DnaK dependence of mutant ethanol oxidoreductases evolved for aerobic function and protective role of the chaperone against protein oxidative damage in Escherichia coli

Author

Echave Lozano, Pedro

Esparza-Cerón, M. Angel

Cabiscol Català, Elisa

Tamarit Sumalla, Jordi

Ros Salvador, Joaquim

Membrillo-Hernández, Jorge

Lin, Edmund C. C.

Publication date

2016-03-29T08:54:34Z

2016-03-29T08:54:34Z

2025-01-01

2002



Abstract

The adhE gene of Escherichia coli encodes a multifunctional ethanol oxidoreductase (AdhE) that catalyzes successive reductions of acetyl-CoA to acetaldehyde and then to ethanol reversibly at the expense of NADH. Mutant JE52, serially selected for acquired and improved ability to grow aerobically on ethanol, synthesized an AdhEA267T/E568K with two amino acid substitutions that sequentially conferred improved catalytic properties and stability. Here we show that the aerobic growth ability on ethanol depends also on protection of the mutant AdhE against metal-catalyzed oxidation by the chaperone DnaK (a member of the Hsp70 family). No DnaK protection of the enzyme is evident during anaerobic growth on glucose. Synthesis of DnaK also protected E. coli from H2O2 killing under conditions when functional AdhE is not required. Our results therefore suggest that, in addition to the known role of protecting cells against heat stress, DnaK also protects numerous kinds of proteins from oxidative damage.

Document Type

article
publishedVersion

Language

English

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a http//dx.doi.org/10.1073pnas.072504199

PNAS, 2002, vol. 99, núm. 7, p. 4626-4631

Rights

(c) National Academy of Sciences, 2002

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