Resistance to beta -Lactam Antibiotics and Its Mediation by the Sensor Domain of the Transmembrane BlaR Signaling Pathway in Staphylococcus aureus*,

Dasantila Golemi-Kotra, Joo Young Cha, Samy O. Meroueh, Sergei B. Vakulenko, and Shahriar MobasheryDagger

From the Departments of Chemistry, of Pharmacology, and of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Institute for Drug Design, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan 48202-3489

Received for publication, January 20, 2003, and in revised form, February 10, 2003

    ABSTRACT
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Staphylococci, a leading cause of infections worldwide, have devised two mechanisms for resistance to beta -lactam antibiotics. One is production of beta -lactamases, hydrolytic resistance enzymes, and the other is the expression of penicillin-binding protein 2a (PBP 2a), which is not susceptible to inhibition by beta -lactam antibiotics. The beta -lactam sensor-transducer (BlaR), an integral membrane protein, binds beta -lactam antibiotics on the cell surface and transduces the information to the cytoplasm, where gene expression is derepressed for both beta -lactamase and penicillin-binding protein 2a. The gene for the sensor domain of the sensor-transducer protein (BlaRS) of Staphylococcus aureus was cloned, and the protein was purified to homogeneity. It is shown that beta -lactam antibiotics covalently modify the BlaRS protein. The protein was shown to contain the unusual carboxylated lysine that activates the active site serine residue for acylation by the beta -lactam antibiotics. The details of the kinetics of interactions of the BlaRS protein with a series of beta -lactam antibiotics were investigated. The protein undergoes acylation by beta -lactam antibiotics with microscopic rate constants (k2) of 1-26 s-1, yet the deacylation process was essentially irreversible within one cell cycle. The protein undergoes a significant conformational change on binding with beta -lactam antibiotics, a process that commences at the preacylation complex and reaches its full effect after protein acylation has been accomplished. These conformational changes are likely to be central to the signal transduction events when the organism is exposed to the beta -lactam antibiotic.

    INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Staphylococci are the most common cause of bacterial infections in the United States (1). Among these organisms, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus has received notoriety since it is currently the scourge of hospitals. Staphylococci have acquired multiple drug resistance genes over the past few decades such that methicillin-resistant S. aureus can usually be treated only by glycopeptides, such as vancomycin (2), or by oxazolidinones, such as linezolid (3). It is disconcerting that variants of methicillin-resistant S. aureus that have become at least partially resistant to glycopeptide (4) and oxazolidinone antibiotics are being identified (5).

beta -Lactam antibiotics target penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs)1 for inhibition. Staphylococci have become resistant to beta -lactam antibiotics by two parallel mechanisms. First, they produce beta -lactamases, enzymes that hydrolytically destroy these antibiotics (6, 7). Second, they have acquired a novel PBP (referred to as PBP 2a) that carries out the physiological functions of the four existing PBPs in staphylococci yet is not inhibited in vivo by any of the clinically used beta -lactam antibiotics. The acquisition of the gene for PBP 2a in staphylococci took place only once from an unknown source (8).

The blaZ and mecA genes encode the staphylococcal beta -lactamase and PBP 2a, respectively. Transcription of these genes is regulated by signal-transducing integral membrane proteins BlaR and MecR and their respective transcriptional repressor proteins BlaI and MecI. BlaR has a beta -lactam-binding domain on the surface of the plasma membrane and a zinc protease domain in the cytoplasm (Fig. 1) (9). The beta -lactam antibiotic acylates a specific active site serine on the cell surface domain, which transduces a signal to the cytoplasmic domain. The zinc-dependent cytoplasmic protease domain, which hydrolyzes the repressor proteins, precipitates transcription of the genes for the two resistance proteins. This proteolytic signaling pathway is unique in bacteria (10). We have cloned, expressed, and purified to homogeneity the cell surface sensor domain of the BlaR protein (referred to as BlaRS hereafter). As an unusual feature, this protein is carboxylated at the side chain of an active site lysine (Lys-392; a carbamate on the side chain), which is critical for active site serine acylation by the beta -lactam antibiotic. The kinetics of these processes are reported herein for the first time. Furthermore, binding of the antibiotic to BlaRS entails a significant conformational change, a process that is likely to play a role in the signal transduction mechanism from the cell surface to the cytoplasm.


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Fig. 1.   Signal-transduction system for the onset of beta -lactam antibiotics resistance in staphylococci. The green band is the cytoplasmic membrane, which displays BlaR and PBP 2a on its external surface. The beta -Lactamase (BlaZ) is excreted to the milieu in staphylococci.


