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Dive into the research topics where Katherine A. Edmonds is active.

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Featured researches published by Katherine A. Edmonds.


Protein Science | 2009

Thermodynamic consequences of disrupting a water‐mediated hydrogen bond network in a protein:pheromone complex

Scott D. Sharrow; Katherine A. Edmonds; Michael A. Goodman; Milos V. Novotny; Martin J. Stone

The mouse pheromones (±)‐2‐sec‐butyl‐4,5‐dihydrothiazole (SBT) and 6‐hydroxy‐6‐methyl‐3‐heptanone (HMH) bind into an occluded hydrophobic cavity in the mouse major urinary protein (MUP‐1). Although the ligands are structurally unrelated, in both cases binding is accompanied by formation of a similar buried, water‐mediated hydrogen bond network between the ligand and several backbone and side chain groups on the protein. To investigate the energetic contribution of this hydrogen bond network to ligand binding, we have applied isothermal titration calorimetry to measure the binding thermodynamics using several MUP mutants and ligand analogs. Mutation of Tyr‐120 to Phe, which disrupts a hydrogen bond from the phenolic hydroxyl group of Tyr‐120 to one of the bound water molecules, results in a substantial loss of favorable binding enthalpy, which is partially compensated by a favorable change in binding entropy. A similar thermodynamic effect was observed when the hydrogen bonded nitrogen atom of the heterocyclic ligand was replaced by a methyne group. Several other modifications of the protein or ligand had smaller effects on the binding thermodynamics. The data provide supporting evidence for the role of the hydrogen bond network in stabilizing the complex.


Biochemistry | 2015

Staphylococcus aureus CstB Is a Novel Multidomain Persulfide Dioxygenase-Sulfurtransferase Involved in Hydrogen Sulfide Detoxification.

Jiangchuan Shen; Mary E. Keithly; Richard N. Armstrong; Khadine A. Higgins; Katherine A. Edmonds; David P. Giedroc

Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is both a lethal gas and an emerging gasotransmitter in humans, suggesting that the cellular H2S level must be tightly regulated. CstB is encoded by the cst operon of the major human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus and is under the transcriptional control of the persulfide sensor CstR and H2S. Here, we show that CstB is a multifunctional Fe(II)-containing persulfide dioxygenase (PDO), analogous to the vertebrate protein ETHE1 (ethylmalonic encephalopathy protein 1). Chromosomal deletion of ethe1 is fatal in vertebrates. In the presence of molecular oxygen (O2), hETHE1 oxidizes glutathione persulfide (GSSH) to generate sulfite and reduced glutathione. In contrast, CstB oxidizes major cellular low molecular weight (LMW) persulfide substrates from S. aureus, coenzyme A persulfide (CoASSH) and bacillithiol persulfide (BSSH), directly to generate thiosulfate (TS) and reduced thiols, thereby avoiding the cellular toxicity of sulfite. Both Cys201 in the N-terminal PDO domain (CstB(PDO)) and Cys408 in the C-terminal rhodanese domain (CstB(Rhod)) strongly enhance the TS generating activity of CstB. CstB also possesses persulfide transferase (PT; reverse rhodanese) activity, which generates TS when provided with LMW persulfides and sulfite, as well as conventional thiosulfate transferase (TST; rhodanese) activity; both of these activities require Cys408. CstB protects S. aureus against H2S toxicity, with the C201S and C408S cstB genes being unable to rescue a NaHS-induced ΔcstB growth phenotype. Induction of the cst operon by NaHS reveals that functional CstB impacts cellular TS concentrations. These data collectively suggest that CstB may have evolved to facilitate the clearance of LMW persulfides that occur upon elevation of the level of cellular H2S and hence may have an impact on bacterial viability under H2S misregulation, in concert with the other enzymes encoded by the cst operon.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Entropy redistribution controls allostery in a metalloregulatory protein

Daiana A. Capdevila; Joseph J. Braymer; Katherine A. Edmonds; Hongwei Wu; David P. Giedroc

