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Originally published In Press as doi:10.1074/jbc.M601832200 on May 22, 2006

J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 281, Issue 30, 20761-20771, July 28, 2006
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The Mechanism of Direct Heme Transfer from the Streptococcal Cell Surface Protein Shp to HtsA of the HtsABC Transporter*Formula

Tyler K. Nygaard{ddagger}, George C. Blouin§, Mengyao Liu{ddagger}, Maki Fukumura{ddagger}, John S. Olson§, Marian Fabian§, David M. Dooley, and Benfang Lei{ddagger}1

From the Departments of {ddagger}Veterinary Molecular Biology and Chemistry and Biochemistry, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana 59718 and the §Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology and the W. M. Keck Center for Computational Biology, Rice University, Houston, Texas 77005

Received for publication, February 27, 2006 , and in revised form, April 27, 2006.


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
The heme-binding proteins Shp and HtsA are part of the heme acquisition machinery found in Streptococcus pyogenes. The hexacoordinate heme (Fe(II)-protoporphyrin IX) or hemochrome form of holoShp (hemoShp) is stable in air in Tris-HCl buffer, pH 8.0, binds to apoHtsA with a Kd of 120 ± 18 µM, and transfers its heme to apoHtsA with a rate constant of 28 ± 6s–1 at 25 °C, pH 8.0. The hemoHtsA product then autoxidizes to the hexacoordinate hemin (Fe(III)-protoporphyrin IX) or hemichrome form (hemiHtsA) with an apparent rate constant of 0.017 ± 0.002 s–1. HemiShp also rapidly transfers hemin to apoHtsA through a hemiShp·apoHtsA complex (Kd = 48 ± 7 µM) at a rate ~40,000 times greater than the rate of simple hemin dissociation from hemiShp into solvent (ktransfer = 43 ± 3s–1 versus k–hemin = 0.0003 ± 0.00006 s–1). The rate constants for hemin binding to and dissociation from HtsA (k'hemin {approx} 80 µM–1 s–1, k–hemin = 0.0026 ± 0.0002 s–1) are 50- and 10-fold greater than the corresponding rate constants for Shp (khemin {approx} 1.6 µM–1 s–1, k–hemin = 0.0003 s–1), which implies that HtsA has a more accessible active site. However, the affinity of apoHtsA for hemin (khemin {approx} 31,000 µM–1) is roughly 5-fold greater than that of apoShp (khemin {approx} 5,300 µM–1), accounting for the net transfer from Shp to HstA. These results support a direct, rapid, and affinity-driven mechanism of heme and hemin transfer from the cell surface receptor Shp to the ATP-binding cassette transporter system.


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Heme is a major source of iron for bacterial pathogens (13). Gram-negative bacteria contain outer membrane proteins that can sequester heme directly (4) or indirectly through hemophores (5) from host hemoproteins. The captured heme is brought into the periplasmic space in a TonB-dependent process (6) and then transported across the cytoplasmic membrane by heme-specific ATP-binding cassette (ABC)2 transporters (7). Similar ABC transporters (3, 810) and cell surface proteins (11, 12) are required for heme acquisition in Gram-positive pathogens. The lipoprotein components of these ABC transporters and some of the cell surface proteins involved in heme acquisition in Gram-positive bacteria have been shown to bind heme (1012). However, the molecular mechanisms by which the cell surface proteins pass the captured heme to the ABC transporter are incompletely understood.

Streptococcus pyogenes is a Gram-positive bacterium that causes a variety of human diseases (13). This organism is capable of utilizing heme derived from human hemoproteins as a source of iron (14, 15). It expresses two heme-binding proteins, HtsA (10) and Shp (11). HtsA is the lipoprotein component of the heme-specific ABC transporter called HtsABC, whereas Shp is a cell surface protein. The genes encoding Shp and HtsABC are present at the same locus as an operon in the S. pyogenes chromosome (11).

We have chosen Shp and HtsA as a model system to investigate how heme (Fe(II)-protoporphyrin IX) is transferred from a cell surface protein to a heme-specific ABC transporter in Gram-positive bacteria. In this system, heme-free Shp (apoShp) scavenges hemin (Fe(III)-protoporphyrin IX) that has dissociated from methemoglobin. Then holoShp rapidly transfers the iron porphyrin to apoHtsA (16). In this report, the mechanisms of both heme and hemin transfer from holoShp to apoHtsA were examined by measuring the kinetics of these processes and by characterizing each of the observed intermediates. The results reveal the rapid formation of a holoShp-apoHtsA complex and subsequent rapid internal heme or hemin transfer, which is driven by the higher affinity of HtsA for both heme and hemin.


    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Proteins—Recombinant Shp was expressed in Escherichia coli harboring pSHP and purified by the method of Lei et al. (10) with modifications. After DEAE chromatography, the partially purified Shp was dialyzed against 3 liters of 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, loaded onto an SP-Sepharose column (1.5 x 6 cm), washed with 100 ml of Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, and eluted with a 100-ml linear gradient of 0–0.25 M NaCl in Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, yielding holoShp in the reduced form with a purity of >95%, as assessed by SDS-PAGE. Since isolated holoShp contains a tightly bound hexacoordinate Fe(II)-protoporphyrin IX, which is called a hemochrome in the globin literature or a b-type heme in the cytochrome literature. Thus, this form of the protein is designated hemoShp. Alternatively, Shp from the DEAE column was dialyzed against 3 liters of 10 mM sodium acetate buffer, pH 5.5, loaded onto an SP column (2.5 x 3 cm), washed with 100 ml of acetate buffer, eluted with a 100-ml linear gradient of 0–0.3 M NaCl in acetate buffer, yielding a tightly bound hexacoordinate Fe(III)-protoporphyrin IX or hemichrome form of Shp (hemiShp) with a purity of >95%.