    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Materials-- Antibiotics and other reagents were purchased from Sigma, unless otherwise stated. The growth medium was purchased either from Difco Laboratories (Detroit, Michigan) or Fisher Scientific. The chromatography media were either from Bio-Rad Laboratories or Amersham Biosciences. Escherichia coli DH5alpha was from Invitrogen, and E. coli BL21(DE3) and plasmid pET24a+ were from Novagen. The radioactive sodium bicarbonate (NaH14CO3; 58 mCi/mmol) was purchased from Amersham Biosciences, and NaH13CO3 was from Cambridge Isotope Laboratories. BOCILLIN FL, a derivative of penicillin V, was purchased from Molecular Probes, Inc.

Cloning of the Gene for the Cell Surface Domain of S. aureus BlaR Protein-- We used the plasmid pI258 from S. aureus as the source of the blaR gene (11). We utilized high fidelity Pfu Turbo polymerase (Stratagene®) to amplify the sequence that corresponds to the periplasmic portion of the BlaR protein (amino acids 331-385). Two oligonucleotide primers, Dir, 5'-ACATATGGGGCAATCCATAACTGATTATTATAATTA-3', and Rev, 5'-TATAAGCTTATTGGCCATTTAAAACACCCAT-3', were utilized for this purpose. These primers contain the recognition sequences for NdeI and HindIII restriction endonucleases, respectively (italicized in the nucleotide sequence). The amplified fragment was separated by electrophoresis on a 1% agarose gel and further purified using a ZymocleanTM gel DNA recovery kit (Zymo Research, Orange, CA). This fragment was cloned into HincII sites of plasmid pUC19, and the resulting construct pUC19:blaRS was used to transform E. coli DH5alpha . Transformants were selected on agar plates supplemented with 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-beta -D-galactopyranoside (X-gal), isopropyl-1-thio-beta -D-galactopyranoside, and 100 µg/ml ampicillin. Plasmid DNA from several transformants was isolated, and the presence of the inserted blaRS gene was verified by digestion with NdeI and HindIII. Subsequently, the nucleotide sequence of the blaR gene was verified by sequencing of both DNA strands.

To overexpress the cell surface domain of the BlaR protein (BlaRS) in cytoplasm, we released the corresponding DNA fragment from the plasmid pUC19:blaRS by HindIII and NdeI digestion and reinserted the fragment into the HindIII-NdeI sites of the expression vector pET24a(+). The DNA from the ligation mixture was used to transform E. coli DH5alpha , and the plasmids from several transformants were analyzed for the presence of the insert. Subsequently, E. coli BL21(DE3) was retransformed with the pET24a+ vector containing the cloned blaRS gene.

Mutational Alteration of Ser-389 and Lys-392 to Ala in the BlaRS Protein-- The S389A and K392A mutant variants were generated using the QuikChange site-directed mutagenesis protocol (Stratagene®). Specifically, the pUC19:blaRS vector was amplified using Pfu Turbo DNA polymerase and two mutagenic primers, Ser389AlaDir, 5'-GGTATTCTCCTAATGCAACTTATAAAATT-3', and Ser389AlaRev, 5'-AATTTTATAAGTTGCATTAGGAGAATACC-3', to introduce Ser-389 to Ala substitution. Two other mutagenic primers, Lys392AlaDir, 5'-CTCCTAATTCAACTTATGCAATTTATTTAGCTATGTTTGG-3', and Lys392AlaRev, 5'-CCAAACATAGCTAAATAAATTGCATAAGTTGAATTAGGAG-3', were used to mutate Lys-392 to Ala. The PCR products were treated with restriction endonuclease DpnI that digests only the methylated template DNA, and the resulting mixture was used to transform E. coli DH5alpha . The nucleotide sequences of the entire mutated blaRS genes were verified. These genes were released by digestion with restriction enzymes NdeI and HindIII, recloned into the corresponding sites of the pET24a(+) vector, and transformed into E. coli BL21(DE3).

Purification of the BlaRS Protein-- A single colony of E. coli BL21(DE3) harboring pET24a(+) vector with the cloned blaRS gene (or the mutated versions) was used to inoculate 5 ml of the LB medium containing 30 µg/ml kanamycin A ,and bacteria were allowed to grow overnight at 37 °C. The cell culture was diluted 100-fold into fresh Terrific Broth, supplemented with 30 µg/ml kanamycin A. The culture was grown at 37 °C to an A600 of ~0.8 and then was cooled to 25 °C. Expression of the BlaRS protein was induced by the addition of isopropyl-1-thio-beta -D-galactopyranoside to a final concentration of 0.4 mM. The induced cultures were shaken at 25 °C for 16 h.

