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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 277, Issue 43, 40169-40172, October 25, 2002
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,
¶
From the
Department of Biochemistry and
Molecular Biology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon
97239 and § Laboratory of Molecular Medicine, Children's
Hospital/Howard Hughes Medical Institute,
Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Multidrug resistance
(mdr)1 can be defined broadly
as the ability of a cell to survive ordinarily lethal doses of more
than one drug. Clearly, such resistance is a critical problem in the treatment of fungal and bacterial infections and cancer. Four general,
but nonexclusive, mechanisms give rise to multidrug resistance: 1)
detoxification by enzymatic modification or cleavage of drug; 2)
genetic alteration of the intra- or extracellular targets; 3) decreased
permeability of the cell membrane; and 4) active drug extrusion by
multidrug transporters.
Paramount to our understanding of mdr is the issue of
recognition of structurally dissimilar substrates and how drug binding effects function. In bacteria many multidrug transporters are regulated directly (locally) by transcription factors, which also bind
the substrates of these transporters, i.e. the
drug can act as a transcriptional coactivator or inducer.
Multiple mdr transporter genes are also regulated globally
by activators such as MarA that do not necessarily bind drugs (1). The
regulators are of keen interest because they are more amenable to
structural studies than the membrane-bound transporters and thus offer
a greater chance to obtain high resolution views of multidrug binding.
Moreover, the local gene regulators are equally interesting as their
DNA complexes directly reveal the mechanism of mdr
transporter gene regulation. This minireview will summarize the
structures of known bacterial mdr regulators. Because our
focus is more structural the reader is referred to one of several
recent reviews that discuss the more biological aspects of global and
local mdr regulation (2-5).
MarA is a member of the AraC family of transcriptional regulators
(6) and activates over a dozen genes comprising the Escherichia coli mar (multiple antibiotic resistance) regulon (7, 8). MarA does not bind antibiotics as part of its transcription regulation mechanism. This 129-residue protein binds as a monomer to asymmetric 20-bp operators (1), which contrasts to most prokaryotic
transcriptional regulators that are dimers and bind palindromic or
pseudopalindromic DNA (9-11).
The structure of MarA bound to the marA operator
reveals the basis of its DNA binding mechanism (Fig.
1a) (12). The protein consists
of seven
![]()
INTRODUCTION
TOP
INTRODUCTION
MarA/Rob/MarR
BmrR/BRC/MtaN
QacR
Perspective
REFERENCES
![]()
MarA/Rob/MarR
TOP
INTRODUCTION
MarA/Rob/MarR
BmrR/BRC/MtaN
QacR
Perspective
REFERENCES
helices, six of which comprise two three-helix bundles
each containing a helix-turn-helix (HTH) motif. The remaining "linker" helix connects the two HTH motifs, thus creating a monomer with two DNA-reading heads. The independent HTH elements bind adjacent
major grooves, and because the two "recognition helices" have
different amino acid sequences each makes a distinct set of contacts to
the DNA bases, thus explaining the ability of the MarA monomer to bind
asymmetric operator sequences. To gain such specificity otherwise would
require heterodimerization, such as that displayed by the eukaryotic
transcriptional regulators Myc-Max (13, 14), Fos-Jun (15), and AHR-ARNT
(16), or a second DNA binding element, e.g. a wing (17,
18).

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Fig. 1.
The structures of MarA, Rob, and
MarR. a, aligned structures of MarA (blue)
and Rob (red) bound to their respective DNA sites. MarA
bends the DNA toward the protein such that both HTH motifs are inserted
into consecutive major grooves. In contrast, Rob shows one HTH binding
a major groove, while the other sits on the phosphate backbone of the
unbent DNA. b, dimer of MarR. One subunit is colored
from blue (N terminus) to red (C terminus). One
recognition helix is green and located at the bottom of the
monomer in this view. Bound salicylates are shown as ball
and sticks.
