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Iron is among the most important micronutrients used by bacteria. As a partner of the Fenton reaction, however, iron potentiates oxygen toxicity. Strict regulation of iron metabolism, and its coupling with regulation of defenses against oxidative stress, is an essential factor for life in the presence of oxygen. In Escherichia coli, iron metabolism is regulated by the Fur protein. A Fur-deficient mutant, in stationary phase, displayed about 30y-fold lower HPII activity than the respective, Fur-proficient parental strain. Deletion of fur seems to affect HPII catalase specifically, since the mutant was capable of inducing HPI catalase when challenged with H(2)O(2). Low HPII catalase activity appears to be among the reasons for hydrogen peroxide hypersensitivity of the deltafur mutant.  相似文献   

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The plant pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum, which causes bacterial wilt disease, is exposed to reactive oxygen species (ROS) during tomato infection and expresses diverse oxidative stress response (OSR) genes during midstage disease on tomato. The R. solanacearum genome predicts that the bacterium produces multiple and redundant ROS-scavenging enzymes but only one known oxidative stress response regulator, OxyR. An R. solanacearum oxyR mutant had no detectable catalase activity, did not grow in the presence of 250 μM hydrogen peroxide, and grew poorly in the oxidative environment of solid rich media. This phenotype was rescued by the addition of exogenous catalase, suggesting that oxyR is essential for the hydrogen peroxide stress response. Unexpectedly, the oxyR mutant strain grew better than the wild type in the presence of the superoxide generator paraquat. Gene expression studies indicated that katE, kaG, ahpC1, grxC, and oxyR itself were each differentially expressed in the oxyR mutant background and in response to hydrogen peroxide, suggesting that oxyR is necessary for hydrogen peroxide-inducible gene expression. Additional OSR genes were differentially regulated in response to hydrogen peroxide alone. The virulence of the oxyR mutant strain was significantly reduced in both tomato and tobacco host plants, demonstrating that R. solanacearum is exposed to inhibitory concentrations of ROS in planta and that OxyR-mediated responses to ROS during plant pathogenesis are important for R. solanacearum host adaptation and virulence.  相似文献   

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The ability of Helicobacter pylori to colonize the stomach requires that it combat oxidative stress responses imposed by the host. The role of methionine sulfoxide reductase (Msr), a methionine repair enzyme, in H. pylori stress resistance was evaluated by a mutant analysis approach. An msr mutant strain lacked immunologically detectable sulphoxide reductase protein and also showed no enzyme activity when provided with oxidized methionines as substrates. The mutant strain showed diminished growth compared to the parent strain in the presence of chemical oxidants, and showed rapid viability loss when exposed to oxidizing conditions. The stress resistance and enzyme activity could be recovered by complementing the mutant with a functional copy of the msr gene. Upon fractionation of parent strain and the complemented mutant cells into membranes and cytoplasmic proteins, most of the immunologically detectable Msr was localized to the membrane, and this fraction contained all of the Msr activity. Qualitative detection of the whole cell protein pattern using 2,4-dinitro phenyl hydrazine (DNPH) showed a far greater number of oxidized protein species in the mutant than in the parent strain when the cells were subjected to oxygen, peroxide or s-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) induced stress. Importantly, no oxidized proteins were discerned in either strain upon incubation in anaerobic conditions. A mutant strain that synthesized a truncated Msr (corresponding to the MsrA domain) was slightly more resistant to oxidative stress than the msr strain. Mouse colonization studies showed Msr is an important colonization factor, especially for effective longer-term (14 and 21 days) colonization. Complementation of the mutant msr strain by chromosomal insertion of a functional gene restored mouse colonization ability.  相似文献   

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The role of catalase in hydrogen peroxide resistance in Schizosaccharomyces pombe was investigated. A catalase gene disruptant completely lacking catalase activity is more sensitive to hydrogen peroxide than the parent strain. The mutant does not acquire hydrogen peroxide resistance by osmotic stress, a treatment that induces catalase activity in the wild-type cells. The growth rate of the disruptant is not different from that of the parent strain. Additionally, transformed cells that overexpress the catalase activity are more resistant to hydrogen peroxide than wildtype cells with normal catalase activity. These results indicate that the catalase of S. pombe plays an important role in resistance to high concentrations of hydrogen peroxide but offers little in the way of protection from the hydrogen peroxide generated in small amounts under normal growth conditions.  相似文献   

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Campylobacter jejuni, a microaerophilic bacterium, is the most frequent cause of human bacterial gastroenteritis. C. jejuni is exposed to harmful reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced during its own normal metabolic processes and during infection from the host immune system and from host intestinal microbiota. These ROS will damage DNA and proteins and cause peroxidation of lipids. Consequently, identifying ROS defense mechanisms is important for understanding how Campylobacter survives this environmental stress during infection. Construction of a ΔCj1386 isogenic deletion mutant and phenotypic assays led to its discovery as a novel oxidative stress defense gene. The ΔCj1386 mutant has an increased sensitivity toward hydrogen peroxide. The Cj1386 gene is located directly downstream from katA (catalase) in the C. jejuni genome. A ΔkatAΔ Cj1386 double deletion mutant was constructed and exhibited a sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide similar to that seen in the ΔCj1386 and ΔkatA single deletion mutants. This observation suggests that Cj1386 may be involved in the same detoxification pathway as catalase. Despite identical KatA abundances, catalase activity assays showed that the ΔCj1386 mutant had a reduced catalase activity relative to that of wild-type C. jejuni. Heme quantification of KatA protein from the ΔCj1386 mutant revealed a significant decrease in heme concentration. This indicates an important role for Cj1386 in heme trafficking to KatA within C. jejuni. Interestingly, the ΔCj1386 mutant had a reduced ability to colonize the ceca of chicks and was outcompeted by the wild-type strain for colonization of the gastrointestinal tract of neonate piglets. These results indicate an important role for Cj1386 in Campylobacter colonization and pathogenesis.  相似文献   

