BB-rel@ldeleger:BB-rel-19126546 JSONTXT

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Id Subject Object Predicate Lexical cue
T1 0-132 Title denotes Structural and functional analysis of the C-terminal DNA binding domain of the Salmonella typhimurium SPI-2 response regulator SsrB.
T3 79-101 Microorganism denotes Salmonella typhimurium
T2 133-2112 Paragraph denotes In bacterial pathogenesis, virulence gene regulation is controlled by two-component regulatory systems. In Escherichia coli, the EnvZ/OmpR two-component system is best understood as regulating expression of outer membrane proteins, but in Salmonella enterica, OmpR activates transcription of the SsrA/B two-component system located on Salmonella pathogenicity island 2 (SPI-2). The response regulator SsrB controls expression of a type III secretory system in which effectors modify the vacuolar membrane and prevent its degradation via the endocytic pathway. Vacuolar modification enables Salmonella to survive and replicate in the macrophage phagosome and disseminate to the liver and spleen to cause systemic infection. The signals that activate EnvZ and SsrA are unknown but are related to the acidic pH encountered in the vacuole. Our previous work established that SsrB binds to regions of DNA that are AT-rich, with poor sequence conservation. Although SsrB is a major virulence regulator in Salmonella, very little is known regarding how it binds DNA and activates transcription. In the present work, we solved the structure of the C-terminal DNA binding domain of SsrB (SsrB(C)) by NMR and analyzed the effect of amino acid substitutions on function. We identified residues in the DNA recognition helix (Lys(179), Met(186)) and the dimerization interface (Val(197), Leu(201)) that are important for SsrB transcriptional activation and DNA binding. An essential cysteine residue in the N-terminal receiver domain was also identified (Cys(45)), and the effect of Cys(203) on dimerization was evaluated. Our results suggest that although disulfide bond formation is not required for dimerization, dimerization occurs upon DNA binding and is required for subsequent activation of transcription. Disruption of the dimer interface by a C203E substitution reduces SsrB activity. Modification of Cys(203) or Cys(45) may be an important mode of SsrB inactivation inside the host.
T4 136-158 Phenotype denotes bacterial pathogenesis
T5 160-169 Phenotype denotes virulence
T6 240-256 Microorganism denotes Escherichia coli
T7 372-391 Microorganism denotes Salmonella enterica
T8 468-478 Microorganism denotes Salmonella
T9 479-492 Phenotype denotes pathogenicity
T10 564-582 Phenotype denotes type III secretory
T11 723-733 Microorganism denotes Salmonella
T12 766-776 Habitat denotes macrophage
T13 810-815 Habitat denotes liver
T14 820-826 Habitat denotes spleen
T15 1109-1118 Phenotype denotes virulence
T16 1132-1142 Microorganism denotes Salmonella