To bind a cognate DNA site, MarA must significantly bend the DNA. Bending occurs because the recognition helices of MarA are separated by only 27 Å, and the conformational flexibility of the protein appears to be limited by the linker helix. Thus, to accommodate the shorter distance and bind consecutive major grooves, MarA "pulls" the major grooves toward itself, causing two kinks in the DNA at each HTH binding site and the narrowing of the minor groove. These localized kinks result in a global DNA bend of ~35° (12).
The structure of a second AraC family member, E. coli Rob, has also been solved bound to DNA (19). Rob, like MarA,
can activate the mar operon when overexpressed (20).
However, unlike MarA, Rob contains an additional ~200-residue
C-terminal domain of unknown function but which is structurally similar
to the E. coli galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase (21).
Recent NMR studies on the activation of the rob regulon by
2,2'-dipyridyl have shown that the C-terminal domain of Rob binds this
activator directly and that binding is necessary for up-regulation
(22). As expected, MarA and the N-terminal, DNA binding domain of Rob,
the sequences of which are 51% identical, are structurally similar. An
overlay of all the main chain atoms of their conserved domains results
in an r.m.s. deviation of 0.9 Å (19), yet their modes of DNA binding are quite different (Fig. 1a). Only the N-terminal HTH motif
of Rob is inserted into the major groove. The C-terminal HTH sits on
the surface of the double helix and makes a lone DNA contact from
residue Arg-90 to the phosphate backbone. This binding mode allows Rob
to contact unbent DNA. Interestingly, Rob can also bind bent DNA (23)
but to do so in a MarA-like fashion would require the relocation of a
hairpin (19). Understanding the mechanistic implications of the
plasticity of the DNA binding mode(s) of this subclass of the AraC
family will require additional structures of Rob-DNA and perhaps
MarA-DNA complexes.
Whereas MarA, and perhaps Rob, responds to multidrug intrusion, the
former constitutive activator does not bind drugs. Rather, its gene
expression is negatively regulated by a dimer of MarR (7), a multidrug
binding repressor that acts on the marRAB locus. MarR binds
a variety of anionic lipophilic compounds, such as salicylate, which
inhibit its repression of the marRAB operon (24). The
structure of the 144-residue MarR protein bound to salicylate has been
determined and reveals an
/
protein composed of 6
helices and
3
strands (25). Overall, the dimer appears to have the shape of a
highway safety triangle (Fig. 1b). The dimer interface,
which buries 3,570 Å2 of accessible surface area, is
formed mainly by the N and C termini of the monomers. A winged helix
DNA binding motif is found in the middle of the protein sequence. In
this conformation, MarR cannot bind B-DNA, which would explain the
ability of salicylate to relieve repression. Interestingly, the
structure of MarR was solved with two salicylate molecules bound per
monomer, though EmrR, another family member, appears to bind only one
drug molecule per dimer (26). The "drug" binding pockets are
readily accessible, and both use an arginine to neutralize the negative
charge of the bound salicylate. Although salicylate is known to inhibit MarR (27), it remains unclear if one or both of these binding sites are
biologically significant. A ligand-free structure, as well as those of
MarR bound to DNA and bound to other "drugs," is necessary to
understand fully the action of this repressor.
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BmrR/BRC/MtaN |
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BmrR (Bacterial multidrug
resistance Regulator) is a MerR family member
(28) from Bacillus subtilis that, upon binding one of its
structurally unrelated lipophilic cationic ligands,
activates transcription of the multidrug transporter gene
bmr by reconfiguring the 19-bp spacer between the
10 and
35 promoter elements (29, 30). Many BmrR ligands (coactivators) are
also substrates of the multidrug transporter Bmr. Like most MerR family
members, BmrR contains three domains: an N-terminal DNA binding domain, a linker/dimerization region, and a C-terminal coactivator binding domain. The C termini of MerR family members are quite variable, which
is consistent with their functions to respond to a wide variety of
cellular stresses.
