Abstract

Staphylococcus aureus pI258 CadC is an extrachromosomally encoded metalloregulatory repressor protein from the ArsR superfamily which negatively regulates the expression of the cad operon in a metal-dependent fashion. The metalloregulatory hypothesis holds that direct binding of thiophilic divalent cations including Cd(II), Pb(II), and Zn(II) by CadC allosterically regulates the DNA binding activity of CadC to the cad operator/promoter (O/P). This report presents a detailed characterization of the metal binding and DNA binding properties of wild-type CadC. The results of analytical ultracentrifugation experiments suggest that both apo- and Cd(1)-CadC are stable or weakly dissociable homodimers characterized by a K(dimer) = 3.0 x 10(6) M(-1) (pH 7.0, 0.20 M NaCl, 25.0 degrees C) with little detectable effect of Cd(II) on the dimerization equilibrium. As determined by optical spectroscopy, the stoichiometry of Cd(II) and Pb(II) binding is approximately 0.7-0.8 mol/mol of wild-type CadC monomer. Chelator (EDTA) competition binding isotherms reveal that Cd(II) binds very tightly, with K(Cd) = 4.3 (+/-1.8) x 10(12) M(-1). The results of UV-Vis and X-ray absorption spectroscopy of the Cd(1) complex are consistent with a tetrathiolate (S(4)) complex formed by four cysteine ligands. The (113)Cd NMR spectrum reveals a single resonance of delta = 622 ppm, consistent with an S(3)(N,O) or unusual upfield-shifted S(4) complex. The Pb(II) complex reveals two prominent absorption bands at 350 nm (epsilon = 4000 M(-1) cm(-1)) and 250 nm (epsilon = 41 000 M(-1) cm(-1)), spectral properties consistent with three or four thiolate ligands to the Pb(II) ion. The change in the anisotropy of a fluorescein-labeled oligonucleotide containing the cad O/P upon binding CadC and analyzed using a dissociable CadC dimer binding model reveals that apo-CadC forms a high-affinity complex [K(a) = (1.1 +/- 0.3) x 10(9) M(-1); pH 7.0, 0.40 M NaCl, 25 degrees C], the affinity of which is reduced approximately 300-fold upon the binding of a single molar equivalent of Cd(II) or Pb(II). The implications of these findings on the mechanism of metalloregulation are discussed.

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