The cells were removed by centrifugation at 8,300 × g for 15 min. The pellet was suspended in 25 mM TES buffer, pH 7.5, and the cytoplasmic content was liberated by sonication. The suspension was centrifuged at 21,000 × g for 1 h, and the supernatant was loaded onto a Macro-Prep S-support column (2.5 × 20 cm) equilibrated with 25 mM TES buffer, pH 7.5. The BlaRS protein was eluted at 60% of a linear gradient of 0-1.0 M NaCl in 25 mM TES buffer (1.6 liters), pH 7.5. The fractions containing the protein were concentrated and loaded onto a Sephacryl S-200 column (2.5 × 75 cm) equilibrated with 10 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0. Subsequent to elution of the protein from the column by the same buffer, the protein-containing fractions were analyzed by SDS-PAGE, and the protein was concentrated to 5 mg/ml and kept at 4 °C for further use. At this point, the protein was pure to apparent homogeneity. The above operations were all carried out at 4 °C.

13C NMR Experiments-- The wild-type BlaRS protein (10 mg) was dialyzed against several changes of degassed 25 mM sodium acetate buffer (pH 4.5) and then against degassed 10 mM sodium phosphate buffer, 0.1 mM EDTA, pH 7.5. Finally, the protein was dialyzed against the last buffer containing 10% D2O and 20 mM NaH13CO3 (as the source of CO2). The protein was concentrated to give a 1.0 mM solution. The 13C NMR spectra of the wild-type BlaRS protein modified by 13C-labeled carbon dioxide were collected at 25 °C. The same experiment was repeated with the K392A mutant variant of the BlaRS protein. The procedure did not tamper with the quality of the protein since we measured pseudo-first-order rate constants for acylation of the protein by nitrocefin with and without this treatment, which were the same.

Modification of BlaRS by NaH14CO3-- A 50-µl portion of the 100 µM protein solution (either wild-type BlaR or the K392A mutant variant) was diluted in 4 ml of degassed 25 mM sodium acetate buffer (pH 4.5) and concentrated on an Ultrafree-4 centrifugal filter unit (Millipore) down to ~100 µl. Buffer exchange was performed twice with the sodium acetate buffer and then twice with degassed 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.5; hereafter referred to as the "pH 7.5 buffer"). Concentration of protein was measured at the end of this procedure spectrophotometrically. A 30-µg portion of each protein was reconstituted in the pH 7.5 buffer supplemented with 10 mM unlabeled sodium bicarbonate and 4 mM 14C-labeled sodium bicarbonate (total volume 40 µl) and was incubated at room temperature for 15 min. A 2-µl portion from the reaction mixture was diluted with 28 µl of the pH 7.5 buffer, which was supplemented to give a final concentration of 10 mM unlabelled sodium bicarbonate, and the solution was passed through a desalting column (Micro Bio-Spin 6; Bio-Rad) that was equilibrated with the same buffer (with bicarbonate supplement). A portion of this solution was used for the measurement of the radioactivity, along with a control experiment, for which protein was withheld from the solution.

Determination of the Dissociation Constant of Carbon Dioxide and the BlaRS Protein-- Binding of carbon dioxide to Lys-392 of the BlaRS protein resulted in quenching of protein fluorescence at 320 nm, when excited at 295 nm. Fluorometric measurements were performed in a Spex Industries (Metuchen, NJ) Fluoromax luminescence spectrophotometer. The slit width was kept at 1 nm for excitation and 1.5 nm for emission. Experiments were carried out at 25 °C in 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.5). Aliquots of concentrated NaHCO3, prepared in the same buffer, were added to the protein solution (1 µM) to provide the desired carbon dioxide concentration. The measurement of the fluorescence signal was carried out after 2 min from the NaHCO3 addition, which was monitored over 2 min. The experimental data were fit using the GRAFIT software (Erithacus Software, Middlesex, UK) for a single binding site model by the following quadratic equation,


&Dgr;F/F<SUB>o</SUB>=F<SUB><UP>max</UP></SUB>/2F<SUB>o</SUB>[<UP>E</UP>]<SUB>t</SUB>×{(K<SUB>d</SUB>+[<UP>E</UP>]<SUB>t</SUB>+[<UP>L</UP>]<SUB>t</SUB>) (Eq. 1)

−((K<SUB>d</SUB>+[<UP>E</UP>]<SUB>t</SUB>+[<UP>L</UP>]<SUB>t</SUB>)<SUP>2</SUP>−4[<UP>E</UP>]<SUB>t</SUB>[<UP>L</UP>]<SUB>t</SUB>)<SUP>1/2</SUP>}
where Fo is the initial intrinsic fluorescence of the protein, Delta F is the change in fluorescence, Delta Fmax is maximum change in fluorescence after saturation by carbon dioxide, [L]t is the concentration of total carbon dioxide, and [E]t is the enzyme concentration in the assay. The experiment was carried out two times, and analysis of the data was according to literature methods (12, 13). The same experiment was attempted with the mutant K392A BlaRS protein.