To facilitate structural studies on BmrR, a 159-residue
ligand binding domain, designated BRC (for BmrR
C terminus) was crystallized (31), and the
structures of its drug-free and tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP+) bound forms were determined (32). The
BRC·TPP+ structure unveiled an internal multidrug binding
pocket lined with multiple aromatic amino acids, which participate
in van der Waals and stacking interactions with the four phenyl rings
of the TPP+ ligand. Importantly, the bottom of the pocket
features a glutamate residue, Glu-253, buried in the hydrophobic core
of the protein. Glu-253 makes the key electrostatic interaction with
TPP+, which is enhanced by the low dielectric constant of
the protein interior (33). Interestingly, the binding pocket cannot be
detected in the drug-free structure as residue Glu-253 is buried within the hydrophobic core where its carboxylate group is "neutralized" by hydrogen bonds to the hydroxyl groups of three tyrosine residues. To
allow ligand access to this binding site, a short
-helical shield
undergoes a helix-to-coil transition and moves away from the protein.
The interactions between BRC and TPP+ suggest a similar
binding mode for other hydrophobic cationic ligands of BRC/BmrR, such
as rhodamine 6G (R6G) (32). Clearly, because all BmrR ligands are
lipophilic cations, the electrostatic interaction between positively
charged ligands and the negatively charged glutamate is key to the
cation selectivity of BmrR. Indeed, the replacement of Glu-253 with the
isosteric but electroneutral amino acid glutamine diminishes drug
binding significantly but does not perturb the global structural
integrity of the protein (32).2
The ligand selectivity of BRC depends not only on the presence of the negatively charged glutamate but also on the architecture and chemistry of the binding site. Although the structural flexibility of the binding site is unknown, the hydrophobic side chains likely rotate to accommodate different drugs. Mutational analysis of the BRC residues directly participating in TPP+ binding showed that each mutation affected the binding affinity of a variety of ligands differently (34). This suggests that although drugs bind in the same general location, each forms a distinct set of stacking and van der Waals contacts with the residues in the binding site. The structures of additional BRC-drug complexes should clarify this issue.
The structures of full-length BmrR in complex with DNA and
a drug (35) and of MtaN (multidrug transporter activation, N terminus),
also from B. subtilis, have been solved (36) (Fig. 2). BmrR is the first intact MerR family
member to have its structure determined, and the structure of MtaN, a
constitutive activator of transcription, is the first of a MerR family
member solved in the absence of DNA or coactivator. Drug binding by
BmrR is similar to that of the BRC in that residue Glu-253 is still
involved and aromatic residues line the pocket and stack with
TPP+. However, the BmrR structure also reveals the possible
involvement of residue Asp-47', which is located in the DNA binding
domain of the other subunit, and Glu-266. Site-directed mutagenesis of each of these acidic residues and drug binding studies are needed to
elucidate their contribution to binding. Regardless, Glu-253 appears to
be the electrostatic key to TPP+ binding because the BRC,
which is missing Asp-47', binds this activator only ~5-fold less well
than the full-length BmrR.2
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BmrR and MtaN contain a similar winged helix DNA binding
motif, which is contained within the structurally conserved N-terminal four-helix domain. However, a crucial difference between the two proteins is evident in their dimer conformations. The major groove binding helices (the "recognition" helices) are separated by 33.3 Å in the MtaN structure but only 30.6 Å in the DNA- and
coactivator-bound form of BmrR, reflecting the shortening of the
effective length of the consecutive major grooves of BmrR-bound
bmr promoter. In addition, there is a 15° twist of the
dimer partners, which is mediated through the antiparallel coiled-coil
dimerization interface (36). This twist causes a 7.5 Å offset in the
relative positions of the major groove binding helices. These
differences suggest a mechanism of DNA activation by MerR family
members in which DNA and coactivator binding cause a shift in the dimer
conformation of the protein that leads to disruption of a centrally
located Watson-Crick base pair and shortening and undertwisting of the DNA (28, 35, 37, 38). The BmrR-bound DNA structure reveals that the
35 and
10 promoter elements are reconfigured to mimic their spatial
locations in canonical B-form DNA when separated by the typical 17- or
18-bp spacer. This latter conformation must be taken to allow the
productive binding of RNA polymerase and open complex formation. The
structure of BmrR bound to the bmr promoter in the absence
of a coactivator is needed to elucidate the full transcription
activation mechanism of BmrR. Moreover, whether similar DNA distortion
mechanisms are utilized by other MerR family members to activate
transcription awaits the structure of an MtaN-mta promoter
complex as well as others.