HemiShp was also prepared by oxidizing hemoShp with excess ferricyanide and removing any excess ferricyanide by gel filtration on a Sephadex G-25 column (1.5 x 30 cm). As a control, hemoShp was also prepared from hemiShp by reduction with sodium dithionite and subsequent removal of excess dithionite and its products on a Sephadex G-25 column (1.5 x 30 cm). HemiShp or hemoShp samples prepared by these different methods have indistinguishable optical spectra and kinetics of hemin or heme transfer to apoHtsA. ApoShp was prepared as described previously (16). All proteins were stored in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, at –20 °C prior to experiments.

Recombinant HtsA was isolated from E. coli harboring pLP1795 (10) as a mixture of apoprotein (apoHtsA) and a small amount of hemin-containing holoprotein (10). ApoHtsA was isolated and reconstituted with bovine hemin chloride (Sigma) as previously described (16). Briefly, apoHtsA was incubated with hemin at a 1:2 HtsA/hemin molar ratio for 15 min at room temperature. To remove excess hemin, the sample was loaded onto a Sephadex G-25 column (1.5 x 20 cm), and holoHtsA was eluted with 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0. The reduced and oxidized forms of HtsA exhibit UV-visible spectra characteristic of hexacoordinate hemochrome and hemichrome complexes and are designated hemoHtsA and hemiHtsA, respectively.

Autoxidation of HtsA—HemiHtsA (500 µl of 7 µM) was reduced to hemoHtsA with ~2 mg of dithionite, and excess dithionite and its oxidation products were removed by a semidry G-25 spin column. To prepare the semidry column, a G-25 column (1.5 x 10 cm) was equilibrated with 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, and centrifuged in a swinging rotor at 300 x g for 15 s. The reduced hemoHtsA sample was then loaded onto the semidry column, and the column was spun at 300 x g for 15 s to obtain dithionite-free HtsA. The reduced sample was then immediately placed in a cuvette, and autoxidation of hemoHtsA was monitored by measuring the change in absorbance at 424 nm at room temperature.

EPR Measurement—EPR spectra of hemoShp, hemiShp, and hemiHtsA were recorded with a Varian E-6 spectrometer. The conditions for EPR measurements were as follows: frequency, 9.27 GHz; power, 3 milliwatts; modulation amplitude, 10 G; the modulation frequency, 100 kHz; and temperature, 4.2 K. The high spin signal at g = 6 was quantified by double integration between 800 and 1,700 G and comparison with the signal of a high spin sperm whale metmyoglobin at pH 7 (Mb(Fe(III)·H2O)). Quantification of the low spin signals was based on comparison of the area of the g = 3 absorption-like signal with the analogous low spin signal of metmyglobin at pH 9.5 (Mb(Fe(III)OH) at known concentration. To assess the oxidation states of the proteins during the heme transfer reaction, ~300 µM hemoShp was reacted with 370 µM apoHtsA, frozen at ~30 s after mixing by quick immersion in a methanol/dry ice bath at –58 °C, and stored in liquid nitrogen. The EPR spectrum of the sample was recorded as described above. The sample was then warmed to room temperature, incubated for 30 min, and refrozen, and the final EPR spectrum was recorded. A similar experiment was carried out starting with ~300 µM hemiShp and ~370 µM apoHtsA.

Kinetic Experiments—A stopped-flow spectrophotometer (SX18.MV; Applied Photophysics) was used at Montana State University to measure the rate of heme transfer from hemoShp to apoHtsA, the rate of hemin transfer from hemiShp to apoHtsA, and the binding of hemin to apoShp or apoHtsA under pseudo-first-order conditions. In the heme/hemin transfer measurements, one syringe contained 4 µM holoprotein, and the other contained apoprotein at ≥20 µM in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0. In the hemin binding measurements, initial concentrations of hemin and apoprotein were 2 µM and ≥10 µM, respectively. Changes in absorbance were measured at wavelengths appropriate for each reaction, as indicated under "Results." Each time course represents the average of 10 consecutive traces for each condition and was analyzed by fitting the observed data to a single exponential expression using Applied Photophysics software to obtain pseudo-first-order rate constants. The dependence of these rate constants on apoprotein concentration was analyzed using the reaction models presented in Schemes I and II to obtain the specific rate parameters described in Equations 1 and 4. Entire spectra were also recorded during hemin and heme transfer using an OLIS RSM 1000 stopped-flow spectrophotometer at Rice University, and the observed time courses were similar to those obtained in the Applied Photophysics apparatus at a single wavelength.

Heme Transfer in the Absence of Oxygen—HemoShp (3.6 µM) was mixed with an equal volume of 15 µM apoHtsA anaerobically in the presence of excess dithionite in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0. The spectrum of the mixture was recorded ~5 s after mixing using A SPECTRAmax 384 Plus spectrophotometer (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA). The time course of this anerobic reaction was monitored at 424 nm using the Applied Photophysics stopped-flow apparatus.

Rates of Hemin Dissociation from HemiShp and HemiHtsA—The rates of hemin dissociation from hemiShp and hemiHtsA were measured using H64Y/V68F apomyoglobin as a hemin scavenger according to the method of Hargrove et al. (17). The apomyoglobin was prepared using the methyl ethyl ketone method (18). HemiShp or hemiHtsA (5 µM) was incubated with 50 µM apomyoglobin in 1 ml of 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, and the change in absorbance at 602 nm was monitored for up to 50 min. The {Delta}A602 time courses were fit to a single exponential equation to obtain the first-order rate constant.

