leu130, which stabilizes the NadR dimer interface, knowledge of which may also inform future studies to explore the regulatory mechanisms of other MarR family proteins. Secondly, we assessed the thermal stability and unfolding of NadR in the presence or absence of ligands. All DSC profiles showed a single peak, suggesting that a single unfolding event simultaneously disrupted the dimer and the monomer. HPA ligands specifically increased the stability of NadR. The largest effects were induced by the naturally-occurring compounds 4-HPA and 3Cl,4-HPA, which, in SPR assays, were found to bind NadR with KD values of 1.5 mM and 1.1 mM, respectively. Although these NadR/HPA interactions appeared rather weak, their distinct affinities and specificities matched their in vitro effects and their biological relevance appears similar to previous proposals that certain small molecules, including some antibiotics, in the millimolar concentration range may be broad inhibitors of MarR family proteins. Indeed, 4-HPA is found in human saliva and 3Cl,4-HPA is produced during inflammatory processes, suggesting that these natural ligands are encountered by N. meningitidis in the mucosa of the oropharynx during infections. It is also possible that NadR responds to currently unidentified HPA analogues. Indeed, in the NadR/4-HPA complex there was a water molecule close to the carboxylate group and also a small unfilled tunnel ~5Å long, both factors suggesting that alternative larger ligands could occupy the pocket. It is conceivable that such putative ligands may establish different bonding networks, potentially binding in a 2:2 ratio, rather than the 1:2 ratio observed herein. The ability to respond to various ligands might enable NadR in vivo to orchestrate multiple response mechanisms and modulate expression of genes other than nadA. Ultimately, confirmation of the relevance of each ligand will require a deeper understanding of the available concentration in vivo in the host niche during bacterial colonization and inflammation. 0.99859005 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.973828 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:05Z DUMMY: dimeric 0.96735674 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:05Z DUMMY: dimeric 0.9712814 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:49:46Z DUMMY: presence of 0.9975283 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.73995596 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:25:00Z DUMMY: monomeric 0.99705654 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9986633 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.99819344 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9925506 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:26Z MESH: SEC 0.93368363 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:29Z MESH: mass spectrometry 0.98113465 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:32Z MESH: crystallographic studies 0.9954275 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MESH: MarR 0.943355 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:05Z DUMMY: dimeric 0.9960764 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:35Z MESH: structure-guided site-directed mutagenesis protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:50:06Z conserved 0.9986517 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:21:28Z DUMMY: Leu130 0.9982626 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.99668217 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:13:01Z SO: dimer interface protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:35:15Z assessed the thermal stability 0.9985331 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:50:27Z in the presence 0.910316 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:50:30Z DUMMY: absence of 0.7912865 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:42Z MESH: DSC 0.6052191 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:35:20Z DUMMY: profiles 0.9964078 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:37Z DUMMY: dimer 0.9960084 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer 0.9986971 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.99759865 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99718535 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z CHEBI: 3Cl,4-HPA 0.9872149 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:06:46Z MESH: SPR assays 0.9986644 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9551488 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:35:48Z DUMMY: KD 0.8284178 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.99768394 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99437547 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:51Z MESH: human 0.9973361 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:21Z CHEBI: 3Cl,4-HPA 0.9945516 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:12:03Z MESH: N. meningitidis 0.9974638 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9980355 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:26:30Z CHEBI: HPA complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:40Z NadR/4-HPA 0.9984682 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:26:34Z CHEBI: water 0.7275508 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:13:06Z SO: tunnel 0.99801755 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.99730766 