Abstract

In orally acquired bacteria, the ability to counteract extreme acid stress (pH⩽2.5) ensures survival during transit through the animal host stomach. In several neutralophilic bacteria, the glutamate-dependent acid resistance system (GDAR) is the most efficient molecular system in conferring protection from acid stress. In Escherichia coli its structural components are either of the two glutamate decarboxylase isoforms (GadA, GadB) and the antiporter, GadC, which imports glutamate and exports γ-aminobutyrate, the decarboxylation product. The system works by consuming protons intracellularly, as part of the decarboxylation reaction, and exporting positive charges via the antiporter.Herein, biochemical and spectroscopic properties of GadB from Brucella microti (BmGadB), a Brucella species which possesses GDAR, are described. B. microti belongs to a group of lately described and atypical brucellae that possess functional gadB and gadC genes, unlike the most well-known “classical” Brucella species, which include important human pathogens. BmGadB is hexameric at acidic pH. The pH-dependent spectroscopic properties and activity profile, combined with in silico sequence comparison with E. coli GadB (EcGadB), suggest that BmGadB has the necessary structural requirements for the binding of activating chloride ions at acidic pH and for the closure of its active site at neutral pH. On the contrary, cellular localization analysis, corroborated by sequence inspection, suggests that BmGadB does not undergo membrane recruitment at acidic pH, which was observed in EcGadB. The comparison of GadB from evolutionary distant microorganisms suggests that for this enzyme to be functional in GDAR some structural features must be preserved.

Highlights

  • In several food-borne pathogens and orally acquired bacteria, such as Escherichia coli, Shigella flexneri, Listeria monocytogenes and Lactoccoccus lactis, the glutamate-dependent acid resistance system (GDAR) is the most efficient system in counteracting the extreme acid stress encountered by these microorganisms during

  • Our study demonstrates that glutamate decarboxylase (GadB) from evolutionary distant microorganisms, such as E. coli and B. microti, share many biochemical properties and structural features which are instrumental for the full development of GDAR

  • Following electroblotting onto polyvinylidine difluoride (PVDF) membrane, the protein band corresponding to BmGadB (5 lg; 94 pmol) was subjected to Edman degradation and the N-terminal sequence Met-Thr-Gly-Ser-Asn confirmed that the correct N-terminal sequence was that provided in Patric [24]

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Summary

Introduction

GDAR relies on the activities of an enzyme, glutamate decarboxylase (Gad; EC 4.1.1.15), and an antiporter (GadC) (Fig. 1). L-glutamate (L-Glu) into c-aminobutyrate (GABA); (iii) the proton-consuming activity of Gad is coupled to the electrogenic antiport carried out at this same pH values by GadC, which provides to the L-Glu0/GABA+1 antiport [3,4].

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