International audienceHasA is an extracellular heme binding protein, and HasR is an outer membrane receptor protein from Serratia marcescens. They are the initial partners of a heme internalization system allowing S. marcescens to scavenge heme at very low concentrations due to the very high affinity of HasA for heme (Ka = 5,3 x 10(10) m(-1)). Heme is then transferred to HasR, which has a lower affinity for heme. The mechanism of the heme transfer between HasA and HasR is largely unknown. HasR has been overexpressed and purified in holo and apo forms. It binds one heme molecule with a Ka of 5 x 10(6) m(-1) and shows the characteristic absorbance spectrum of a low spin heme iron. Both holoHasA and apoHasA bind tightly to apoHasR in a 1:1 sto...
The first step of heme acquisition by Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria through the so-called heme a...
International audienceHaem is involved in essential processes. It is toxic and thus is not found fre...
International audienceBacterial cells sense the extracellular environment and adapt to that environm...
International audienceHasA is an extracellular heme binding protein, and HasR is an outer membrane r...
International audienceGram-negative bacteria use specific heme uptake systems, relying on outer memb...
To satisfy their iron needs, several Gram-negative bacteria use a heme uptake system involving an ex...
International audienceMany bacterial hemoproteins involved in heme acquisition have been isolated re...
International audienceA heme-acquisition system present in several Gram-negative bacteria requires t...
A heme-acquisition system present in several Gram-negative bacteria requires the secretion of hemoph...
The work presented here is focused on crystallographic studies on the outer membrane receptor HasR f...
Version imprimée publiée en 2004 - version en ligne publiée en 2014International audienceThis chapte...
International audienceBacterial hemophores are secreted to the extracellular medium, where they scav...
International audienceThe protein HasA from the Gram negative bacteria Serratia marcescens is the fi...
International audienceFree iron availability is strongly limited in vertebrate hosts, making the iro...
HasR in the outer membrane of Serratia marcescens binds secreted, heme-loaded HasA and translocates ...
The first step of heme acquisition by Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria through the so-called heme a...
International audienceHaem is involved in essential processes. It is toxic and thus is not found fre...
International audienceBacterial cells sense the extracellular environment and adapt to that environm...
International audienceHasA is an extracellular heme binding protein, and HasR is an outer membrane r...
International audienceGram-negative bacteria use specific heme uptake systems, relying on outer memb...
To satisfy their iron needs, several Gram-negative bacteria use a heme uptake system involving an ex...
International audienceMany bacterial hemoproteins involved in heme acquisition have been isolated re...
International audienceA heme-acquisition system present in several Gram-negative bacteria requires t...
A heme-acquisition system present in several Gram-negative bacteria requires the secretion of hemoph...
The work presented here is focused on crystallographic studies on the outer membrane receptor HasR f...
Version imprimée publiée en 2004 - version en ligne publiée en 2014International audienceThis chapte...
International audienceBacterial hemophores are secreted to the extracellular medium, where they scav...
International audienceThe protein HasA from the Gram negative bacteria Serratia marcescens is the fi...
International audienceFree iron availability is strongly limited in vertebrate hosts, making the iro...
HasR in the outer membrane of Serratia marcescens binds secreted, heme-loaded HasA and translocates ...
The first step of heme acquisition by Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria through the so-called heme a...
International audienceHaem is involved in essential processes. It is toxic and thus is not found fre...
International audienceBacterial cells sense the extracellular environment and adapt to that environm...