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.9845227 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:57Z DUMMY: bacterial DISCUSS paragraph 46104 Here, we determined the first crystal structures of apo-NadR and holo-NadR. These experimentally-determined structures enabled a new detailed characterization of the ligand-binding pocket. In holo-NadR, 4-HPA interacted directly with at least 11 polar and hydrophobic residues. Several, but not all, of these interactions were predicted previously by homology modelling combined with ligand docking in silico. Subsequently, we established the functional importance of His7, Ser9, Asn11 and Phe25 in the in vitro response of meningococcus to 4-HPA, via site-directed mutagenesis. More unexpectedly, the crystal structure revealed that only one molecule of 4-HPA was bound per NadR dimer. We confirmed this stoichiometry in solution using SPR methods. We also used heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy to detect substantial conformational changes of NadR occurring in solution upon addition of 4-HPA. Moreover, NMR spectra at 10°C suggested the existence of two distinct conformations of NadR in the vicinity of the ligand-binding pocket. More powerfully, our unique crystallographic observation of this ‘occupied vs unoccupied site’ asymmetry in the NadR/4-HPA interaction is, to our knowledge, the first example reported for a MarR family protein. Structural analyses suggested that ‘inward’ side chain positions of Met22, Phe25 and especially Arg43 precluded binding of a second ligand molecule. Such a mechanism indicates negative cooperativity, which may enhance the ligand-responsiveness of NadR. 0.9971545 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:35:52Z DUMMY: crystal structures 0.9977964 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9986632 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9977132 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:22Z DUMMY: holo 0.9986835 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9959116 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:35:58Z DUMMY: structures 0.99816763 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:13:11Z SO: ligand-binding pocket 0.9975103 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:22Z DUMMY: holo 0.9985104 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9960315 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9938643 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:07:01Z MESH: homology modelling 0.99227476 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:07:04Z MESH: ligand docking 0.9991386 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:02:27Z DUMMY: His7 0.9991304 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:30:05Z DUMMY: Ser9 0.9991472 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:02:37Z DUMMY: Asn11 0.9991252 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:35Z DUMMY: Phe25 0.986343 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:19:08Z DUMMY: meningococcus 0.99670297 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99458283 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:07:07Z MESH: site-directed mutagenesis 0.9972843 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:02Z DUMMY: crystal structure 0.996538 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.76325077 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:50:36Z DUMMY: bound 0.9986249 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9958813 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:41Z DUMMY: dimer 0.9931855 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:07:12Z MESH: SPR 0.9955998 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:07:15Z MESH: heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy 0.99871445 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9958806 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9211322 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:48:34Z MESH: NMR 0.7642749 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:49:02Z DUMMY: spectra 0.99845326 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.99803483 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:13:15Z SO: ligand-binding pocket evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:13:41Z crystallographic observation 0.6236123 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:50:42Z DUMMY: occupied 0.66957355 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:50:45Z DUMMY: unoccupied complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:40Z NadR/4-HPA protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.9818895 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:07:21Z MESH: Structural analyses protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:44:58Z inward 0.9991411 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:28Z DUMMY: Met22 0.99911517 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:35Z DUMMY: Phe25 0.9991381 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:37:40Z DUMMY: Arg43 0.9987212 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR DISCUSS paragraph 47608 Comparisons of the NadR/4-HPA complex with available MarR family/salicylate complexes revealed that 4-HPA has a previously unobserved binding mode. Briefly, in the M. thermoautotrophicum MTH313 dimer, one molecule of salicylate binds in the pocket of each monomer, though with two rather different positions