Circular Dichroism Spectroscopy-- The CD spectra of the wild-type BlaRS and the K392A and S389A mutant proteins (2.0 µM each in 10 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.0, supplemented with 50 mM sodium bicarbonate), were recorded on a Jasco J-600 (Easton, MD) instrument (5-mm path length) in the absence and presence of various beta -lactam antibiotics. The contribution of the substrate was subtracted in each case. The concentrations of the beta -lactams were generally 2-fold higher than the respective Ks values. Prior to recording the spectra of the proteins with a beta -lactam antibiotic, the proteins were incubated with the beta -lactam antibiotics for 15 min at 25 °C.

Determination of the Kinetic Parameters for Interactions of beta -Lactam Antibiotics with the BlaRS Protein-- The BlaRS protein experiences acylation at the active site serine, and the acyl-protein species slowly undergoes deacylation according to Reaction 1,


<UP>B+I </UP><AR><R><C>k<SUB><UP>1</UP></SUB></C></R><R><C><UP>⇄</UP></C></R><R><C>k<SUB><UP>−1</UP></SUB></C></R></AR><UP> B·I </UP><AR><R><C>k<SUB><UP>2</UP></SUB></C></R><R><C><UP>→</UP></C></R><R><C> </C></R></AR><UP> B-I </UP><AR><R><C><UP>k<SUB>3</SUB></UP></C></R><R><C><UP>→</UP></C></R><R><C> </C></R></AR><UP> B+P</UP>

<UP>R<SC>eaction</SC> 1</UP>
where the ratio k-1/k1 equals Ks, B represents the BlaRS protein, B·I is the non-covalent preacylation complex, B-I is the covalent acyl-protein species, and P denotes the product of hydrolysis of the beta -lactam antibiotic.

The first-order rate constants for protein acylation (k2) were determined for different beta -lactam compounds using a Cary 50 UV spectrophotometer (Varian Inc.) equipped with an SFA-20 stopped-flow apparatus (Hi-Tech Scientific, Salisbury, UK) at room temperature. The parameters for the reaction between the BlaRS protein and nitrocefin were determined directly by monitoring the formation of the acyl-enzyme species at 500 nm (Delta epsilon 500 = +15,900 cm-1 M-1) (14). The experiments were carried out in 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer supplemented with 50 mM NaHCO3, and sodium sulfate was added to maintain an ionic strength of 0.3 M (pH 7.0).

The observed first-order rate constants (kobs) were measured at a protein concentration of 1.0 µM and at different concentrations of nitrocefin (5-20 µM). The reactions were monitored for 15 s each, at which time the protein was invariably acylated. The stopped-flow instrument had an intrinsic delay time of 20 ms from the moment of mixing to the time of recording. The observed first-order rate constants (kobs) for acylation of BlaRS by nitrocefin were determined by fitting the change in absorbance as a function of time to the following equation: At = Amax(1 - exp(-kobst)), where At is the absorbance at time t and Amax is the maximum absorbance reached after all the protein is acylated (calculated from fitting of the progress curves with the above equation). The kobs values were plotted against the nitrocefin concentrations to obtain the apparent first-order rate constant (k2), as per the equation: kobs = k2 × [S]/(Ks + [S]). The parameters for the K392A mutant protein were calculated similarly.

Nitrocefin was used as a reporter molecule to determine the apparent first-order rate constants for acylation by other non-chromogenic (or poorly chromogenic) beta -lactams in competitive reactions, as described by Woodward-Graves and Pratt (15). The progress curves, obtained by monitoring at 500 nm the formation of acyl-enzyme species between nitrocefin and BlaRS protein (1 µM) at different concentrations of the beta -lactam, were fit to the following equation: At = Amax{1 - exp(-(kn ki)t)}, where Kn is the observed first-order rate constant at 12 µM nitrocefin and Ki is the observed first-order rate constant of the competing beta -lactam at a particular concentration. The Ki values were plotted against the beta -lactam concentrations, and the data obtained for each beta -lactam were processed using nonlinear regression analysis (GRAFIT) to calculate the k2 and Ks values.

The deacylation rate constants were determined using BOCILLIN FL as a reporter molecule (16). A typical reaction mixture (60 µl) contained either 3 or 10 µM of BlaRS (the higher concentration was used for the measurement of the deacylation rate constant for more stable complexes) and a beta -lactam antibiotic at a concentration of at least 2-fold higher than its Ks value. The mixture was incubated at 25 °C for 15 min in 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, supplemented with 50 mM NaHCO3. The excess of beta -lactam antibiotic was removed by passing the mixture through a Micro Bio-Spin®6 column (Bio-Rad). An aliquot (3 µl) of the mixture was diluted 5-fold with the buffer and incubated at different time intervals at 37 °C. The amount of the free protein, liberated from the acyl-protein species, was assayed by the addition of BOCILLIN FL to afford a final concentration of 5 µM and incubated for an additional 5 min at 37 °C. A portion of the SDS sample buffer (15 µl) was added to the reaction mixture, and it was boiled for 3 min. The samples (30 µl in total) were loaded onto 15% Laemmli SDS-PAGE, and the gel was developed and scanned using Storm840® Fluorimager. The fluorescent bands were quantified using the NIH IMAGE 1.62 software. A control sample was also prepared in which the BlaRS protein was incubated with BOCILLIN FL under the same conditions as with other beta -lactam antibiotics, with the exception that the SDS buffer was added immediately after a 5-fold dilution of the reaction mixture. This control sample was used to determine the amount of the acylated protein at time 0. The data were fit to the equation -k3t = ln[B-I]t/[B-I]0, where [B-I]0 and [B-I]t are the concentrations of the acylated BlaRS at time 0 and at time t, respectively, calculated as [B-I]t = [B-I]0 - [B-IB]t, where [B-IB]t is the concentration of the acylated protein with BOCILLIN FL at time t.

