Peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase from Escherichia coli and Mycobacterium tuberculosis protects bacteria against oxidative damage from reactive nitrogen intermediates Journal Article


Authors: St. John, G.; Brot, N.; Ruan, J.; Erdjument-Bromage, H.; Tempst, P.; Weissbach, H.; Nathan, C.
Article Title: Peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase from Escherichia coli and Mycobacterium tuberculosis protects bacteria against oxidative damage from reactive nitrogen intermediates
Abstract: Inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) plays an important role in host defense. Macrophages expressing iNOS release the reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNI) nitrite and S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO), which are bactericidal in vitro at a pH characteristic of the phagosome of activated macrophages. We sought to characterize the active intrabacterial forms of these RNI and their molecular targets. Peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase (MsrA; EC 1.8.4.6) catalyzes the reduction of methionine sulfoxide (Met-O) in proteins to methionine (Met). E. coli lacking MsrA were hypersensitive to killing not only by hydrogen peroxide, but also by nitrite and GSNO. The wild-type phenotype was restored by transformation with plasmids encoding msrA from E. coli or M. tuberculosis, but not by an enzymatically inactive mutant msrA, indicating that Met oxidation was involved in the death of these cells. It seemed paradoxical that nitrite and GSNO kill bacteria by oxidizing Met residues when these RNI cannot themselves oxidize Met. However, under anaerobic conditions, neither nitrite nor GSNO was bactericidal. Nitrite and GSNO can both give rise to NO, which may react with superoxide produced by bacteria during aerobic metabolism, forming peroxynitrite, a known oxidant of Met to Met-O. Thus, the findings are consistent with the hypotheses that nitrite and GSNO kill E. coli by intracellular conversion to peroxynitrite, that intracellular Met residues in proteins constitute a critical target for peroxynitrite, and that MsrA can be essential for the repair of peroxynitrite-mediated intracellular damage.
Keywords: nonhuman; phenotype; ph; mycobacterium tuberculosis; bacterial proteins; recombinant fusion proteins; escherichia coli; plasmid; immunoblotting; hydrogen peroxide; oxidative stress; macrophage; macrophages; oxidoreductase; oxidoreductases; mycobacterium; methionine; glutathione; nitrogen; nitric oxide synthase; polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; nitric oxide synthase type ii; nitric oxide; genetic complementation test; nitrates; nitrite; nitrites; bactericidal activity; actinobacteria (class); peroxynitrite; negibacteria; priority journal; article; uncultured actinomycete; anaerobic metabolism; nitroso compounds; s-nitrosoglutathione; methionine sulfoxide; s nitrosoglutathione
Journal Title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume: 98
Issue: 17
ISSN: 0027-8424
Publisher: National Academy of Sciences  
Date Published: 2001-08-14
Start Page: 9901
End Page: 9906
Language: English
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.161295398
PUBMED: 11481433
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC55550
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 21 May 2015 -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Paul J Tempst
    324 Tempst