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Recent
Articles 
Heddle JG, Lu T, Zhao X, Drlica K, Maxwell A.
gyrB-225, a mutation of DNA gyrase that compensates for
topoisomerase I
deficiency: investigation of its low activity and quinolone hypersensitivity.
J Mol Biol 2001 Jun 22;309(5):1219-31
PMID: 11399091
The B subunit of DNA gyrase (GyrB) consists of a 43 kDa N-terminal
domain,
containing the site of ATP binding and hydrolysis, and a 47 kDa
C-terminal
domain that is thought to play a role in interactions with GyrA
and DNA. In
cells containing a deletion of topA (the gene encoding DNA topoisomerase
I) a
compensatory mutation is found in gyrB. This mutation (gyrB-225)
results in a
two amino acid insertion in the N-terminal domain of GyrB. We found
that cells
containing this mutation are more sensitive than wild-type cells
to quinolone
drugs with respect to bacteriostatic and lethal action. We have
characterised
the mutant GyrB protein in vitro and found it to have reduced DNA
supercoiling,
relaxation, ATPase, and cleavage activities. The mutant enzyme is
up to
threefold more sensitive to quinolones than wild-type. The mutation
also
increases the affinity of GyrB for GyrA and DNA, while the affinity
of quinolone
for the enzyme-DNA complex is unaffected. We propose that the loss
in activity
is due to misfolding of the GyrB-225 protein, providing an example
in which
misfolding of one protein, DNA gyrase, suppresses a deficiency of
another,
topoisomerase I. The increased quinolone sensitivity is proposed
to be a
consequence of an altered conformation of the protein that renders
quinolones
better able to disrupt, rather than generate, gyrase-drug-DNA complexes.
Copyright 2001 Academic Press.
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