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Heme‐dependent autophosphorylation of a heme sensor kinase, ChrS, from <i>Corynebacterium diphtheriae</i> reconstituted in proteoliposomes
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Citations
22
References
2009
Year
Heme Sensor KinaseMolecular BiologyHost Heme IronHeme TraffickingBiosynthesisBioenergeticsSensor KinaseProteomicsCell SignalingBiochemistryHeme SignalingHeme‐dependent AutophosphorylationHeme TransportProtein PhosphorylationSignal TransductionNatural SciencesHeme DegradationEshcherichia Coli MembranesMicrobiologyCellular BiochemistryMedicine
Corynebacterium diphteriae employs the response regulator, ChrA, and the sensor kinase, ChrS, of a two-component signal transduction system to utilize host heme iron. Although ChrS is predicted to encode a heme sensor, the sensing mechanism remains to be characterized. In this report, ChrS expressed in Eshcherichia coli membranes was solubilized and purified using decylmaltoside. ChrS protein incorporated into proteoliposomes catalyzed heme-dependent autophosphorylation by ATP. Other metalloporphyrins and iron did not stimulate kinase activity. The UV-Vis spectrum of hemin in the ChrS-proteoliposomes indicated that heme directly interacts with ChrS. This is the first functional reconstitution of a bacterial heme-sensing protein.
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