Other Assays and Measurements—HtsA and Shp protein concentrations were measured using a modified Lowry protein assay kit (Pierce), with bovine serum albumin as a standard, according to the manufacturer's instructions. Heme or hemin content of Shp and HtsA was determined using a pyridine hemochrome assay (19). Each protein, diluted in 750 µl of 20 mM Tris-HCl was combined with 175 µl of pyridine, 75 µl of 1 N NaOH, and ~2 mg of sodium hydrosulfite. Absorbance at 418 nm was measured immediately after mixing, and the extinction coefficient, {epsilon}418 = 191.5 mM–1 cm–1, was used to determine heme/hemin concentrations. A SPECTRAmax 384 Plus spectrophotometer was used for absorption measurements, unless otherwise specified.


    RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Oxidation States of HtsA and Shp—The absorption and EPR spectra of holoShp are shown in Fig. 1. Shp expressed and purified from E. coli using DEAE and SP-Sepharose columns at pH 8.0 has a strong Soret absorption peak at 428 nm and two additional peaks at 528 and 560 nm (solid curve in Fig. 1A). This spectrum is only seen for reduced b-type cytochromes but not for their oxidized forms (20, 21), indicating that holoShp purified at pH 8.0 is in a hemochrome form. Oxidation of hemoShp was readily achieved by the addition of ferricyanide at pH 8.0 and, after removal of excess ferricyanide, can be seen as a shift of the Soret peak from 428 to 420 nm and replacement of the distinct 528- and 560-nm peaks with a broad band at 530 nm and a weaker one at 570 nm (dotted curve in Fig. 1B).

The spectral properties of hemiShp prepared by ferricyanide treatment are almost identical to those of hemiShp purified at pH 5.5 (Fig. 1B). The addition of dithionite to either of the hemiShp samples instantly results in the hemochrome visible spectrum (Fig. 1A). Shp remains in the hemochrome form in air-saturated Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, after removal of excess dithionite (Fig. 1A), consistent with the observation that purified hemoShp is stable in Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, for weeks in the cold. These results indicate that hemoShp is not sensitive to autoxidation at pH 8.0 but that the conversions between the two oxidation states can be readily achieved by dithionite and ferricyanide.

EPR measurements confirmed the oxidation states of holoShp and their transition. Purified hemoShp (Fig. 1C) and dithionite-derived hemoShp lack any significant EPR signal, whereas ferricyanide-treated holoShp displays strong EPR signals at 4.2 K, which suggest three different populations of the hemin Fe(III) (Fig. 1C), all of which are spectrally distinct from the EPR signal of ferricyanide. These results confirm unambiguously that, when purified at high pH, hemoShp is present initially in a stable reduced state and oxidized readily by ferricyanide.

Approximately 2% of Fe(III) in hemiShp is in a high spin state, characterized by an axial field with g{perp} = 5.58 and g|| = 2.00. The dominant population (~80%) exhibits a low spin signal with the rhombic symmetry. However, only gz = 3.09 could be accurately determined for this component, because the other two transitions (gy and gx) are obscured by overlap with absorption from a third iron species. The third Fe(III) component (15–20%) is also low spin but exhibits more axial symmetry and is characterized by a g{perp} = 2.1 transition. Although complex, the EPR spectrum for oxidized holoShp clearly supports the view that bound hemin is coordinated by pairs of two strong axial ligands.


Figure 1
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FIGURE 1.
Optical absorption and EPR spectra of holoShp. A, optical absorption spectra of 3 µM hemoShp purified using DEAE and SP-Sepharose columns at pH 8.0 (solid curve), dithionite-free hemoShp reduced with dithionite (dotted curve), and hemiShp isolated at pH 5.5 (dashed curve). B, optical absorption spectra of 4.7 µM isolated hemiShp (solid curve), hemiShp oxidized with ferricyanide (dotted curve), and isolated hemoShp (dashed curve). C, EPR spectra of 300 µM hemoShp (solid curve), hemiShp from the oxidation of hemoShp with ferricyanide (dotted curve), and ferricyanide (dashed curve). The horizontal arrows in C indicate the y-axis scales. All of the spectra were recorded in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0.

 
The spectrum of hemiHtsA shows an intense Soret band at 412 nm and strong and weak absorption bands at 530 and 570 nm, respectively (Fig. 2A), which are similar to those of hemiShp, model hemichrome compounds, and oxidized b-type cytochromes. Reduction of hemiHtsA with excess dithionite generates a spectrum with peaks at 424, 528, and 558 nm (Fig. 2A), which are characteristic of a hemochrome or a reduced b-type cytochrome. However, gel filtration of the hemoHtsA/ dithionite mixture results in only hemiHtsA (Fig. 2A), indicating that hemoHtsA is unstable and autoxidizes rapidly in air.


Figure 2
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FIGURE 2.
Optical absorption and EPR spectra of holoHtsA. A, optical absorption spectra of 5.2 µM hemiHtsA (solid curve), hemoHtsA from reduction in the presence of excess dithionite (dashed curve), and holoHtsA from the hemoHtsA/dithionite mixture after removal of dithionite on a G-25 column (dotted curve). B, comparison of EPR spectra of 300 µM hemiHtsA (solid curve) and low spin standard Mb(Fe(III)·OH) (dotted curve). The horizontal arrows in C indicate the y-axis scales. All of the spectra were recorded in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0.

 
The EPR spectrum of hemiHtsA is shown in Fig. 2B. There appear to be two forms of oxidized hemin iron. Approximately 10% of the ferric iron is in a high spin state with g{perp} = 5.73 and g|| = 2.00, and about 90% of the iron is in a low spin state with g factors equal to 2.94, 2.29, and 2.02. Although the derivative signal near g {approx} 6 appears large (Fig. 2B), its integrated intensity is quite small (10%) compared with a high spin Mb(Fe(III)·H2O) control at an equivalent total iron concentration. In contrast, the integrated intensity of the low spin signal is about 90% of that of our low spin Mb(Fe(III)·OH) control at the same total iron concentration (Fig. 2B). The g values of the low spin signal for hemiHtsA can be used to define the putative axial coordination of the iron. Using the method of Blumberg and Peisach (22), we calculated an axial field of 2.87 and a rhombicity of 0.73 for hemiHtsA. These two parameters define a point in the "truth diagram" (23), and the point fell in the region occupied by b-type cytochromes and hexacoordinate hemoglobins with two axial N ligands, which are normally but not always bis-His complexes. Unfortunately, in the case of ferric holoShp, only one of the three g values could be identified from its EPR spectrum, and thus, we cannot identify the axial ligands in holoShp without structural studies.

