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Microbiology 153 (2007), 1474-1482; DOI  10.1099/mic.0.2006/003228-0
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Microbiology 153 (2007), 1474-1482; DOI  10.1099/mic.0.2006/003228-0
© 2007 Society for General Microbiology

Interaction between the Helicobacter pylori accessory proteins HypA and UreE is needed for urease maturation

Stéphane L. Benoit, Nalini Mehta{dagger}, Michael V. Weinberg, Cheryl Maier and Robert J. Maier

Department of Microbiology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA

Correspondence
Robert J. Maier
rmaier{at}uga.edu

Several accessory proteins are required for the maturation of two nickel-containing enzymes in the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori. These two enzymes are hydrogenase and urease. Among the accessory/maturation proteins, the nickel-binding HypA protein has been previously shown to be required for the full activity of both the hydrogenase and the urease enzymes, while another nickel-binding protein, UreE, is known to be solely involved in the urease maturation process. In this study, UreE was shown to be required under all nickel levels for full activation of the apourease. By use of cross-linking studies, an interaction between purified HypA and UreE proteins was identified, leading to the formation of a 34 kDa heterodimer complex. The cross-linked adduct was detected by immunoblotting with either anti-HypA or anti-UreE antiserum. By using a two-plasmid system in Escherichia coli, the highest urease activity was achieved under low nickel conditions only when the UreE protein was expressed along with the wild-type HypA protein, but not with its nickel-binding-deficient variant HypA H2A. Addition of only 1 µM NiCl2 into minimal medium abolished the need for HypA to activate the urease. Although various attempts to show direct nickel transfer from HypA to UreE failed, these results suggest that interactions between the nickel-binding accessory proteins HypA and UreE are required to allow nickel transfer from HypA eventually to the apourease in H. pylori.


Abbreviations: DMS, dimethyl suberimidate

{dagger}Present address: Center for Genomic Sciences, Allegheny and Singer Research Institute, 320 East North Avenue, 9th Floor, South Tower, Pittsburgh, PA 15212, USA.




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