and orientations, only one of which (site-1) is thought to be biologically relevant (Fig 10A). In the S. tokodaii protein ST1710, salicylate binds to the same position in each monomer of the dimer, in a site equivalent to the putative biologically relevant site of MTH313 (Fig 10B). Unlike other MarR family proteins which revealed multiple ligand binding interactions, we observed only 1 molecule of 4-HPA bound to NadR, suggesting a more specific and less promiscuous interaction. In NadR, the single molecule of 4-HPA binds in a position distinctly different from the salicylate binding site: translated by > 10 Å and with a 180° inverted orientation (Fig 10C). complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:40Z NadR/4-HPA protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.4382097 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9972873 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99461573 species cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:19:13Z MESH: M. thermoautotrophicum 0.9984688 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:58Z PR: MTH313 0.99616396 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:45Z DUMMY: dimer 0.9982845 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9935482 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:13:55Z SO: pocket 0.9945979 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer 0.9863995 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:14:01Z SO: site-1 0.99450547 species cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:19:18Z MESH: S. tokodaii 0.99853384 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:06Z PR: ST1710 0.989588 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9952158 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer 0.99607986 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:48Z DUMMY: dimer 0.99854845 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:58Z PR: MTH313 protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.997176 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99584013 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:50:48Z DUMMY: bound to 0.9988686 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.99867034 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9970718 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9979003 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:14:23Z SO: salicylate binding site ppat.1005557.g010.jpg ppat.1005557.g010 FIG fig_title_caption 48583 NadR shows a ligand binding site distinct from other MarR homologues. 0.74721384 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9980111 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:14:27Z SO: ligand binding site 0.99762696 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MESH: MarR ppat.1005557.g010.jpg ppat.1005557.g010 FIG fig_caption 48653 (A) A structural alignment of MTH313 chains A and B shows that salicylate is bound in distinct locations in each monomer; site-1 (thought to be the biologically relevant site) and site-2 differ by ~7Å (indicated by black dotted line) and also by ligand orientation. (B) A structural alignment of MTH313 chain A and ST1710 (pink) (Cα rmsd 2.3Å), shows that they bind salicylate in equivalent sites (differing by only ~3Å) and with the same orientation. (C) Addition of holo-NadR (chain B, blue) to the alignment reveals that bound 4-HPA differs in position by > 10 Å compared to salicylate, and adopts a novel orientation. 0.9951623 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:07:26Z MESH: structural alignment 0.99830675 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:58Z PR: MTH313 structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:44Z chains A and B 0.99855167 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.5704616 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:50:54Z DUMMY: bound 0.98944247 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:23:34Z DUMMY: monomer 0.9937976 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:14:34Z SO: site-1 0.9936908 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:14:37Z SO: site-2 0.9943106 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:07:29Z MESH: structural alignment 0.998104 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:58Z PR: MTH313 structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:34:02Z chain A 0.755813 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:06Z PR: ST1710 0.9025636 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:11Z DUMMY: rmsd 0.99835485 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9980702 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:22Z DUMMY: holo 0.9984768 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:33:13Z chain B 0.82494926 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:07:42Z MESH: alignment 0.9933189 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:50:58Z DUMMY: bound 0.997561 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:13Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9984068 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate DISCUSS paragraph 49281 Interestingly, a crystal structure was previously reported for a functionally-uncharacterized meningococcal homologue of NadR, termed NMB1585, which shares 16% sequence identity with NadR. The two structures can be closely aligned (rmsd 2.3 Å), but NMB1585 appears unsuited for binding HPAs, since its corresponding ‘pocket’ region is occupied by several bulky hydrophobic side chains. It can be speculated that MarR family members have evolved separately to engage distinct signaling molecules, thus enabling bacteria to use the overall conserved MarR scaffold to adapt and respond to diverse changing environmental stimuli experienced in their natural niches. Alternatively, it is possible that other MarR homologues (e.g. NMB1585) may have no extant functional binding pocket and thus may have lost the ability to respond to a ligand, acting instead as constitutive DNA-binding regulatory proteins. 