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QacR |
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The Staphylococcus aureus protein QacR is a TetR/CamR family member (39) that represses the qacA multidrug transporter gene. These plasmid-encoded proteins were named for their ability to confer resistance to quaternary ammonium compounds (QACs), and recognized compounds include monovalent and bivalent cationic lipophilic antiseptics, antibiotics, and disinfectants (40). Like BmrR, QacR utilizes many of the transporter substrates (40) in its control of qacA expression. However, QacR is induced by these compounds rather than activated. QacR binds a 28-bp pseudopalindromic site (IR1) to repress the transcription of the qacA mdr gene (40). This length is nearly twice that of other well characterized DNA binding sites of TetR/CamR family members. Biochemical and biophysical studies indicated that a tetramer, rather than a dimer, binds the IR1 site in a cooperative fashion, i.e. a pair of dimers is assembled on the DNA, as there is no evidence for QacR tetramers in the absence of DNA, even at very high concentrations of protein (41).
The unusual mechanism of QacR DNA binding is revealed by the crystal
structure of a QacR-IR1 complex (42). QacR is an all helical protein,
which contains a TetR-like HTH DNA binding motif embedded within the
first three helices (43). Helices
4-
9 comprise the drug binding
and dimerization domains. Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of
QacR-IR1 binding is that a tetramer does indeed bind as a pair of
dimers but without the dimers contacting each other (Fig.
3a). Rather, cooperativity is
effected by the DNA, the structure of which differs
significantly from canonical B-DNA. The IR1 site is underwound (32.1°
twist per bp and 11.2 bp per turn) and displays a widened major groove.
These features are necessary to allow the QacR recognition helices of
each dimer, which display a center-to-center distance of 37 Å, to bind
consecutive major grooves. Thus, binding of the first QacR dimer and
remodeling of the IR1 site allows the facile binding of the second
dimer.
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The crystal structures of QacR bound to six different drugs
reveal its multidrug binding and drug induction mechanisms (44). The
most striking finding is the presence of multiple but overlapping drug
binding sites, which is consistent with data on multidrug transporters
(4, 45). The elongated binding site, made from all C-terminal helices
but
9, has dimensions of 10 × 9 × 23 Å and essentially
contains two connected pockets. The R6G and the Et (ethidium) pockets
of the site were named for the drugs which bind in them (Fig.
3c). The monovalent compounds crystal violet and malachite
green bind in the R6G-Et overlap regions of the pockets, whereas
berberine is located in the R6G pocket. The long, bivalent drug
dequalinium spans the site and fills both the R6G and Et pockets.
Containing an elongated, multifaceted drug binding site, QacR displays
a now obvious yet elegant mechanism for multiple drug recognition.
Interestingly, QacR binds only one drug molecule per homodimer, unlike
TetR, which binds two tetracycline molecules per dimer (44).
The QacR and BmrR drug binding sites contain a number of similar features. Both are lined by aromatic residues, which are found to stack against the ring structures of bound drugs. Moreover each protein uses buried or partially buried carboxylates to recognize their cationic ligands. In BmrR, Glu-253 appears to be key for the recognition of cationic drugs. By contrast, QacR contains four partially buried glutamates (residues 57, 58, 90, and 120) that line the extended drug binding pocket. In the binding of each cationic drug, the positive charge is neutralized by one or more of these glutamates. The QacR drug binding site also has several polar residues and solvent molecules, which interact with the hydrogen bond donors and acceptors of each drug, likely in a "nondiscriminatory" manner as each can act as a donor or acceptor.