The activity of S389A mutant protein was assessed spectrophotometrically in reaction with nitrocefin by monitoring the formation of the acylated species at 500 nm and by fluorescence detection after incubation with BOCILLIN FL. In subsequent experiments, the protein at 1.0 µM was incubated with BOCILLIN FL (5 µM) for 30 min at 37 °C. The reaction was quenched with SDS sample buffer, and the sample was analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.

Structure-based Computational Modeling-- The Swiss-Model server (www.expasy.ch/swissmod) was used to construct a model for the BlaRS protein. The procedure consisted of first carrying out a BLAST (17) search of the ExNRL-3D data base of sequences of known structures for suitable templates. A pairwise sequence alignment of each template to the target sequence was then carried out using the SIM method (18), and sequence identity was determined after each alignment. Only those structures with 25% or greater sequence identity to the target sequence were selected. The ProMod package (19) was then implemented to use the information from the SIM sequence alignments and the Cartesian coordinates from the Protein Data Bank files of the templates to construct a three-dimensional model of the desired protein.

Three sequences of known structures (Protein Data Bank accession codes: 1H8Y, 1EWZ, 1FOF) with 28% percent or more sequence identity to BlaRS were found. The sequence alignment and resulting model generated by the Swiss-Model server were analyzed with the Sybyl 6.7 (Tripos Inc., St. Louis, MO) software package. The BlaRS three-dimensional model generated by the Swiss-Model server was locally refined by molecular dynamics simulations using the AMBER 7 suite of programs (20). The active site Lys-392 was carboxylated in silico, for which derivation of the force field parameters was described previously (21). The protein was fully solvated in a box of TIP3P (22) waters, resulting in a total of 37,585 atoms. A short trajectory was carried out with the protein frozen to equilibrate water molecules. This was followed by a series of energy minimization procedures to gradually relax the protein. Subsequently, a total of 200 ps of molecular dynamics simulation was carried out on the system. Snapshots were collected every 2 ps, and an average structure was generated by root-mean-square fitting of all the collected snapshots to the initial structure. The fitted structures were then averaged, and the resulting model was subjected to a 20,000-step conjugate gradient energy minimization procedure.

    RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

We cloned the sensor domain of the signal transducer protein BlaR from S. aureus (spans amino acids 331-581), which we refer to as the BlaRS protein. The cloned protein was expressed in the cytoplasm of E. coli. The protein was purified to homogeneity in two chromatographic steps and was highly soluble (up to 26 mg/ml). We routinely obtain 50 mg of pure protein from one liter of growth medium. The C terminus of BlaR from Bacillus licheniformis has also been cloned (23, 24).

Carboxylation of Lysine Side Chain in the BlaR Protein-- The BlaRS protein is related to the OXA family of beta -lactamases, enzymes of resistance to beta -lactam antibiotics (24, 25). The active site peptide sequence of Ser-X-X-Lys, which is a known minimal motif for these proteins that undergo acylation at the serine residue, is present in both (25). The x-ray structures for the OXA-10 beta -lactamase (26, 27) reveal that the active site lysine is carboxylated on its side chain (i.e. the carbamate product of reaction with carbon dioxide). The side chain of lysine in the OXA-10 beta -lactamase is sequestered in an unusual environment made up of five hydrophobic amino acid side chains (Phe-69, Val-117, Phe-120, Trp-154, and Leu-155) that is believed to lower the pKa of the lysine side chain such that it exists in the free base form that undergoes reaction with carbon dioxide (26). The side chain of the carboxylated lysine and that of serine are in contact, and the former activates the latter for enzyme acylation by beta -lactam antibiotics (26). The requisite amino acids in the Ser-X-X-Lys motif and the five hydrophobic sites, among others, are conserved among the many OXA beta -lactamases and the BlaR protein (25). A pertinent question now is whether the sensor domain of the BlaR protein is also carboxylated at the corresponding lysine residue.