Heme Transfer from Shp to HtsA—When hemoShp is mixed with apoHtsA, there is a rapid shift in the Soret peak from 428 to 424 nm with little change in the visible wavelength region from 500 to 600 nm (Fig. 3A), suggesting the transfer of heme to apoHtsA without any oxidation of the iron atom. The half-time of this heme transfer reaction is on the order of 20–200 ms and depends on [apoHtsA]. This rapid spectral change is followed by a slower process, which involves a further blue shift in the Soret peak from 424 to 414 nm and marked decreases in the 530- and 560-nm peaks, suggesting autoxidation of hemoHtsA (Fig. 3B). To verify this interpretation, hemoShp was mixed with apoHtsA at ~300 µM total heme in an EPR tube and frozen 30 s after mixing. The EPR spectrum of this mixture showed only a small amount of oxidation, indicating that most of the iron atoms were still reduced (Fig. 3C). More importantly, the weak low spin signal is similar to that of hemiHtsA but not that of hemiShp. When the Shp/HtsA reaction mixture was thawed, allowed to stand at room temperature for 30 min, and then refrozen, the strong, primarily lowspin signal of hemiHtsA was observed (Fig. 3C). Both the g {approx} 2 and 5.9 signals were much higher at 30 min than at 30 s, indicating that the slow absorbance changes shown in Fig. 3B correlate with the appearance of the oxidized hemiHtsA EPR signal. These results demonstrate that autoxidation of hemoHtsA is occurring after the hemochrome is transferred from hemoShp to apoHtsA.


Figure 3
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FIGURE 3.
Spectral changes during heme transfer from hemoShp to apoHtsA. The optical absorption spectra at the initial fast step (A) and the following slow step (B) were taken using a stopped-flow spectrophotometer after mixing 10 µM hemoShp and 40 µM apoHtsA in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0. Times when the spectra were taken were as follows. A, 0 (the instrument dead time), 0.5, 1.49, 1.99, and 4.97 s; B, 4.97, 14.9, 28.8, 58.6, 88.4, 118.2, and 148.0 s. The first spectrum in each panel is the dotted line, and the arrows indicate the directions of the spectral changes with time. The absorbance in the region of 500–600 nm is 5 times the actual value. C, EPR spectra of a mixture of 300 µM hemoShp and 370 µM apoHtsA in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 30 s (solid curve) and 30 min (dashed curve) after mixing. The spectrum (dotted curve) of hemoShp at 300 µM was included as a control. The horizontal arrows in C indicate the y-axis scales.

 


Figure 4
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FIGURE 4.
Heme transfer from hemoShp to apoHtsA under anaerobic conditions. A, the spectra of 1.8 µM hemoShp, 2 µM hemoHtsA, and 1.8 µM hemoShp plus 7.5 µM apoHtsA all in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, with excess dithionite. The spectrum of the hemoShp/apoHtsA mixture was recorded 5 s after mixing equal volumes of 3.6 µM hemoShp and 15 µM apoHtsA in the presence of excess dithionite. The hemoHtsA spectrum was normalized to that of the spectrum of the Shp/HtsA mixture according to absorbance at 424 nm. B, a stopped-flow trace of {Delta}A420 in heme transfer reaction after mixing 4 µM hemoShp/excess dithionite and 30 µM apoHtsA/excess dithionite at 25 °C in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0.

 
Thus, hemoHtsA appears to be formed within seconds after mixing hemoShp and apoHtsA. To test this idea, hemoShp was mixed anaerobically with apoHtsA in the presence of excess dithionite to prevent autoxidation. The spectrum of this mixture was recorded 5 s after mixing using a conventional spectrometer and is almost identical to that of hemoHtsA obtained by reducing hemiHtsA but is significantly different from that of hemoShp (Fig. 4A). The time course for hemoHtsA formation was monitored under similar conditions by measuring the change in absorbance at 420 nm using a stopped-flow spectrophotometer. The transfer reaction is complete within 5 s, and no further changes occur (Fig. 4B). The absorbance change corresponds to the rapid spectral shift shown in Fig. 3A, and the slow blue shift shown in Fig. 3B is not observed in the absence of oxygen. These results firmly establish that the rapid and slow phases of spectral changes seen when mixing hemoShp with apoHtsA are the rapid formation and subsequent slow autoxidation of hemoHtsA, respectively.


Figure 5
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FIGURE 5.
Spectral changes during hemin transfer from hemiShp to apoHtsA. A, change with time in the Soret peak of a hemiShp/apoHtsA mixture. The spectra were taken using a stopped-flow spectrophotometer after mixing 6 µM Shp and 24 µM apoHtsA in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0. Times when the spectra were taken were 0, 0.50, 1.49, and 88.4 s. B, EPR spectra of a mixture of 300 µM hemiShp and 370 µM apoHtsA in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 30 s (solid curve) and 30 min (dotted gray curve) after mixing. The spectrum (dashed curve) of hemiShp at 300 µM was included as a control. The horizontal arrows in C indicate the y-axis scales.

