For each citation that was shared on social media (LinkedIn, Facebook, or Twitter) with the “@GenScript” tag, the author will be rewarded with a $10 Amazon gift card or 2,000 GS points.

Molecular mechanisms of HipA-mediated multidrug tolerance and its neutralization by HipB.

Science.. 2009-01;  323(5912):396 - 401
Maria A. Schumacher, Kevin M. Piro, Weijun Xu, Sonja Hansen, Kim Lewis, Richard G. Brennan. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Texas, M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Unit 1000, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Products/Services Used Details Operation

Abstract

Bacterial multidrug tolerance is largely responsible for the inability of antibiotics to eradicate infections and is caused by a small population of dormant bacteria called persisters. HipA is a critical Escherichia coli persistence factor that is normally neutralized by HipB, a transcription repressor, which also regulates hipBA expression. Here, we report multiple structures of HipA and a HipA-HipB-DNA complex. HipA has a eukaryotic serine/threonine kinase-like fold and can phosphorylate the translation factor EF-Tu, suggesting a persistence mechanism via cell stasis. The HipA-HipB-DNA structure reveals the HipB-operator binding mechanism, approximately 70 degrees DNA bending, and unexpected HipA-DNA contacts... More

Keywords