Significance The immune system limits nutrient availability and releases highly reactive toxic molecules to control bacterial infections. Successful pathogens resist these host effects by using regulatory proteins that “sense” diverse environmental stressors and alter the transcription of genes required to mount an adaptive response. We demonstrate here that these regulatory proteins are capable of sensing a specific stressor in a process that relies nearly exclusively on a redistribution of atomic motions to regulate gene transcription. This work provides insights into how nature exploits a simple molecular scaffold that relies on changes in atomic motions to evolve new adaptive responses to a wide range of environmental stimuli. Allosteric communication between two ligand-binding sites in a protein is a central aspect of biological regulation that remains mechanistically unclear. Here we show that perturbations in equilibrium picosecond–nanosecond motions impact zinc (Zn)-induced allosteric inhibition of DNA binding by the Zn efflux repressor CzrA (chromosomal zinc-regulated repressor). DNA binding leads to an unanticipated increase in methyl side-chain flexibility and thus stabilizes the complex entropically; Zn binding redistributes these motions, inhibiting formation of the DNA complex by restricting coupled fast motions and concerted slower motions. Allosterically impaired CzrA mutants are characterized by distinct nonnative fast internal dynamics “fingerprints” upon Zn binding, and DNA binding is weakly regulated. We demonstrate the predictive power of the wild-type dynamics fingerprint to identify key residues in dynamics-driven allostery. We propose that driving forces arising from dynamics can be harnessed by nature to evolve new allosteric ligand specificities in a compact molecular scaffold.


Molecular Microbiology | 2017

The zinc efflux activator SczA protects Streptococcus pneumoniae serotype 2 D39 from intracellular zinc toxicity

Julia E. Martin; Katherine A. Edmonds; Kevin E. Bruce; Gregory C. Campanello; Bart A. Eijkelkamp; Erin B. Brazel; Christopher A. McDevitt; Malcolm E. Winkler; David P. Giedroc

Zinc is an essential trace element that serves as a catalytic cofactor in metalloenzymes and a structural element in proteins involved in general metabolism and cellular defenses of pathogenic bacteria. Despite its importance, high zinc levels can impair cellular processes, inhibiting growth of many pathogenic bacteria, including the major respiratory pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae. Zinc intoxication is prevented in S. pneumoniae by expression of the zinc exporter CzcD, whose expression is activated by the novel TetR‐family transcriptional zinc‐sensing regulator SczA. How zinc bioavailability triggers activation of SczA is unknown. It is shown here through functional studies in S. pneumoniae that an unannotated homodimeric TetR from S. agalactiae (PDB 3KKC) is the bona fide zinc efflux regulator SczA, and binds two zinc ions per protomer. Mutagenesis analysis reveals two metal binding sites, termed A and B, located on opposite sides of the SczA C‐terminal regulatory domain. In vivo, the A‐ and B‐site SczA mutant variants impact S. pneumoniae resistance to zinc toxicity and survival in infected macrophages. A model is proposed for S. pneumoniae SczA function in which both A‐ and B‐sites were required for transcriptional activation of czcD expression, with the A‐site serving as the evolutionarily conserved intracellular sensing site in SczAs.


mSphere | 2017

Sulfide Homeostasis and Nitroxyl Intersect via Formation of Reactive Sulfur Species in Staphylococcus aureus

Hui Peng; Jiangchuan Shen; Katherine A. Edmonds; Justin L. Luebke; Anne Hickey; Lauren D. Palmer; Feng Ming James Chang; Kevin A. Bruce; Thomas E. Kehl-Fie; Eric P. Skaar; David P. Giedroc

Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is a toxic molecule and a recently described gasotransmitter in vertebrates whose function in bacteria is not well understood. In this work, we describe the transcriptomic response of the major human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus to quantified changes in levels of cellular organic reactive sulfur species, which are effector molecules involved in H2S signaling. We show that nitroxyl (HNO), a recently described signaling intermediate proposed to originate from the interplay of H2S and nitric oxide, also induces changes in cellular sulfur speciation and transition metal homeostasis, thus linking sulfide homeostasis to an adaptive response to antimicrobial reactive nitrogen species. ABSTRACT Staphylococcus aureus is a commensal human pathogen and a major cause of nosocomial infections. As gaseous signaling molecules, endogenous hydrogen sulfide (H2S) and nitric oxide (NO·) protect S. aureus from antibiotic stress synergistically, which we propose involves the intermediacy of nitroxyl (HNO). Here, we examine the effect of exogenous sulfide and HNO on the transcriptome and the formation of low-molecular-weight (LMW) thiol persulfides of bacillithiol, cysteine, and coenzyme A as representative of reactive sulfur species (RSS) in wild-type and ΔcstR strains of S. aureus. CstR is a per- and polysulfide sensor that controls the expression of a sulfide oxidation and detoxification system. As anticipated, exogenous sulfide induces the cst operon but also indirectly represses much of the CymR regulon which controls cysteine metabolism. A zinc limitation response is also observed, linking sulfide homeostasis to zinc bioavailability. Cellular RSS levels impact the expression of a number of virulence factors, including the exotoxins, particularly apparent in the ΔcstR strain. HNO, like sulfide, induces the cst operon as well as other genes regulated by exogenous sulfide, a finding that is traced to a direct reaction of CstR with HNO and to an endogenous perturbation in cellular RSS, possibly originating from disassembly of Fe-S clusters. More broadly, HNO induces a transcriptomic response to Fe overload, Cu toxicity, and reactive oxygen species and reactive nitrogen species and shares similarity with the sigB regulon. This work reveals an H2S/NO· interplay in S. aureus that impacts transition metal homeostasis and virulence gene expression. IMPORTANCE Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is a toxic molecule and a recently described gasotransmitter in vertebrates whose function in bacteria is not well understood. In this work, we describe the transcriptomic response of the major human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus to quantified changes in levels of cellular organic reactive sulfur species, which are effector molecules involved in H2S signaling. We show that nitroxyl (HNO), a recently described signaling intermediate proposed to originate from the interplay of H2S and nitric oxide, also induces changes in cellular sulfur speciation and transition metal homeostasis, thus linking sulfide homeostasis to an adaptive response to antimicrobial reactive nitrogen species.


