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Structural and biochemical characterization of Chlamydia trachomatis DsbA reveals a cysteine-rich and weakly oxidising oxidoreductase

journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-26, 05:37 authored by S Christensen, MK Groftehauge, K Byriel, WM Huston, E Furlong, Begona HerasBegona Heras, JL Martin, RM McMahon
The Gram negative bacteria Chlamydia trachomatis is an obligate intracellular human pathogen that can cause pelvic inflammatory disease, infertility and blinding trachoma. C. trachomatis encodes a homolog of the dithiol oxidoreductase DsbA. Bacterial DsbA proteins introduce disulfide bonds to folding proteins providing structural bracing for secreted virulence factors, consequently these proteins are potential targets for antimicrobial drugs. Despite sharing functional and structural characteristics, the DsbA enzymes studied to date vary widely in their redox character. In this study we show that the truncated soluble form of the predicted membrane anchored protein C. trachomatis DsbA (CtDsbA) has oxidase activity and redox properties broadly similar to other characterized DsbA proteins. However CtDsbA is distinguished from other DsbAs by having six cysteines, including a second disulfide bond, and an unusual dipeptide sequence in its catalytic motif (Cys-Ser-Ala-Cys). We report the 2.7 Å crystal structure of CtDsbA revealing a typical DsbA fold, which is most similar to that of DsbA-II type proteins. Consistent with this, the catalytic surface of CtDsbA is negatively charged and lacks the hydrophobic groove found in EcDsbA and DsbAs from other enterobacteriaceae. Biochemical characterization of CtDsbA reveals it to be weakly oxidizing compared to other DsbAs and with only a mildly destabilizing active site disulfide bond. Analysis of the crystal structure suggests that this redox character is consistent with a lack of contributing factors to stabilize the active site nucleophilic thiolate relative to more oxidizing DsbA proteins.

Funding

This work was supported by an Australian Research Council (www.arc.gov.au) Australian Laureate Fellowship (FL0992138) to JLM; RMM, MKG, BH and SC were also supported by this award. RMM is also supported by an NHMRC (www.nhmrc.gov.au) Project Grant (1061241) awarded to JLM. SC holds a UQI Tuition Fee Award (www.scholarships.uq.edu.au/). EF is supported by an Australian Postgraduate Award and an Institute for Molecular Bioscience Research Advancement Award.

History

Publication Date

2016-12-28

Journal

PLoS One

Volume

11

Issue

12

Article Number

e0168485

Pagination

22p.

Publisher

PLoS ONE

ISSN

1932-6203

Rights Statement

© 2016 Christensen et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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