A diagnostic test for carboxylation of the lysine side chain is by 13C NMR, which detects a distinctive signal. The 13C NMR experiment indicated that lysine carboxylation is seen in the BlaRS protein, as shown by the presence of a diagnostic resonance at 164 ppm (Fig. 2). The same experiment was carried out with the K392A mutant protein, and unexpectedly, we observed that the NMR signal at 164 ppm was not entirely eliminated (Fig. 2B). The integrations of the carbamate signals in Fig. 2 indicated that the wild type enzyme (Fig. 2A) had approximately two carboxylated lysines to one in the mutant protein. Therefore, under the NMR experiment conditions, two lysines in the wild-type protein exist in the free base forms, which undergo carboxylation in the presence of the 13C-labeled carbon dioxide, one of which is at position 392. 


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Fig. 2.   The 13C NMR spectra of the wild-type BlaRS (A) and the K392A mutant proteins (at 1 mM) (B) in 10 mM sodium phosphate, 0.1 mM EDTA, supplemented with 20 mM NaH13CO3.

We resorted to binding of radioactive carbon dioxide to the BlaRS and the K392A mutant proteins. Analogously to the case of the OXA-10 beta -lactamases, the expectation was that the active site carboxylated lysine would be stabilized by specific interactions. On the other hand, the other carboxylated lysine seen in the NMR experiment might have experienced carboxylation in an adventitious process and could be back-titrated by non-radioactive carbon dioxide. Here, each protein was incubated at pH 4.5 to facilitate the decarboxylation of lysine followed by reconstitution of the protein by the radioactively labeled carbon dioxide. The workup was made in the presence of non-labeled carbon dioxide. We were able to measure an average of 0.9 equivalents of radioactive label incorporated per each of the wild-type protein molecule. By the same procedure, no label was introduced into the K392A mutant protein. This argued that carboxylation of the protein was indeed at the Lys-392 position and that there may be another exposed lysine with reduced pKa in this protein that may be partially and unstably carboxylated under the conditions of the NMR experiment (i.e. high carbon dioxide concentration in the NMR tube). The cloned protein has a total of 31 lysine residues.

In the case of the OXA-10 beta -lactamase, proximity of one of the oxygen atoms of the lysine carbamate to Trp-154 was useful in quantitative fluorescence quenching studies of the interaction of carbon dioxide with the enzyme (26). Tryptophan 475 of the BlaR protein corresponds to Trp-154 of the OXA-10 beta -lactamase, so we felt that the dissociation constant for carbon dioxide of the BlaRS protein may be evaluated by fluorescence analyses. The intrinsic fluorescence of BlaRS was quenched upon addition of sodium bicarbonate as the source of carbon dioxide in a saturable fashion. Data fit to Equation 1 revealed a Kd of 0.6 ± 0.2 µM (Fig. 3). Considering that the physiological concentration of carbon dioxide is 1.3 mM (28), this indicates that BlaRS is fully carboxylated in vivo. It is significant to note that the K392A mutant protein did not give the tryptophan fluorescence quench, which is indicative of the fact that the dissociation constant that was evaluated for the wild-type protein was for carboxylation of residue 392 and is a further validation that this residue is indeed carboxylated in the wild-type protein. As will be described below, carboxylated Lys-392 is the active site base that activates the serine for protein acylation. This is now only the second example of a protein, after the OXA-10 beta -lactamases (26), that uses the highly uncommon carboxylated lysine as a basic residue to facilitate reactions in the active site. The few other proteins having carboxylated lysine use the modified amino acid as metal ligand or for hydrogen bonding in the protein structure.


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Fig. 3.   Relative quenching of the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of BlaRS protein (1 µM) versus total concentration of carbon dioxide (µM). Data were fit to a single binding site model as per the equation described under "Experimental Procedures."

The collective information in the preceding paragraphs made possible the generation of a homology-based computational model for the sensor domain of the BlaR protein (Fig. 4). In comparison with the structure of the OXA-10 beta -lactamase, the arrangements of the side chains of serine and the carboxylated lysine and the hydrophobic environment around the lysine, including the proximity of the carboxylated lysine and the tryptophan residue, are preserved.


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Fig. 4.   A, stereo view of the computational model for the beta -lactam binding site of the BlaR protein. A Connolly water-accessible surface (in green) was constructed around the hydrophobic pocket of the binding site residues. The side chains of the residues that make up the hydrophobic pocket are shown in orange-capped sticks. Carboxylated Lys-392 (shown in the middle of the Connolly surface), Ser-389, and Trp-475 are color-coded according to atom types and shown in capped-sticks representation (white, red, and blue correspond to carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen, respectively). Hydrogen bonding interactions between carboxylated Lys-392 and Ser-389 and Trp-475 are represented with a white dashed line. The protein is shown in a purple tube representation. In B, a similar perspective from the x-ray structure for the OXA-10 beta -lactamase is given for comparison.