bioRxiv | 2018

Structure of the large extracellular loop of FtsX and its interaction with the essential peptidoglycan hydrolase PcsB in Streptococcus pneumoniae

Britta E. Rued; Martín Alcorlo; Katherine A. Edmonds; Siseth Martínez-Caballero; Daniel Straume; Yue Fu; Kevin E. Bruce; Hongwei Wu; Leiv Sigve Håvarstein; Juan A. Hermoso; Malcolm E. Winkler; David P. Giedroc

Streptococcus pneumoniae is a leading killer of infants and immunocompromised adults and has become increasingly resistant to major antibiotics. Therefore, the development of new antibiotic strategies is desperately needed. Targeting bacterial cell division is one such strategy, specifically targeting essential proteins for the synthesis and breakdown of peptidoglycan. One complex important to this process is FtsEX. FtsEX comprises an integral membrane protein (FtsX) and cytoplasmic ATPase (FtsE) that resembles an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter. Here, we present NMR solution structural and crystallographic models of the large extracellular domain of FtsX, denoted ECL1. The structure of ECL1 reveals an upper extended β-hairpin and a lower α-helical lobe, each extending from a mixed α-β core. The helical lobe mediates a physical interaction with the peptidoglycan hydrolase PcsB, via the coiled-coil domain of PcsB (PcsB-CC). Characterization of S. pneumoniae D39 derived strains harboring mutations in the α-helical lobe shows that this subdomain is essential for cell viability and required for proper cell division of S. pneumoniae. IMPORTANCE FtsX is a ubiquitous bacterial integral membrane protein involved in cell division that regulates the activity of peptidoglycan (PG) hydrolases. FtsX is representative of a large group of ABC3 superfamily proteins that function as “mechanotransmitters,” proteins that relay signals from inside to the outside of the cell. Here we present a structural characterization of the large extracellular loop (ECL1) of FtsX from the human opportunistic pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae. We show a direct interaction between the peptidoglycan hydrolase PcsB and FtsX, and demonstrate that this interaction is essential for cell viability. As such, FtsX represents an attractive, conserved target for the development of new classes of antibiotics.


Essays in Biochemistry | 2017

Metallochaperones and metalloregulation in bacteria

Daiana A. Capdevila; Katherine A. Edmonds; David P. Giedroc


eLife | 2018

Tuning site-specific dynamics to drive allosteric activation in a pneumococcal zinc uptake regulator

Daiana A. Capdevila; Fidel Huerta; Katherine A. Edmonds; My Tra Le; Hongwei Wu; David P. Giedroc


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Functional Role of Solvent Entropy and Conformational Entropy of Metal Binding in a Dynamically Driven Allosteric System.

Daiana A. Capdevila; Katherine A. Edmonds; Gregory C. Campanello; Hongwei Wu; Giovanni Gonzalez-Gutierrez; David P. Giedroc


Journal of Back and Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation | 2018

side-chain methyl order parameters for Zn(II)-bound CzrA L34A mutant at 25C-40C

Daiana A. Capdevila; Katherine A. Edmonds; Hongwei Wu; David P. Giedroc

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David P. Giedroc

Indiana University Bloomington

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Daiana A. Capdevila

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Hongwei Wu

Indiana University Bloomington

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Gregory C. Campanello

Indiana University Bloomington

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Kevin E. Bruce

Indiana University Bloomington

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Malcolm E. Winkler

Indiana University Bloomington

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Britta E. Rued

Indiana University Bloomington

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Eric P. Skaar

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Feng Ming James Chang

Indiana University Bloomington

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