0.9972241 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:07Z DUMMY: crystal structure 0.65245795 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.99733835 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.9971601 protein cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:12:27Z PR: NMB1585 0.99822205 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:49Z PR: NadR 0.99524575 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:10Z DUMMY: structures 0.9727957 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:11Z DUMMY: rmsd 0.9963366 protein cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:12:28Z PR: NMB1585 0.98902774 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:03Z CHEBI: HPAs 0.95218843 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:15:04Z SO: ‘pocket protein_type MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MarR 0.9961553 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:53Z DUMMY: bacteria 0.9724381 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MESH: MarR 0.99568754 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MESH: MarR 0.99731016 protein cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:12:28Z PR: NMB1585 0.9018167 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:15:13Z SO: binding pocket chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:16:12Z DNA DISCUSS paragraph 50188 The apo-NadR crystal structures revealed two dimers with slightly different conformations, most divergent in the DNA-binding domain. It is not unusual for a crystal structure to reveal multiple copies of the same protein in very slightly different conformations, which are likely representative of the lowest-energy conformations sampled by the dynamic ensemble of molecular states occurring in solution, and which likely have only small energetic differences, as described previously for MexR (a MarR protein) or more recently for the solute-binding protein FhuD2. Further, the holo-NadR structure was overall more different from the two apo-NadR structures (rmsd values ~1.3Å), suggesting that the ligand selected and stabilized yet another conformation of NadR. These observations suggest that 4-HPA, and potentially other similar ligands, can shift the molecular equilibrium, changing the energy barriers that separate active and inactive states, and stabilizing the specific conformation of NadR poorly suited to bind DNA. 0.99787676 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9971002 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.99730563 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:13Z DUMMY: crystal structures 0.99617815 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:22:59Z DUMMY: dimers 0.9942808 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:25Z SO: DNA-binding domain 0.9972534 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:16Z DUMMY: crystal structure 0.99853015 protein cleaner0 2023-07-06T07:59:32Z PR: MexR 0.9948894 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:09:39Z MESH: MarR 0.9842086 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:16:23Z MESH: solute-binding protein 0.99863726 protein cleaner0 2023-07-06T07:59:36Z PR: FhuD2 0.9976864 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:22Z DUMMY: holo 0.9967859 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.99675167 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:19Z DUMMY: structure 0.9978709 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9969388 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.99600583 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:22Z DUMMY: structures 0.99534804 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:51:11Z DUMMY: rmsd 0.9987024 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.99678 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:14Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.9960879 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:51:26Z DUMMY: active 0.9954644 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:51:29Z DUMMY: inactive 0.9986125 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.9232329 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:26:39Z CHEBI: DNA DISCUSS paragraph 51217 Comparisons of the apo- and holo-NadR structures revealed that the largest differences occurred in the DNA-binding helix α4. The shift of helix α4 in holo-NadR was also accompanied by rearrangements at the dimer interface, involving helices α1, α5, and α6, and this holo-form appeared poorly suited for DNA-binding when compared with the known OhrR:ohrA complex. While some flexibility of helix α4 was also observed in the two apo-structures, concomitant changes in the dimer interfaces were not observed, possibly due to the absence of ligand. One of the two conformations of