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Bacterial Strategies to Maintain Zinc Metallostasis at the Host-Pathogen Interface.


ABSTRACT: Among the biologically required first row, late d-block metals from MnII to ZnII, the catalytic and structural reach of ZnII ensures that this essential micronutrient touches nearly every major metabolic process or pathway in the cell. Zn is also toxic in excess, primarily because it is a highly competitive divalent metal and will displace more weakly bound transition metals in the active sites of metalloenzymes if left unregulated. The vertebrate innate immune system uses several strategies to exploit this "Achilles heel" of microbial physiology, but bacterial evolution has responded in kind. This review highlights recent insights into transcriptional, transport, and trafficking mechanisms that pathogens use to "win the fight" over zinc and thrive in an otherwise hostile environment.

SUBMITTER: Capdevila DA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5076499 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Bacterial Strategies to Maintain Zinc Metallostasis at the Host-Pathogen Interface.

Capdevila Daiana A DA   Wang Jiefei J   Giedroc David P DP  

The Journal of biological chemistry 20160726 40


Among the biologically required first row, late d-block metals from Mn<sup>II</sup> to Zn<sup>II</sup>, the catalytic and structural reach of Zn<sup>II</sup> ensures that this essential micronutrient touches nearly every major metabolic process or pathway in the cell. Zn is also toxic in excess, primarily because it is a highly competitive divalent metal and will displace more weakly bound transition metals in the active sites of metalloenzymes if left unregulated. The vertebrate innate immune s  ...[more]

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