 
When hemiShp is reacted with apoHtsA, only a small rapid shift in the Soret peak from 420 to 412 nm is observed (Fig. 5A). To prove that these spectral changes represent hemin transfer, an EPR sample was prepared by mixing hemiShp with apoHtsA, freezing the sample 30 s after mixing, recording its EPR spectrum at 4 K, thawing, refreezing 30 min later, and recording a final EPR spectrum. In this case, the EPR spectra recorded 30 s and 30 min after mixing were similar to those of hemiHtsA but not those of hemiShp (Fig. 5B). Thus, the reaction of hemiShp with apoHtsA involves one spectral transition, representing the transfer of hemin without any changes in redox state and suggesting that Shp and HtsA have different ligand(s) at one or both axial positions.

Kinetics of Heme Transfer from HoloShp to ApoHtsA—A minimal model for the heme transfer from hemoShp to apoHtsA is given in Scheme I and based on the optical absorption and EPR results shown so far. In the model, hemoShp forms a complex with apoHtsA, and heme is then directly transferred to apoHtsA to yield apoShp and hemoHtsA, which subsequently autoxidizes to hemiHtsA. In this scheme, dissociation of the apoShp-hemoHtsA complex is undetectable by spectral measurements and is assumed to be too rapid to affect the slow autoxidation of hemoHtsA.

Formula 1SCHEME I

Time courses for heme and hemin transfer were measured at single wavelengths, 420 and 414 nm, respectively, in a stopped-flow spectrophotometer by mixing holoShp with varying concentrations of apoHtsA. In the case of the transfer from hemoShp, the absorbance at 420 nm (A420) increased rapidly and then slowly decreased over a period of several hundred seconds, as the resultant hemoHtsA autoxidized at 25 °C in air (Fig. 6A). The fast phase was a single exponential process and was complete a few seconds after mixing (Fig. 6B). The pseudo-first-order rate constant (kobs) of the fast phase increased hyperbolically with increasing [apoHtsA] (Fig. 6C), suggesting the rapid formation of a holoShp-apoHtsA complex followed by a rate-limiting and first-order transfer of heme to apoHtsA as described in Scheme I. When the initial [apoHtsA] is ≥5[hemoShp], the heme transfer is a pseudo-first-order process. The expression for the observed rate constant, kobs, is given by Equation 1,

Formula 2(Eq. 1)
where Kd is the dissociation constant of the hemoShp-apoHtsA complex, and k1, k2, and ktransfer are the rate constants of the individual reactions proposed in Scheme I. As shown in Fig. 6C, the observed dependence of kobs on [apoHtsA] is described quantitatively by Equation 1, with fitted values of ktransfer and Kd equal to 28 ± 6s–1 and 120 ± 18 µM, respectively (Table 1).


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TABLE 1
Rate constants and activation parameters for heme and hemin transfer from holoShp to apoHtsA

 
The slow phase observed after mixing hemoShp with apoHtsA is also a single exponential process, but the observed rate constant is independent of [apoHtsA]. As described in Figs. 2, 3, 4, and 6, this slow process represents autoxidation of hemoHtsA, with kautox equal to 0.017 ± 0.002 s–1. This rate of autoxidation was confirmed independently by reducing hemiHtsA with dithionite, removing excess dithionite by centrifugation through a G-25 column, and then measuring autoxidation in air of the newly produced hemoHtsA by monitoring changes in A424 in a conventional spectrophotometer. The observed rate of autoxidation of chemically reduced holoHtsA was 0.01 s–1 at 22 °C (Fig. 6A, inset), which is almost identical to that observed for hemoHtsA produced by heme transfer from Shp.

Hemin transfer from holoShp to apoHtsA had a kinetic pattern similar to that of heme transfer. The only qualitative difference was the absence of a slow, secondary autoxidation phase for holoHtsA, because the iron was already oxidized (Fig. 6A). Under pseudo-first-order conditions, the time courses at 414 nm can be fit to single exponential expressions. The observed rate constants (kobs) for hemin transfer depend hyperbolically on [apoHtsA] (Fig. 6, B and C), and this dependence can be described by Equation 1 with ktransfer and Kd equal to 43 ± 3 s–1 and 48 ± 7 µM, respectively. Thus, both the affinity of apoHtsA for holoShp and the rate of transfer are 2-fold higher when the heme iron is oxidized. At low protein concentrations where Kd >> [apoHtsA], the transfer process appears second order with an apparent association rate constant equal to ktransfer/Kd. Under these conditions, the observed bimolecular rate constant for hemin transfer is ~0.8 µM–1 s–1 and roughly 2.5 times larger than that for heme transfer (~0.3 µM–1 s–1) at 25°C.


Figure 6
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FIGURE 6.
Kinetic analysis of the heme and hemin transfer from hemoShp and hemiShp to apoHtsA. A, stopped-flow traces of {Delta}A in the reaction containing 2 µM hemoShp ({Delta}A420, solid curve) or hemiShp ({Delta}A414, dotted curve) and 15 µM apoHtsA at 25 °C in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0. Inset, time course of hemoHtsA autoxidation. Dithionite (~2 mg) was added to 0.5 ml of 7 µM hemiHtsA, and hemoHtsA formed was separated from dithionite by a quick spin column. A424 of the sample was immediately monitored with time at room temperature. Presented are the change in A424 (dotted curve) and the theoretical curve obtained by fitting the data to a single exponential expression (solid curve). {Delta}A424 was obtained by subtracting the observed readings from the one at time 0 when the monitoring started. B, {Delta}A traces corresponding to the {Delta}A traces in the first 2 s in A. The dotted and solid curves represent the observed data and single exponential curve fits, respectively. C, plots of observed rate constants (kobs) versus the initial [apoHtsA]. The kobs values (circles) were obtained by fitting a single exponential expression to the {Delta}A traces of B and the other data obtained from the reactions of 2 µM hemoShp (solid circles) or hemiShp (open circles) with apoHtsA at the indicated concentrations. The curves are theoretical curves obtained by fitting the data to Equation 1.

