Guanidine Hydrochloride-Induced Unfolding of the Three Heme Coordination States of the CO-Sensing Transcription Factor, CooA

TitleGuanidine Hydrochloride-Induced Unfolding of the Three Heme Coordination States of the CO-Sensing Transcription Factor, CooA
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsLee, AJ, Clark, RW, Youn, H, Ponter, S, Burstyn, JN
JournalBiochemistry
Volume48
Pagination6585-6597
Date PublishedJul
Accession NumberISI:000268137800004
Keywordsactivator cooa, allosteric regulation, Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, Camp receptor protein, change, circular-dichroism, conformational, crystal-structure, dna-binding domains, escherichia-coli, hinge reorientation, rhodospirillum-rubrum
Abstract

CooA is a heme-dependent CO-sensing transcription factor that has three observable heme coordination states. There is some evidence that each CooA heme state has a distinct protein conformation; the goal of this study was to characterize these conformations by measuring their structural stabilities through guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) denaturation. By studying the denaturation processes of the Fe(Ill) state of WT CooA and several variants, we were able to characterize independent unfolding processes for each domain of CooA. This information was used to compare the unfolding profiles of various CooA heme activation states [Fe(III), Fe(II), and Fe(II)-CO] to show that the heme coordination state changes the stability of the effector binding domain. A mechanism consistent with the data predicts that all CooA coordination states and variants undergo unfolding of the DNA-binding domain between 2 and 3 M GuHCl with it free energy of unfolding of similar to 17 kJ/mol, while unfolding of the heme domain is variable and dependent on the heme coordination state. The Findings support it model in which changes in heme ligation alter the structural stability of the heme domain and dimer interface but do not alter the stability of the DNA-binding domain. These studies provide evidence that the domains of transcription factors are modular and that allosteric signaling occurs through changes in the relative positions of the protein domains without affecting the structure of the DNA-binding region.

Short TitleBiochemistry