apo-NadR appeared ideally suited for DNA-binding. Overall, these analyses suggest that the apo-NadR dimer has a pre-existing equilibrium that samples a variety of conformations, some of which are compatible with DNA binding. This intrinsically dynamic nature underlies the possibility for different conformations to inter-convert or to be preferentially selected by a regulatory ligand, as generally described in the ‘conformational selection’ model for protein-ligand interactions (the Monod-Wyman-Changeux model), rather than an ‘induced fit’ model (Koshland-Nemethy-Filmer). The noted flexibility may also explain how NadR can adapt to bind various DNA target sequences with slightly different structural features. Subsequently, upon ligand binding, holo-NadR adopts a structure less suited for DNA-binding and this conformation is selected and stabilized by a network of protein-ligand interactions and concomitant rearrangements at the NadR holo dimer interface. In an alternative and less extensive manner, the binding of two salicylate molecules to the M. thermoautotrophicum protein MTH313 appeared to induce large changes in the wHTH domain, which was associated with reduced DNA-binding activity. 0.9973699 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9971554 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:22Z DUMMY: holo 0.9959662 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.9974324 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:25Z DUMMY: structures chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:15:27Z DNA 0.5043439 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:28Z SO: helix 0.9908263 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:31Z SO: α4 0.98037887 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:36Z SO: helix 0.99362767 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:39Z SO: α4 0.9971974 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:22Z DUMMY: holo 0.9961991 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.99508715 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:15:31Z SO: dimer interface 0.95091134 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:42Z SO: helices 0.9958883 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:44Z SO: α1 0.9955355 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:47Z SO: α5 0.9956929 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:50Z SO: α6 0.9974261 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:22Z DUMMY: holo chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:52:26Z DNA 0.9916764 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:16:35Z GO: OhrR:ohrA 0.9877594 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:54Z SO: helix 0.9935834 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:20:56Z SO: α4 0.9978315 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.979077 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:28Z DUMMY: structures 0.9937589 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:15:34Z SO: dimer interfaces 0.7910685 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:51:39Z DUMMY: absence of ligand 0.9975109 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9974704 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:51:48Z DNA 0.99754024 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:28Z DUMMY: apo 0.9964143 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.99657625 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:37:53Z DUMMY: dimer chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:52:00Z DNA 0.99644935 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:52:09Z DNA 0.9972614 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:22Z DUMMY: holo 0.9973586 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:52:17Z DNA 0.9977654 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.99550545 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:18:22Z DUMMY: holo 0.9939954 site cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:15:38Z SO: dimer interface 0.9988034 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:11:42Z CHEBI: salicylate 0.9949896 species cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:19:22Z MESH: M. thermoautotrophicum 0.9984168 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:10:58Z PR: MTH313 0.9724839 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:21:04Z SO: wHTH domain DISCUSS paragraph 53025 Here we have presented two new crystal structures of the transcription factor, NadR, which regulates expression of the meningococcal surface protein, virulence factor and vaccine antigen NadA. Detailed structural analyses provided a molecular explanation for the ligand-responsive regulation by NadR on the majority of the promoters of meningococcal genes regulated by NadR, including nadA. Intriguingly, NadR exhibits a reversed regulatory mechanism on a second class of promoters, including mafA of the multiple adhesin family–i.e. NadR represses these genes in the presence but not absence of 4-HPA. The latter may influence the surface abundance or secretion of maf proteins, an emerging class of highly conserved meningococcal putative adhesins and toxins with many important roles. Further work is required to investigate how the two different promoter types influence the ligand-responsiveness of NadR during bacterial infection and may provide insights into the regulatory mechanisms occurring during these host-pathogen interactions. Ultimately, knowledge of the ligand-dependent activity of NadR will continue to deepen our understanding of nadA expression levels, which influence meningococcal pathogenesis. 