QacR is induced by each drug, mono- or bivalent, by an
identical mechanism. Upon binding drug, helix
5 of the drug-bound subunit undergoes a coil-to-helix transition and expels residues Tyr-92
and Tyr-93 from the hydrophobic core of the protein. This coil-to-helix
transition extends the
5 helix by a turn, which now impinges upon
helix
6 moving the latter helix toward the DNA binding domain. To
maintain contacts between
6 and
1, the DNA binding domain
translates by 9.1 Å and rotates by 36.7° (Fig. 3b). The
change in one subunit is transmitted to the other (non-drug-bound) subunit through interactions between the
6 helices. However, the
change in the position of the DNA binding domain of the drug-free monomer is smaller (3.9-Å translation and 18.3° rotation). The end
result of these drug binding-induced changes is an increased distance
between the recognition helices from 37 to 48 Å, thus eliminating
specific DNA binding.
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Perspective |
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We are now at the initial stages of elucidating the structural
underpinnings of multidrug recognition and how these toxic molecules
can regulate bacterial gene expression. Clearly many major questions
remain. For instance, are multidrug binding pockets limited in their
design or have multiple scaffolds arisen? The QacR and BmrR drug
binding pockets share similarities such as the interaction of one or
more acidic residues with their cationic ligands. In an analogous
manner MarR uses an arginine to contact one of its anionic ligands.
QacR and BmrR have multiple aromatic side chains stacking interactions
with their ligands but MarR does not. The multidrug binding sites of
QacR and BmrR are solvent-inaccessible and require a conformational
change for drug access. By contrast, both salicylate binding pockets of
MarR are solvent-exposed. Thus, the answer is still unclear. However,
the coordinates of MexR, a MarR family member, have been deposited in
the Protein Data Bank (46), and its structure should shed some light on
the multidrug binding mechanism of this family. Can bacterial
mdr gene regulators, like their transporter counterparts,
bind more than one drug simultaneously? The structure of the
QacR-dequalinium complex and the 1,100 Å3 volume of the
multidrug binding pocket of QacR suggest such binding is possible. A
similarly large volume is calculated for the drug binding pocket of
PXR, the human nuclear xenobiotic response regulator (47). Formal proof
will require the structure of a protein-two drug complex. Is there a
structural relationship between the drug binding pockets of the
cytosolic mdr gene regulators and membrane-bound transporters? Although not an mdr transporter per
se, a 4.5-Å resolution crystal structure of E. coli
MsbA, an ABC transporter, has been reported (48). The structure of this
flippase reveals a large positively charged central cavity, which is
the likely ligand binding pocket. Unfortunately, the particulars of the
ligand binding site(s) cannot be described at this resolution, and
hence the comparison of the drug binding pockets of the cytosolic
mdr gene regulators and membrane-bound transporters awaits
higher resolution structural studies on the latter class of proteins. Of note, the coordinates of AcrB, which is a member of the RND family
of multidrug transporters, have been deposited in the Protein Data
Bank. The description of its structure is eagerly awaited. Over the
next few years the structures of other drug-bound mdr regulators as well as additional studies on BmrR, MarR, and QacR should
address these questions, provide new insight into multidrug binding,
and as importantly delineate novel mechanisms of mdr gene regulation.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This minireview will be reprinted in the 2002 Minireview Compendium, which will be available in December, 2002. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant AI48593 (to R. G. B.) and Training Grant GM08617-05 (to M. H. G.) and by grants from the National Science Foundation and the N. L. Tartar Trust.
¶ To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, L224, Oregon Health & Science University, 3181 S.W. Sam Jackson Park Rd., Portland, OR 97239-3098. Tel.: 503-494-4427; Fax: 503-494-8393; E-mail: brennanr@ohsu.edu.
Published, JBC Papers in Press, August 22, 2002, DOI 10.1074/jbc.R200018200
2 J. L. Huffman, M. C. Miller, and R. G. Brennan, unpublished data.
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ABBREVIATIONS |
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The abbreviations used are: mdr, multidrug resistance; TPP+, tetraphenylphosphonium; BRC, BmrR C terminus; HTH, helix-turn-helix; r.m.s., root mean square; R6G, rhodamine 6G.
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