 


Figure 7
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FIGURE 7.
Effect of temperature on the heme and hemin transfer rate constants and the association constants of the holoShp-apoHtsA complexes. The rate constants (ktransfer) of the heme and hemin transfer and the association constants (kassociation) of the holoShp-apoHtsA complexes were obtained in experiments similar to those described in the legend to Fig. 6 at the indicated temperature. Presented are plots of ln(ktransfer/T) versus 1/T (A) and ln kassociation versus 1/T (B).

 
Activation Parameters for Heme and Hemin Transfers from Shp to ApoHtsA—The activation parameters for heme and hemin transfers in the holoShp-apoHtsA complex were obtained by determining ktransfer at temperatures ranging from 15 to 35 °C. At each temperature, a plot of kobs versus [apoHtsA] was generated experimentally and then fitted to Equation 1. Both the heme and hemin transfer rate constants increased with temperature and displayed a linear ln(ktransfer/T) versus 1/T plot (Fig. 7A), consistent with the Eyring equation,

Formula 2(Eq. 2)
where kB, h, and R are Boltzman's, Planck's, and the gas constants, respectively. The activation entropy ({Delta}S!=) and enthalpy ({Delta}H!=) were calculated from the intercept and slope, respectively, of the plots of ln(ktransfer/T) versus 1/T. The free energy of activation, {Delta}G!=, was calculated as {Delta}H!=T{Delta}S!=. The values of {Delta}H!= and {Delta}S!= for the first order transfer of heme were 140 ± 13 kJ/mol and 250 ± 25 J/(K·mol), respectively, whereas the corresponding parameters for hemin transfer were 75 ± 9 kJ/mol and 35 ± 4 J/(K·mol). The values of {Delta}G!= for formation of the transition states were 64.2 and 64.9 kJ/mol at 25 °C for heme and hemin transfer, respectively, reflecting the experimental observation that the ktransfer values are similar at room temperature. The 2-fold higher {Delta}H!= for the transfer of the reduced iron-porphyrin probably reflects the greater strength of the Fe(II)-ligand bonds compared with the weaker Fe(III)-ligand interactions. However, the greater heat required to break the axial linkages appears to be compensated by larger and favorable {Delta}S!= values for formation of the transition state for heme transfer.

Enthalpy and Entropy Changes for Formation of the HoloShp-ApoHtsA Complex—The equilibrium dissociation constants for formation of transient holoShp-apoHtsA complexes also increase with increasing temperature. A plot of ln Kassociation versus 1/T in Fig. 7B can be analyzed by the van't Hoff equation,

Formula 2(Eq. 3)
where Kassociation is the equilibrium association constant for formation of the holoShp-apoHtsA complex and equal to 1/Kd from Table 1. The standard enthalpy ({Delta}H0) and entropy ({Delta}S0) changes were calculated from the slope and intercept of the ln Kassociation versus 1/T plots (Fig. 7B), respectively, and were equal to –77 ± 9 kJ/mol and –182 ± 30 J/(K·mol), respectively, for the formation of hemoShp-apoHtsA and –37 ± 6 kJ/mol and –37 ± 18 J/(K·mol), respectively, for the hemiShp-HtsA complex. The standard free energy changes, {Delta}G0, calculated from RTln(1/Kd), are –23 and –26 kJ/mol at 25 °C for the formation of the hemoShp-apoHtsA and hemiShp-apoHtsA complexes, respectively.


Figure 8
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FIGURE 8.
Hemin binding to and dissociation from Shp and HtsA. A, the observed rate constants of hemin binding to apoShp and apoHtsA as a function of apoprotein concentration. Hemin (1 µM) reacted with apoShp (open circles) or apoHtsA (solid circles) at the indicated concentrations in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0. Each {Delta}A420 time course was monitored using a stopped-flow spectrophotometer and fit to a single exponential expression to obtain the pseudo-first-order rate constant (kobs). The curves are theoretical lines obtained by fitting the kobs data to Equation 4. B, time courses for hemin dissociation from hemiHtsA (solid circles) and hemiShp (open circles). H64Y/V68F apomyoglobin (50 µM) reacted with 5 µM hemiShp or hemiHtsA in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0. Hemin dissociation was measured by the change in A602, the absorbance at the indicated time minus the absorbance at time 0. The circles and curves represent, respectively, the observed {Delta}A602 values and the theoretical curves obtained by fitting the data to a single exponential expression.

 
Kinetics of Hemin Binding to ApoShp and ApoHtsA—The rates of hemin binding to and dissociation from Shp and HtsA were also measured. Time courses for hemin binding to apoShp and apoHtsA were measured at 420 and 414 nm, respectively. In these experiments, the concentration of hemin was kept as low as possible to prevent hemin dimer formation and to maintain pseudo-first-order conditions by keeping [apoShp] or [apoHtsA] >> [hemin]. Under these conditions, the observed time courses for both proteins are single exponential processes, and the observed pseudo-first-order rate constants display a hyperbolic dependence on [apoprotein] (Fig. 8A). These results indicate a two-step binding process involving the formation of weakly adsorbed hemin-apoprotein intermediate followed by axial coordination to form the final hemichrome structure as proposed below,

Formula 5SCHEME II

Formula 6
where k1 and k2 are the rate constants for bimolecular formation and unimolecular dissociation of the initial apoproteinhemin complex, respectively, and Kcoordination and k–hemin the internal first order rate constants for iron coordination to and dissociation from the final protein ligands, respectively. A similar two-step mechanism was proposed by Rose and Olson (24) for CO-heme binding to apohemoglobin.

