DESCRIPTION (Adapted from the Applicant's Abstract): Bacteria elaborate iron
chelators that scavenge iron from the environment, including their human and
animal hosts. Iron acquisition is a determinant of pathogenicity. One such
iron chelate, the siderophore enterobactin, enters gram-negative bacteria
through the FepA protein of the outer membrane. FepA is a ligand-gated porin,
in that binding of ferric enterobactin triggers transport through its
transmembrane pore. This high affinity multispecific, multicomponent, energy
dependent transport process is a paradigm of prokaryotic membrane
biochemistry. Based on the FepA crystal structure, the proposed research will
use molecular biological, biochemical, and biophysical methods to investigate
the mechanism of ferric enterobactin uptake. The experiments will address two
stages of the transport event, binding and internalization. Dr. Klebba will
study the specificity of the initial recognition event by binding experiments
on both wild type FepA and site-directed mutants, containing alterations to
residues in either the external loops of the top loops of the N-terminal
globular domain. He will similarly characterize the ligand internalization
reaction by mutagenesis of target residues that are conserved among other
Gram-negative bacterial ligand-gated porins. Mutant proteins of interest,
those with impaired ligand binding or ligand internalization phenotypes, will
be crystallized and studied by X-ray diffraction Finally, he will perform
biophysical analyses of conformation changes that occur in FepA during ligand
transport.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
X ray crystallographyadsorptionbacterial proteinsbacterial toxinsbinding sitesconformationflow cytometryfluorescence spectrometrygram negative bacteriaironlaboratory mouselaboratory rabbitmembrane permeabilitymembrane proteinsmembrane transport proteinsmolecular cloningnucleic acid sequencepolymerase chain reactionpore forming proteinprotein purificationprotein transportreceptor bindingsiderophoressite directed mutagenesistissue /cell culture
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01GM053836-07
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