0.996686 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:36:33Z DUMMY: crystal structures 0.9821497 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:16:39Z MESH: transcription factor 0.9978492 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.7136107 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.9967894 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:02:00Z PR: NadA 0.97987914 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-06T12:07:47Z MESH: structural analyses 0.9983432 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.9701741 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.99673766 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.9928474 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.99358 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.9957644 gene cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:00:45Z GENE: mafA 0.99762875 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.9962601 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:05:14Z CHEBI: 4-HPA 0.99696594 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-06T08:52:33Z DUMMY: highly conserved 0.97295785 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal 0.9980994 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.99093115 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:57Z DUMMY: bacterial 0.9976197 protein cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:01:50Z PR: NadR 0.9941636 gene cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:01Z GENE: nadA 0.8491299 taxonomy_domain cleaner0 2023-07-05T16:04:16Z DUMMY: meningococcal METHODS title_1 54246 Materials and Methods METHODS title_2 54268 Bacterial strains, culture conditions and mutant generation METHODS paragraph 54328 In this study we used N. meningitidis MC58 wild type strain and related mutant derivatives. The MC58 isolate was kindly provided to us by Professor E. Richard Moxon, University of Oxford, UK, and was previously submitted to the Meningococcal Reference Laboratory, Manchester, UK. Strains were routinely cultured, stocked, and transformed as described previously. To generate N. meningitidis MC58 mutant strains expressing only the amino acid substituted forms of NadR, plasmids containing the sequence of nadR mutated to insert alanine codons to replace His7, Ser9, Asn11 or Phe25 were constructed using the QuikChange II XL Site-Directed Mutagenesis Kit (Stratagene). The nadR gene (also termed NMB1843) was mutated in the pComEry-1843 plasmid using couples of mutagenic primers (forward and reverse). The resulting plasmids were named pComEry-1843H7A, -1843S9A, -1843N11A or -1843F25A, and contained a site-directed mutant allele of the nadR gene, in which the selected codons were respectively substituted by a GCG alanine codon, and were used for transformation of the MC-Δ1843 strain. Total lysates from single colonies of all transformants were used as a template for PCR analysis to confirm the correct insertion by double homologous recombinant event. When indicated, bacterial strains were grown in presence of 5 mM 4-HPA (MW 152, Sigma-Aldrich). METHODS title_2 55688 Molecular cloning METHODS paragraph 55706 The preparation of the expression construct enabling production of soluble NadR with an N-terminal His-tag followed by a thrombin cleavage site (MGSSHHHHHHSSGLVPR↓GSH-) (where the arrow indicates the cleavage site) and then NadR residues M1-S146 (Uniprot code Q7DD70), and methods to generate site-directed mutants, were described previously. Briefly, site-directed mutagenesis was performed using two overlapping primers containing the desired mutation to amplify pET15b containing several NadR variants. (Full oligonucleotide sequences of primers are available upon request). 1–10 ng of plasmid DNA template were amplified using Kapa HiFi DNA polymerase (Kapa Biosystems) and with the following cycling conditions: 98°C for 5 min, 15 cycles of (98°C for 30 s, 60°C for 30 s, 72°C for 6 min) followed by a final extension of 10 min at 72°C. Residual template DNA was digested by 30 min incubation with FastDigest DpnI (Thermo Scientific) at 37°C and 1 μl of this reaction was used to transform E. coli DH5α competent cells. The full recombinant tagged NadR protein generated contained 166 residues, with a theoretical MW of 18746, while after thrombin-cleavage the untagged protein contained 149 residues, with a theoretical MW of 16864. METHODS title_2 56957 Protein production and purification METHODS paragraph 56993 The NadR expression constructs (wild-type or mutant clones) were transformed into E. coli BL21 (DE3) cells and were grown at 37°C in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium supplemented with 100 μg/mL ampicillin, until an OD600 of 0.5 was reached. Target protein production was induced by the addition of 1 mM IPTG followed by incubation with shaking overnight at 21°C. For production of the selenomethionine (SeMet) derivative form of NadR for crystallization studies, essentially the same procedure was followed, but using the E. coli B834 strain grown in a modified M9 minimal medium supplemented with 40 mg/L L-SeMet. For production of 15N-labeled NadR for NMR analyses, the EnPresso B Defined Nitrogen-free