Characterization of a novel ArsR regulates divergent ars operon in Ensifer adhaerens strain ST2.

FEMS Microbiol Lett

Institute of Environmental Remediation and Human Health, College of Ecology and Environment, Southwest Forestry University, Kunming 650224, China.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Microbes can adapt to arsenic toxicity through resistance genes regulated by transcriptional repressors called ArsRs, specifically in the case of the Ensifer adhaerens strain ST2, which shows tolerance to methylarsenite (MAs(III)).
  • The resistance genes arsZ (which encodes an oxidase) and arsK (which encodes an efflux transporter) are controlled by a novel repressing protein, EaArsR, that has specific cysteine pairs crucial for binding and regulating transcription.
  • Mutations in the cysteine pairs affect the binding capabilities of EaArsR to the ars promoter, indicating that the structure and evolution of arsenic binding sites in these repressor proteins are more complex than

Article Abstract

Microbes evolved resistance determinates for coping with arsenic toxicity are commonly regulated by a variety of transcriptional repressors (ArsRs). Ensifer adhaerens strain ST2 was previously shown tolerance to environmental organoarsenical methylarsenite (MAs(III)), which has been proposed to be a primordial antibiotic. In E. adhaerens strain ST2 chromosomal ars operon, two MAs(III) resistance genes, arsZ, encoding MAs(III) oxidase, and arsK, encoding MAs(III) efflux transporter, are controlled by a novel ArsR transcriptional repressor, EaArsR. It has two conserved cysteine pairs, Cys91-92 and Cys108-109. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs) demonstrate that EaArsR binds to two inverted-repeat sequences within the ars promoter between arsR and arsZ to repress ars operon transcription and that DNA binding is relieved upon binding of As(III) and MAs(III). Mutation of either Cys91 or Cys92 to serine (or both) abolished these mutants binding to the ars promoter. In contrast, both C108S and C109S mutants kept responsiveness to As(III) and MAs(III). These results suggest that cysteine pair Cys91-Cys92 and either Cys108 or Cys109 contribute to form arsenic binding site. Homology modeling of EaArsR indicates the binding site consisted of Cys91-Cys92 pair from one monomer and Cys108-Cys109 pair from the other monomer, which displays the diverse evolution of arsenic binding site in the ArsR metalloregulators.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/femsle/fnad113DOI Listing

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