If k1 and k2 are much greater than Kcoordination and k–hemin is much smaller than Kcoordination, the observed pseudo-first-order rate constant (kobs) is described by Equation 4,

Formula 6(Eq. 4)
where Kd is k2/k1. Fits of Equation 4 to kobs versus [apoprotein] data for both Shp and HtsA are shown in Fig. 8A. The fitted values for Kd and Kcoordination are 22 ± 2 µM and 35 ± 4s–1 and 8 ± 0.7 µM and 655 ± 47 s–1 for hemin binding to apoShp and apoHtsA, respectively (Table 2). At low apoprotein concentrations where the reactions appear bimolecular, the apparent second-order rate constants (Kcoordination/Kd) are 1.6 and 81 µM–1 s–1 for apoShp and apoHtsA, respectively.


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TABLE 2
Rate and equilibrium constants for hemin binding to apoShp and apoHtsA

 
The rates of dissociation of hemin from hemiShp and hemiHtsA were measured using excess H64Y/V68F apomyoglobin as a hemin scavenger with a unique absorption peak at 602 nm (17). Low concentrations of hemiShp or hemiHtsA were mixed with apomyoglobin at high concentrations, and the uptake of hemin by apoMb was followed by increases in A602 (Fig. 8B). The time courses in Fig. 8B were fitted to single exponential expressions, and the values of k–hemin were 0.0003 ± 0.00006 s–1 and 0.0026 ± 0.0002 s–1 for hemiShp and hemiHtsA, respectively. Since the dissociation of hemin is extremely slow, k–hemin in Scheme II must be <<k1 or k2. Therefore, the rate constants obtained from the time courses in Fig. 8 are directly equal to k–hemin in Scheme II.

The association equilibrium constants (khemin) for hemin binding to apoShp or apoHtsA can be estimated by the ratio of the apparent second order association rate constant (k'hemin = Kcoordination/Kd) and the hemin dissociation rate constant k–hemin (Table 2). The khemin values for hemiShp and hemiHtsA are 5,300 and 31,000 µM–1, respectively, indicating that the higher affinity of HtsA for hemin is the driving force for the efficient transfer of hemin from Shp to HtsA. The absolute values of the equilibrium constants for heme binding to apoShp and apoHtsA could not be measured easily by these kinetic methods. However, because hemoShp can efficiently transfer its heme to apoHtsA, HtsA must also have much greater affinity for reduced iron-porphyrin.


    DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Heme acquisition machineries have been identified in numerous bacteria. However, our understanding of the mechanisms of heme and hemin transfer between the proteins in these systems is quite limited. In this work, we have elucidated the kinetic mechanisms for heme and hemin transfer from holoShp to apoHtsA, providing the first detailed kinetic characterization of iron porphyrin transfer between the proteins involved in heme acquisition in bacteria. The efficient transfer of heme and hemin is driven by the relative affinities of the proteins and by direct first-order transfer within holoShp-apoHtsA complexes. The results advance our understanding of how fast heme and hemin can be transferred and why heme binding to cell surface proteins facilitates heme acquisition in Gram-positive bacteria.

Characterization of the oxidation states of holoShp and holoHtsA indicates that hemoShp is stable in air at pH 8.0, whereas hemoHtsA is not. Dithionite and ferricyanide are commonly used to achieve the ferric to ferrous and ferrous to ferric transitions, respectively, in iron-porphyrin-containing proteins (25, 26). HoloShp and holoHtsA treated with dithionite have dominant {alpha} absorbance bands centered at ~560 nm. This type of spectrum is seen for reduced b-type cytochromes but not for their oxidized forms, where the beta band at 530–540 nm dominates (20, 21). HemoHtsA is unstable in air and autoxidizes within 5–10 min after reduction. In contrast, hemoShp is stable in aerated Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, for over 24 h at room temperature. When Shp is purified at low pH or in the presence of ammonium sulfate, it is isolated as the oxidized hemichrome form. However, it can be purified in the hemoShp form using DEAE and SP-Sepharose chromatography at pH 8.0. HemoShp purified at high pH has identical spectral properties to those of hemiShp reduced with dithionite, and both reduced holoShp proteins can rapidly transfer their heme to apoHtsA.

We have firmly established that hemoShp rapidly transfers its heme to apoHtsA and that the resulting hemoHtsA quickly autoxidizes in air. The initial rapid spectral change during heme transfer is due to the formation of hemoHtsA and not to a spin state or ligand switch in holoShp itself when it interacts with apoHtsA. These findings are consistent with our previous report that apoShp and holoHtsA are formed after hemoShp is mixed with apoHtsA (16). A ligand switch mechanism has been proposed to explain the efficient heme transfer from HasA to HasR, which has lower affinity for heme than HasA (27). In contrast, HtsA has higher affinity for hemin and presumably for heme than Shp. Thus, Shp to HtsA heme transfer does not require such a mechanism. Furthermore, the ligand switch mechanism proposed for the HasA/HasR system seems less plausible than a model in which binding to HasR promotes an opening of the heme pocket in HasA and a decrease in affinity (28).

The slower spectral change observed after heme transfer from Shp is due to autoxidation of reduced holoHtsA. Immediately after chemical reduction with dithionite, isolated hemoHtsA undergoes autoxidation with a spectral change and rate constant very similar to those observed after heme transfer from holoShp. No slow spectral change occurs when oxygen is absent. The EPR measurements and kinetic analyses shown in Figs. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 support these conclusions.