medium (Sigma-Aldrich) was used; in brief, BL21 (DE3) cells were grown in BioSilta medium at 30°C for 30 h, and production of the 15N-labeled NadR was enabled by the addition of 2.5 g/L 15NH4Cl and further incubation for 2 days. METHODS paragraph 57924 Cells were harvested by centrifugation (6400 g, 30 min, 4°C), resuspended in 20 mM HEPES pH 8.0, 300 mM NaCl, 20 mM imidazole, and were lysed by sonication (Qsonica Q700). Cell lysates were clarified by centrifugation at 2800 g for 30 min, and the supernatant was filtered using a 0.22 μm membrane (Corning filter system) prior to protein purification. NadR was purified by affinity chromatography using an AKTA purifier (GE Healthcare). All steps were performed at room temperature (18–26°C), unless stated otherwise. The filtered supernatant was loaded onto an Ni-NTA resin (5 mL column, GE Healthcare), and NadR was eluted using 4 steps of imidazole at 20, 30, 50 and 250 mM concentration, at a flow rate of 5 mL/min. Eluted fractions were examined by reducing and denaturing SDS-PAGE analysis. Fractions containing NadR were identified by a band migrating at ~17 kDa, and were pooled. The N-terminal 6-His tag was removed enzymatically using the Thrombin CleanCleave Kit (Sigma-Aldrich). Subsequently, the sample was reloaded on the Ni-NTA resin to capture the free His tag (or unprocessed tagged protein), thus allowing elution in the column flow-through of tagless NadR protein, which was used in all subsequent studies. The NadR sample was concentrated and loaded onto a HiLoad Superdex 75 (16/60) preparative size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) column equilibrated in buffer containing 20 mM HEPES pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, at a flow-rate of 1 mL/min. NadR protein was collected and the final yield of purified protein obtained from 0.5 L LB growth medium was approximately 8 mg (~2 mg protein per g wet biomass). Samples were used immediately for crystallization or analytical experiments, or were frozen for storage at -20°C. METHODS title_2 59661 SE-HPLC/MALLS analyses METHODS paragraph 59684 MALLS analyses were performed online with SE-HPLC using a Dawn TREOS MALLS detector (Wyatt Corp., Santa Barbara, CA, USA) and an incident laser wavelength of 658 nm. The intensity of the scattered light was measured at 3 angles simultaneously. Data analysis was performed using the Astra V software (Wyatt) to determine the weighted-average absolute molecular mass (MW), the polydispersity index (MW/Mn) and homogeneity (Mz/Mn) for each oligomer present in solution. Normalization of the MALLS detectors was performed in each analytical session by use of bovine serum albumin. METHODS title_2 60261 Differential scanning calorimetry METHODS paragraph 60295 The thermal stability of NadR proteins was assessed by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) using a MicroCal VP-Capillary DSC instrument (GE Healthcare). NadR samples were prepared at a protein concentration of 0.5 mg/mL (~30 μM) in buffer containing 20 mM HEPES, 300 mM NaCl, pH 7.4, with or without 6 mM HPA or salicylate. The DSC temperature scan ranged from 10°C to 110°C, with a thermal ramping rate of 200°C per hour and a 4 second filter period. Data were analyzed by subtraction of the reference data for a sample containing buffer only, using the Origin 7 software. All experiments were performed in triplicate, and mean values of the melting temperature (Tm) were determined. METHODS title_2 60988 Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) METHODS title_3 61020 Determination of equilibrium dissociation constant, KD METHODS paragraph 61076 Surface plasmon resonance binding analyses were performed using a Biacore T200 instrument (GE Healthcare) equilibrated at 25°C. The ligand (NadR) was covalently immobilized by amine-coupling on a CM-5 sensor chip (GE Healthcare), using 20 μg/mL purified protein in 10 mM sodium acetate buffer pH 5, injected at 10 μl/min for 120 s until ~9000 response units (RU) were captured. A high level of ligand immobilization was required due to the small size of the analytes. An unmodified surface was used as the reference channel. Titrations with analytes (HPAs or salicylate) were performed with a flow-rate of 30 μl/min, injecting the compounds in a concentration range of 10 μM to 20 mM, using filtered running buffer containing Phosphate Buffered Saline (PBS) with 0.05% Tween-20, pH 7.4. Following each injection, sensor chip surfaces were regenerated with a 30-second injection of 10 mM Glycine pH 2.5. Each titration series contained 20 analyte injections and was performed in triplicate. Titration experiments with long injection phases (> 15 mins) were used to enable steady-state analyses. Data were analyzed using the BIAcore T200 evaluation software and the steady-state affinity model. A buffer injection was subtracted from each curve, and reference sensorgrams were subtracted from experimental sensorgrams to yield curves representing specific binding. The equilibrium dissociation constant, KD, was determined from the plot of RUeq against analyte concentration (S2 Fig), as described previously. Determination of binding stoichiometry: From each plot of RUeq against analyte concentration, obtained from triplicate experiments, the Rmax value (maximum analyte binding capacity of the surface) was extrapolated from the experimental data (S2 Fig). Stoichiometry was calculated using