Kinetics of Interactions of beta -Lactam Antibiotics and the BlaRS Protein-- In light of the information that the sensor domain of the BlaR protein has a carboxylated lysine, it is conceivable that the protein at the end of each individual purification protocol would be carboxylated to varying degrees, since the process is reversible. This point was documented by observing typically a 2-fold enhancement of the rate of interactions of the BlaRS protein with beta -lactam antibiotics by supplementation of the buffer with sodium bicarbonate (as a source of carbon dioxide). As argued above, the BlaR protein is fully carboxylated in vivo, and the fact that some of the carboxylation of the protein is reversed during the purification is an artifact. Therefore, we have supplemented the reaction mixtures for the kinetic studies with bicarbonate to generate the fully carboxylated and active form of the protein for all kinetic determinations.

BOCILLIN FL, a fluorescent penicillin, was used to further study and analyze the mode of action of BlaRS protein. This molecule modifies BlaRS covalently, as would any beta -lactam antibiotic, whereby the protein would migrate through an SDS-polyacrylamide gel to allow quantitative detection by Fluorimager. Titration of the BlaRS protein with BOCILLIN FL revealed saturation and also indicated a one-to-one modification of the protein by the antibiotic. The wild-type and K393A mutant BlaRS proteins were acylated by BOCILIN FL, as revealed by Fluorimager. The K393A has a residual level of activity (see below) that accounts for this observation. In contrast, incubation of the S389A mutant variant with BOCILIN FL did not give a fluoregenic band. A previous study based on sequence analysis of the BlaR from B. licheniformis with a class D beta -lactamase had suggested that residue Ser-389 (BlaR numbering according to S. aureus) might be the modification site by beta -lactams (23). The experiments reported herein clearly reveal Ser-389 to be the serine-active site residue that is acylated.

The kinetics of interactions of several beta -lactam molecules (three penicillins, three cephalosporins, and one carbapenem) with the BlaRS protein were investigated (Table I). Stopped-flow kinetics distinguished between a rapid enzyme acylation event and a substantially slower deacylation step. Acylation of the active site proceeded with microscopic rate constants (i.e. k2) of 1-26 s-1, which indicate rapid t1/2 values for acylation of 27-690 ms for the beta -lactams that we studied. The deacylation rate constants (i.e. k3) for the same beta -lactam molecules are listed in Table I, corresponding to t1/2 values of ~12-240 min. The k3 for oxacillin would appear to be representative of most of the substrates studied, with a value of (4.8 ± 0.6) × 10-5 s-1, which corresponds to a t1/2 value of 240 min. In light of the fact that typical strains of S. aureus double their population sizes in 20-30 min under favorable growth conditions, this indicates that a single acylation event per each molecule of the beta -lactam signal sensor-transducer protein accounts for the biological consequences per each generation of bacterial growth.


                              
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Table I
Kinetic parameters of BlaRS with the beta -lactam antibiotics
The rate constants were determined in the presence of 50 mM NaHCO3 at pH 7.0. The concentration of the protein in the assays was 1 µM. The kinetic parameters for substrates other than nitrocefin were determined in competition experiments with nitrocefin. (See "Experimental Procedures" for more details.)

It is a feature of the signal sensor-transducer protein that it is activated by all beta -lactam antibiotics (29). Consistent with this information, the dissociation constants (i.e. Ks) for various beta -lactam antibiotics are in the micromolar range, which are attainable in the milieu where the bacteria grow. The dissociation constants are practically in the same range for the three penicillins and three cephalosporins that we tested, whereas the carbapenem imipenem shows a higher value (Table I). The second-order rate constants (i.e. k2/Ks) for the encounter of the beta -lactam molecules and the BlaRS protein were typically 104 to 106 M-1 s-1, indicative of a very favorable process.

As per the computational model and the foregoing evidence, we decided to evaluate the effect of Lys-392 on the kinetics of BlaRS acylation. In the case of the OXA-10 beta -lactamase, the mutational change of the corresponding carboxylated lysine resulted in an inactive enzyme that did not experience acylation in the active site by the beta -lactam antibiotics (26). Similarly to the case of the OXA-10 beta -lactamase, a mutational change of Lys-392 to Ala in BlaRS resulted in a protein that was severely impaired in acylation of the active site serine as evaluated for oxacillin (k2 = 0.0026 ± 0.0005 s-1 and Ks = 43 ± 14 µM). The rate constant for acylation was attenuated for the mutant protein by 6730-fold with no change in Ks. Since the mutant protein has the same conformation as the wild-type protein by circular dichroic analyses (see below), the attenuation on k2 may be ascribed to poor activation of serine in the mutant protein.

