Time-resolved Studies of IsdG Protein Identify Molecular Signposts along the Non-canonical Heme Oxygenase Pathway*
- Bennett R. Streit‡,
- Ravi Kant‡,
- Monika Tokmina-Lukaszewska‡,
- Arianna I. Celis‡,
- Melodie M. Machovina‡,
- Eric P. Skaar§,¶1,
- Brian Bothner‡ and
- Jennifer L. DuBois‡2
- From the ‡Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana 59715-3400,
- the §Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine and
- the ¶Tennessee Valley Healthcare Systems, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Nashville, Tennessee 37232
- ↵2 To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Chemistry and Biochemistry, 221 Chemistry and Biochemistry Bldg., Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59715-3400. Tel.: 406-994-2844; Fax: 406-994-5407; E-mail: jdubois{at}chemistry.montana.edu.
Abstract
IsdGs are heme monooxygenases that break open the tetrapyrrole, releasing the iron, and thereby allowing bacteria expressing this protein to use heme as a nutritional iron source. Little is currently known about the mechanism by which IsdGs degrade heme, although the products differ from those generated by canonical heme oxygenases. A synthesis of time-resolved techniques, including in proteo mass spectrometry and conventional and stopped-flow UV/visible spectroscopy, was used in conjunction with analytical methods to define the reaction steps mediated by IsdG from Staphylococcus aureus and their time scales. An apparent meso-hydroxyheme (forming with k = 0.6 min−1, pH 7.4, 10 mm ascorbate, 10 μm IsdG-heme, 22 °C) was identified as a likely common intermediate with the canonical heme oxygenases. Unlike heme oxygenases, this intermediate does not form with added H2O2 nor does it convert to verdoheme and CO. Rather, the next observable intermediates (k = 0.16 min−1) were a set of formyloxobilin isomers, similar to the mycobilin products of the IsdG homolog from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MhuD). These converted in separate fast and slow phases to β-/δ-staphylobilin isomers and formaldehyde (CH2O). Controlled release of this unusual C1 product may support IsdG's dual role as both an oxygenase and a sensor of heme availability in S. aureus.
Footnotes
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↵1 Supported by Department of Veterans Affairs Merit Award INFB-024-13F.
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↵* This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants GM090260 and 5P20RR02437 of the CoBRE Program (to J. L. D.) and Grant RO1 AI069233 (to E. P. S.). The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest with the contents of this article. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
- Received May 20, 2015.
- Revision received October 27, 2015.
- © 2016 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











