Issue 10, 2015

Metal binding spectrum and model structure of the Bacillus anthracis virulence determinant MntA

Abstract

The potentially lethal human pathogen Bacillus anthracis expresses a putative metal import system, MntBCA, which belongs to the large family of ABC transporters. MntBCA is essential for virulence of Bacillus anthracis: deletion of MntA, the system's substrate binding protein, yields a completely non-virulent strain. Here we determined the metal binding spectrum of MntA. In contrast to what can be inferred from growth complementation studies we find no evidence that MntA binds Fe2+ or Fe3+. Rather, MntA binds a variety of other metal ions, including Mn2+, Zn2+, Cd2+, Co2+, and Ni2+ with affinities ranging from 10−6 to 10−8 M. Binding of Zn2+ and Co2+ have a pronounced thermo-stabilizing effect on MntA, with Mn2+ having a milder effect. The thermodynamic stability of MntA, competition experiments, and metal binding and release experiments all suggest that Mn2+ is the metal that is likely transported by MntBCA and is therefore the limiting factor for virulence of Bacillus anthracis. A homology-model of MntA shows a single, highly conserved metal binding site, with four residues that participate in metal coordination: two histidines, a glutamate, and an aspartate. The metals bind to this site in a mutually exclusive manner, yet surprisingly, mutational analysis shows that for proper coordination each metal requires a different subset of these four residues. ConSurf evolutionary analysis and structural comparison of MntA and its homologues suggest that substrate binding proteins (SBPs) of metal ions use a pair of highly conserved prolines to interact with their cognate ABC transporters. This proline pair is found exclusively in ABC import systems of metal ions.

Graphical abstract: Metal binding spectrum and model structure of the Bacillus anthracis virulence determinant MntA

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Apr 2015
Accepted
16 Jun 2015
First published
16 Jun 2015
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Metallomics, 2015,7, 1407-1419

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