the molecular weight of dimeric NadR as ligand molecule (MWligand) and the molecular weights of the HPA analyte molecules (MWanalyte), and the following equation: where Rligand is recorded directly from the sensorgram during ligand immobilization prior to the titration series, as described previously. The stoichiometry derived therefore represented the number of HPA molecules bound to one dimeric NadR protein. METHODS title_2 63290 Crystallization of NadR in the presence or absence of 4-HPA METHODS paragraph 63350 Purified NadR was concentrated to 2.7 mg/mL (~160 μM) using a centrifugal concentration device (Amicon Ultra-15 Centrifugal Filter Unit with Ultracel-10 membrane with cut-off size 10 kDa; Millipore) running at 600 g in a bench top centrifuge (Thermo Scientific IEC CL40R) refrigerated at 2–8°C. To prepare holo-NadR samples, HPA ligands were added at a 200-fold molar excess prior to the centrifugal concentration step. The concentrated holo- or apo-NadR was subjected to crystallization trials performed in 96-well low-profile Intelli-Plates (Art Robbins) or 96-well low-profile Greiner crystallization plates, using a nanodroplet sitting-drop vapour-diffusion format and mixing equal volumes (200 nL) of protein samples and crystallization buffers using a Gryphon robot (Art Robbins). Crystallization trays were incubated at 20°C. Crystals of apo-NadR were obtained in 50% PEG 3350 and 0.13 M di-Ammonium hydrogen citrate, whereas crystals of SeMet–NadR in complex with 4-HPA grew in condition H4 of the Morpheus screen (Molecular Dimensions), which contains 37.5% of the pre-mixed precipitant stock MPD_P1K_PEG 3350, buffer system 1 and 0.1 M amino acids, at pH 6.5. All crystals were mounted in cryo-loops using 10% ethylene glycol or 10% glycerol as cryo-protectant before cooling to 100 K for data collection. METHODS title_2 64673 X-ray diffraction data collection and structure determination METHODS paragraph 64735 X-ray diffraction data from crystals of apo-NadR and SeMet–NadR/4-HPA were collected on beamline PXII-X10SA of the Swiss Light Source (SLS) at the Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI), Villigen, Switzerland. All diffraction data were processed with XDS and programs from the CCP4 suite. Crystals of apo-NadR and 4-HPA-bound SeMet-NadR belonged to space group P43 21 2 (see Table 2). Apo-NadR crystals contained four molecules (two dimers) in the asymmetric unit (Matthews coefficient 2.25 Å3 Da−1, for a solvent content of 45%), while crystals of SeMet–NadR/4-HPA contained two molecules (one dimer) in the asymmetric unit (Matthews coefficient 1.98 Å3 Da−1, for a solvent content of 38%). In solving the holo-NadR structure, an initial and marginal molecular replacement (MR) solution was obtained using as template search model the crystal structure of the transcriptional regulator PA4135 (PBD entry 2FBI), with which NadR shares ~54% sequence identity. This solution was combined with SAD data to aid identification of two selenium sites in NadR, using autosol in phenix and this allowed generation of high-quality electron density maps that were used to build and refine the structure of the complex. Electron densities were clearly observed for almost the entire dimeric holo-NadR protein, except for a new N-terminal residues and residues 88–90 of chain B. METHODS paragraph 66103 The crystal structure of apo-NadR was subsequently solved by MR in Phaser at 2.7 Å, using the final refined model of SeMet-NadR/4-HPA as the search model. For apo-NadR, electron densities were clearly observed for almost the entire protein, although residues 84–91 of chains A, C, and D, and residues 84–90 of chain B lacked densities suggesting local disorder. METHODS paragraph 66470 Both structures were refined and rebuilt using phenix and Coot, and structural validation was performed using Molprobity. Data collection and refinement statistics are reported in Table 2. Atomic coordinates of the two NadR structures have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank, with entry codes 5aip (NadR bound to 4-HPA) and 5aiq (apo-NadR). All crystallographic software was compiled, installed and maintained by SBGrid. METHODS title_2 66896 NMR spectroscopy METHODS paragraph 66913 For heteronuclear NMR experiments, the NadR protein concentration used was 85 μM (~ 1.4 mg/mL) in a solution containing 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer (90% H2O and 10% D2O) and 200 mM NaCl, prepared in the apo-form or in the presence of a 200-fold molar excess of 4-HPA, at pH 6.5. The stability, integrity and dimeric state of the protein in the NMR buffer was confirmed by analytical SEC (Superdex 75, 10/300 column) prior to NMR studies. 1H-15N transverse relaxation-optimized spectroscopy (TROSY)-heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) experiments on apo-NadR and NadR in the presence of 4-HPA were acquired using an Avance 950 Bruker spectrometer, operating at a proton frequency of 949.2 MHz and equipped with triple resonance cryogenically-cooled probe at two different temperatures (298 K and 283 K). 1H-15N TROSY-HSQC experiments were recorded for 12 h, with a data size of 1024 x 232 points. Spectra were processed using the Bruker TopSpin 2.1 and 3.1 software packages. METHODS title_2 67902 Western blot METHODS paragraph 67915 Western blot analysis was performed as described previously. 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