Abstract
Copper is broadly toxic to bacteria. As such, bacteria have evolved specialized copper export systems (cop operons) often consisting of a DNA-binding/copper-responsive regulator (which can be a repressor or activator), a copper chaperone, and a copper exporter. For those bacteria using DNA-binding copper repressors, few studies have examined the regulation of this operon regarding the operator DNA sequence needed for repressor binding. In Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus), CopY is the copper repressor for the cop operon. Previously, homologs of pneumococcal CopY have been characterized to bind a 10-base consensus sequence T/GACANNTGTA known as the cop box. Using this motif, we sought to determine whether genes outside the cop operon are also regulated by the CopY repressor, which was previously shown in Lactococcus lactis We found that S. pneumoniae CopY did not bind to cop operators upstream of these candidate genes in vitro During this process, we found that the cop box sequence is necessary but not sufficient for CopY binding. Here, we propose an updated operator sequence for the S. pneumoniaecop operon to be ATTGACAAATGTAGAT binding CopY with a dissociation constant (Kd ) of ∼28 nM. We demonstrate strong cross-species interaction between some CopY proteins and CopY operators, suggesting strong evolutionary conservation. Taken together with our binding studies and bioinformatics data, we propose the consensus operator RNYKACANNYGTMRNY for the bacterial CopR-CopY copper repressor homologs.IMPORTANCE Many Gram-positive bacteria respond to copper stress by upregulating a copper export system controlled by a copper-sensitive repressor, CopR-CopY. The previous operator sequence for this family of proteins had been identified as TACANNTGTA. Here, using several recombinant proteins and mutations in various DNA fragments, we define those 10 bases as necessary but not sufficient for binding and in doing so, refine the cop operon operator to the 16-base sequence RNYKACANNTGTMRNY. Due to the sheer number of repressors that have been said to bind to the original 10 bases, including many antibiotic resistance repressors such as BlaI and MecI, we feel that this study highlights the need to reexamine many of these sites of the past and use added stringency for verifying operators in the future.
Highlights
A BLAST search revealed that the 61-base stretch of DNA upstream of the pneumococcal cop operon that includes the two extended 21-base repeats is highly conserved in all pneumococcal strains [46]
We suggest that 16 bases make up a minimal operator site (ATTGACAAATGTAGAT) recognized by CopY and that additional flanking bases increase stability
We found that S. pneumoniae CopY did not bind to the distal E. hirae operator but did bind to the E. hirae proximal operator and both distal and proximal cop operators from S. thermophilus (Tables 1 and 3)
Summary
Bacteria have evolved specialized copper export systems (cop operons) often consisting of a DNA-binding/ copper-responsive regulator (which can be a repressor or activator), a copper chaperone, and a copper exporter. More stable complexes correlate to a metal’s toxicity, as native metals for an active site can be displaced by another metal ion further along in the observed series This mismetallation is present across multiple metal-binding motifs and can result in abnormal protein function [3]. There are cop operon activators and repressors in structurally distinct groups, they all serve to protect the bacteria against copper stress by sensing copper and facilitating its export. The pneumococcal cop operon contains, copY as the DNA repressor, cupA as a membrane-associated copper chaperone, and copA as the copper-specific exporter [19, 30, 34]. Mutations in the copper export protein in cop operons result in decreased bacterial virulence, highlighting the importance of copper in nutritional immunity [21, 30, 39, 40]
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