Ishikawa T, Mizunoe Y, Kawabata S, Takade A, Harada M, Wai SN
The iron-binding protein Dps confers hydrogen peroxide stress resistance to Campylobacter jejuni.
J. Bacteriol. 185:1010-1017
Abstract:
We identified and characterized the iron-binding protein Dps from
Campylobacter jejuni. Electron microscopic analysis of this protein
revealed a spherical structure of 8.5 nm in diameter, with an
electron-dense core similar to those of other proteins of the Dps
(DNA-binding protein from starved cells) family. Cloning and sequencing
of the Dps-encoding gene (dps) revealed that a 450-bp open reading
frame (ORF) encoded a protein of 150 amino acids with a calculated
molecular mass of 17,332 Da. Amino acid sequence comparison indicated a
high similarity between C. jejuni Dps and other Dps family proteins. In
C. jejuni Dps, there are iron-binding motifs, as reported in other Dps
family proteins. C. jejuni Dps bound up to 40 atoms of iron per
monomer, whereas it did not appear to bind DNA. An isogenic
dps-deficient mutant was more vulnerable to hydrogen peroxide than its
parental strain, as judged by growth inhibition tests. The iron
chelator Desferal restored the resistance of the Dps-deficient mutant
to hydrogen peroxide, suggesting that this iron-binding protein
prevented generation of hydroxyl radicals via the Fenton reaction. Dps
was constitutively expressed during both exponential and stationary
phase, and no induction was observed when the cells were exposed to
H(2)O(2) or grown under iron-supplemented or iron-restricted
conditions. On the basis of these data, we propose that this
iron-binding protein in C. jejuni plays an important role in protection
against hydrogen peroxide stress by sequestering intracellular free
iron and is expressed constitutively to cope with the harmful effect of
hydrogen peroxide stress on this microaerophilic organism without delay.
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The iron-binding protein Dps confers hydrogen peroxide stress resistance to
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