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Pathogenic Escherichia coli expressing Afa/Dr adhesins are able to cause both urinary tract and diarrheal infections. The Afa/Dr adhesins confer adherence to epithelial cells via interactions with the human complement regulating protein, decay accelerating factor (DAF or CD55). Two of the Afa/Dr adhesions, AfaE-III and DraE, differ from each other by only three residues but are reported to have several different properties. One such difference is disruption of the interaction between DraE and CD55 by chloramphenicol, whereas binding of AfaE-III to CD55 is unaffected. Here we present a crystal structure of a strand-swapped trimer of wild type DraE. We also present a crystal structure of this trimer in complex with chloramphenicol, as well as NMR data supporting the binding position of chloramphenicol within the crystal. The crystal structure reveals the precise atomic basis for the sensitivity of DraE-CD55 binding to chloramphenicol and demonstrates that in contrast to other chloramphenicol-protein complexes, drug binding is mediated via recognition of the chlorine "tail" rather than via intercalation of the benzene rings into a hydrophobic pocket.

Original publication

DOI

10.1074/jbc.M409284200

Type

Journal article

Journal

J Biol Chem

Publication Date

05/11/2004

Volume

279

Pages

46851 - 46857

Keywords

Adhesins, Bacterial, Adhesins, Escherichia coli, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Bacterial Adhesion, CD55 Antigens, Chloramphenicol, Cloning, Molecular, Complement System Proteins, Crystallography, X-Ray, Escherichia coli Proteins, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Models, Molecular, Protein Binding, Protein Conformation, Protein Structure, Secondary, Surface Plasmon Resonance, X-Rays