Conformational Change in the BlaRS Protein-- Signal transduction from one side of the membrane to the other necessitates communication between the surface and the cytoplasmic domains. A means to this communication is by conformational change of the membrane-bound protein after binding to the beta -lactam antibiotic. As shown in Fig. 5, the BlaRS protein is prone to significant conformational change on binding to the beta -lactam antibiotics. The conformational change commences upon binding to the beta -lactam antibiotic at the preacylation complex and reaches its full extent on protein acylation. If the acyl-protein species is allowed to undergo its sluggish deacylation, the protein returns to the native conformation (data not shown). As indicated earlier, the K392A mutant variant of the BlaRS protein is severely deficient in the acylation step. This mutant variant would not experience acylation by beta -lactam antibiotics during the course of the CD experiment. However, the non-covalent binding by a beta -lactam antibiotic, for example by oxacillin (Fig. 5B), resulted in a discernable change in the CD spectrum of the protein (similar results were seen with the S389A mutant protein, which does not have the opportunity to give the acyl-protein species; see Supplemental Material). The minima at 208 and 222 nm, which are due to the helices, were enhanced, and the maximum at 195 nm, due to beta -sheets, sharpened (Fig. 5B). These data argue for the enhancement of secondary structures (helicity and beta -sheets) in the protein on non-covalent binding by the antibiotic. Upon acylation of the protein by oxacillin (Fig. 5A), these effects were enhanced further, but the native state returned upon deacylation. Similar results and trends were noted for all beta -lactam antibiotics shown in Table I (see Supplemental Material), so the effects of the conformational change on the BlaRS protein are shared by all of these antibiotics. In light of the fact that this conformational change is significant and is generally seen regardless of the nature of the beta -lactam antibiotic, we believe that it is likely that it plays a role in the signal transduction process. However, we acknowledge the fact that in the whole cell context, other factors may play a role as well.


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Fig. 5.   Circular dichroic spectra of the wild-type BlaR protein (2 µM, solid line) and the wild-type BlaRS protein (2 µM) incubated with oxacillin (30 µM, broken line) (A) of the K392A mutant variant of the BlaRS protein (2 µM, solid line) and the K392A mutant (2 µM) incubated with oxacillin (30 µM, broken line) (B) and of the S389A mutant variant of the BlaR protein (2 µM, solid line) and the S389A mutant (2 µM) incubated with oxacillin (30 µM, broken line) (C). All the spectra were corrected for the small contribution from the antibiotic in the mixture.

The essence of signal transduction is the switch between inactive and active forms of a given protein. In the case of the beta -lactam signal sensor-transducer, a key question is how binding of the beta -lactam antibiotic to the sensor domain facilitates signal transduction. Two classical models for signal transduction have been proposed (30). In one, ligand binding induces the formation of a new conformation in the protein. In the other, an equilibrium mixture of conformational states exists, and the ligand binding shifts the equilibrium in favor of the active form. The data presented here for the BlaR protein are consistent with either the induced-fit or the population shift model. It is conceivable that the protein switches its conformation on binding by the beta -lactam antibiotic during the formation of the preacylation complex, which reaches its maximal effect after acylation of the enzyme in the active site (the induced-fit model). Alternatively, the CD spectrum of the native BlaR protein may be due to the distribution of several preexisting conformational states, which binding of the beta -lactam antibiotics to one would shift the equilibrium in favor of the active structure (the population shift model). The discrimination between these two models for the case of the BlaR protein should await availability of structural information in the future.

We have described in this report the dynamic nature of the sensor domain of the BlaR protein from staphylococci. This protein undergoes structural rearrangement on binding to a wide range of beta -lactam antibiotics, the implications of which for the signal transduction event remain to be studied by structural biologists. We have shown that beta -lactam antibiotics modify the protein covalently and essentially irreversibly within a bacterial population doubling time at Ser-389. The covalent modification of the sensor domain is facilitated by an uncommon carboxylated lysine at position 392 within the antibiotic binding site. The means by which the BlaR system carries out its signal sensing and transducing processes is unique to Gram-positive bacteria. We have provided herein insights into how this specific protein in S. aureus facilitates the manifestation of resistance to beta -lactam antibiotics, a process that remains a challenge in clinical treatment of infections caused by this organism.

    Note Added in Proof

Knox and colleagues recently determined the x-ray structure for the OXA-1 beta -lactamase (Sun, T., Nukaga, M., Mayama, K., Braswell, E. H., and Knox, J. R. (2003) Protein Sci. 12, 82-91). Comparable with the case of the OXA-10 beta -lactamase and BlaRS, the active site lysine in this enzyme is also carboxylated.

    FOOTNOTES

* This work was supported by Grants GM61629 and AI33170 from the National Institutes of Health.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains supplementary data providing a collection of CD spectra.

Dagger To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 313-577-3924; Fax: 313-577-8822; E-mail: som@chem.wayne.edu.

Published, JBC Papers in Press, February 18, 2003, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M300611200

    ABBREVIATIONS

The abbreviations used are: PBP, penicillin-binding protein; TES, 2-{[2-hydroxy-1,1-bis(hydroxymethyl)ethyl]amino}ethanesulfonic acid.

    REFERENCES
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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