Cell surface heme-binding proteins are proposed to relay heme through the cell wall to heme-specific ABC transporters in Gram-positive bacteria (12). To have efficient heme or hemin transfer between proteins, a donor should have lower affinity for heme and hemin than the acceptor, but neither of these affinities should be extremely high. Shp and HtsA appear to have evolved affinities suitable for their roles in transport. HtsA has a 5-fold higher affinity for hemin than Shp, resulting in directional transfer to HtsA. The affinities of Shp and HtsA for hemin are similar to those of the hemophore HasA (29), which is involved in heme transport in Serratia marcescens, and to serum albumin (30), which is involved in heme transport in the circulatory systems of vertebrates. However, the Shp and HtsA hemin affinities are much lower than those of mammalian myoglobin (Mb) (30) and hemoglobin (Hb) (31) (Table 3).


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TABLE 3
Comparison of apparent rate and equilibrium constants for hemin binding to apoShp, apoHtsA, and other hemin protein complexes

 
As shown in Table 1, Mb has a very low rate of hemin dissociation, which is critical for its retention of hemin in muscle tissue even after oxidative damage. Replacement of the proximal imidazole in Mb with glycine increases the rate of hemin dissociation ~10,000-fold, placing it in the rate range of k–hemin values for HtsA and Shp (30) (Table 3). In contrast to Mb, hemiShp and hemiHtsA have low spin bis-coordinated structures, based on their optical and EPR spectra. Normally, these types of hemichrome structures are associated with high hemin affinity and low rates of dissociation. However, both hemiShp and hemiHtsA have the relatively high rates of hemin dissociation (~0.003–0.0003 s–1)) compared with that for myoglobin (k–hemin {approx} 0.000001 s–1). Thus, although the axial positions of the iron are filled with strong field ligands, the overall binding of hemin to these proteins is relatively weak. The heterogeneity apparent in the EPR spectra of hemiShp and hemiHtsA (Figs. 1C and 2B) suggest that the weaker hemin binding is due to less rigid active sites that allow more rapid rates of transfer to facilitate heme uptake across the cell wall and membrane.

Gram-positive bacteria have no outer membrane. So why do Gram-positive bacteria require cell surface heme-binding proteins for heme acquisition? Heme and hemin usually are associated with host proteins that cannot directly interact with heme-specific ABC transporters, and, thus, cell surface heme-binding proteins are needed to relay heme and hemin through the thick cell wall. Another potential reason for the requirement of several cell surface components is that, in combination, these proteins serve as a sink to remove iron porphyrin from the host proteins.

Human hemoglobin is believed to be a major source of heme and hemin for bacterial pathogens. At low concentrations, where dimerization occurs, Hb shows hemin affinities approaching those of the transport proteins (Table 3). By itself, Shp does not possess a high enough affinity to remove hemin from Hb dimers at equilibrium. However, because Shp directly transfers hemin to HtsA, which in turn delivers it to the permease of the HtsABC transporter, this set of multiple proteins greatly enhances the affinity of the transport system for hemin and facilitates the speed of internalization. Although each individual protein has a relatively low affinity for hemin, the complete transport system of several proteins and direct transfer steps have sufficient capacity and affinity to acquire heme and hemin from hemoglobin.

The rates of heme and hemin transfer from holoShp to apoHtsA are ~40,000 times faster than the rate of simple hemin dissociation from either protein. The formation of a holoShp-apoHtsA complex is the major reason for the rapid rate of transfer. The free energy released by the binding of apoHtsA to holoShp is used to weaken hemin and heme coordination in holoShp, which facilitates transfer to apoHtsA. Consequently, the equilibrium association constants for formation of the holoShp-apoHtsA complexes are relatively small (i.e. large Kd values, 50–150 µM). However, the result of complex formation is direct hemin or heme transfer, with a much lower free energy barrier to movement from one protein to another than complete dissociation of the heme or hemin into solvent.

Another remarkable result is the similarity of the heme and hemin transfer processes. Normally, it is very difficult to remove reduced iron-porphyrin complexes from hemoproteins, and the process often requires partial unfolding of the protein. Although differences do occur, the kinetic parameters for hemin and heme transfer from Shp to HtsA are very similar, and there is no change in mechanism. The biggest difference is that the activation energy for the internal transfer process is much higher for the reduced iron complex. The net result is the greater temperature dependence for heme transfer versus hemin transfer. However, at room temperature, the rates only differ by a factor of 2–3 and are comparable physiologically. As a result, iron-porphyrin can be transferred on millisecond time scales by the Shp/HtsA system, regardless of the redox state of the immediate environment of the bacterium.

Taken together, our kinetic results show that Shp and HtsA of S. pyogenes have evolved to rapidly pass the iron-porphyrin from the cell surface heme-binding protein to the ABC transporter by forming an activated protein complex that is independent of the redox state of the iron and does not require the slow dissociation of bound heme or hemin.


    FOOTNOTES
 
* This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants K22 AI057347 (to B. L.), RO1 HL47020 (to J. S. O.), RO1 GM35649 (to J. S. O.), and RO1 GM55807 (to M. F.) National Center for Research Resources Grant P20 RR-020185 (to B. L.), Robert A. Welch Foundation Grant C-0612 (to J. S. O.), and the Montana State University Agricultural Experimental Station. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. Back

Formula The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains Fig. S1. Back

1 To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Veterinary Molecular Biology, Montana State University, P.O. Box 173610, Bozeman, MT 59717. Tel.: 406-994-6389; Fax: 406-994-4303; E-mail: blei{at}montana.edu.

2 The abbreviations used are: ABC, ATP-binding cassette; apoHtsA, metalloporphyrin-free HtsA; hemoHtsA, HtsA-bound hemochrome (Fe(II)-protoporphyrin IX with two strong axial ligands); hemiHtsA, HtsA-bound hemichrome (Fe(III)-protoporphyrin IX with two strong axial ligands); apoShp, metalloporphyrin-free Shp; hemoShp, Shp-bound hemochrome; hemiShp, Shp-bound hemichrome. Back


    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
We thank Dr. Mark Quinn for critical reading of the manuscript.



    REFERENCES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
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