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A single catalase enzyme was produced by the anaerobic bacterium Bacteroides fragilis when cultures at late log phase were shifted to aerobic conditions. In anaerobic conditions, catalase activity was detected in stationary-phase cultures, indicating that not only oxygen exposure but also starvation may affect the production of this antioxidant enzyme. The purified enzyme showed a peroxidatic activity when pyrogallol was used as an electron donor. It is a hemoprotein containing one heme molecule per holomer and has an estimated molecular weight of 124,000 to 130,000. The catalase gene was cloned by screening a B. fragilis library for complementation of catalase activity in an Escherichia coli catalase mutant (katE katG) strain. The cloned gene, designated katB, encoded a catalase enzyme with electrophoretic mobility identical to that of the purified protein from the B. fragilis parental strain. The nucleotide sequence of katB revealed a 1,461-bp open reading frame for a protein with 486 amino acids and a predicted molecular weight of 55,905. This result was very close to the 60,000 Da determined by denaturing sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the purified catalase and indicates that the native enzyme is composed of two identical subunits. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified catalase obtained by Edman degradation confirmed that it is a product of katB. The amino acid sequence of KatB showed high similarity to Haemophilus influenzae HktE (71.6% identity, 66% nucleotide identity), as well as to gram-positive bacterial and mammalian catalases. No similarities to bacterial catalase-peroxidase-type enzymes were found. The active-site residues, proximal and distal hemebinding ligands, and NADPH-binding residues of the bovine liver catalase-type enzyme were highly conserved in B. fragilis KatB.  相似文献   

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Twenty-six Helicobacter pylori targeted mutant strains with deficiencies in oxidative stress combating proteins, including 12 double mutant strains were analyzed via physiological and proteomic approaches to distinguish the major expression changes caused by the mutations. Mutations were introduced into both a MtzS and a MtzR strain background. Most of the mutations caused increased growth sensitivity of the strains to oxygen, and they all exhibited clear compensatory up-expression of oxidative stress resistance proteins enabling survival of the bacterium. The most frequent up-expressed oxidative stress resistance factor (observed in 16 of the mutants) was the iron-sequestering protein NapA, linking iron sequestration with oxidative stress resistance. The up-expression of individual proteins in mutants ranged from 2 to 10 fold that of the wild type strain, even when incubated in a low O2 environment. For example, a considerably higher level of catalase expression (4 fold of that in the wild-type strain) was observed in ahpC napA and ahpC sodB double mutants. A Fur mutant up-expressed ferritin (Pfr) protein 20-fold. In some mutant strains the bacterial DNA is protected from oxidative stress damage apparently via overexpression of oxidative stress-combating proteins such as NapA, catalase or MdaB (an NADPH quinone reductase). Our results show that H. pylori has a variety of ways to compensate for loss of major oxidative stress combating factors.  相似文献   

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Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an obligate aerobe that is virtually ubiquitous in the environment. During aerobic respiration, the metabolism of dioxygen can lead to the production of reactive oxygen intermediates, one of which includes hydrogen peroxide. To counteract the potentially toxic effects of this compound, P. aeruginosa possesses two heme-containing catalases which detoxify hydrogen peroxide. In this study, we have cloned katB, encoding one catalase gene of P. aeruginosa. The gene was cloned on a 5.4-kb EcoRI fragment and is composed of 1,539 bp, encoding 513 amino acids. The amino acid sequence of the P. aeruginosa katB was approximately 65% identical to that of a catalase from a related species, Pseudomonas syringae. The katB gene was mapped to the 71- to 75-min region of the P. aeruginosa chromosome, the identical region which harbors both sodA and sodB genes encoding both manganese and iron superoxide dismutases. When cloned into a catalase-deficient mutant of Escherichia coli (UM255), the recombinant P. aeruginosa KatB was expressed (229 U/mg) and afforded this strain resistance to hydrogen peroxide nearly equivalent to that of the wild-type E. coli strain (HB101). The KatB protein was purified to homogeneity and determined to be a tetramer of approximately 228 kDa, which was in good agreement with the predicted protein size derived from the translated katB gene. Interestingly, KatB was not produced during the normal P. aeruginosa growth cycle, and catalase activity was greater in nonmucoid than in mucoid, alginate-producing organisms. When exposed to hydrogen peroxide and, to a greater extent, paraquat, total catalase activity was elevated 7- to 16-fold, respectively. In addition, an increase in KatB activity caused a marked increase in resistance to hydrogen peroxide. KatB was localized to the cytoplasm, while KatA, the "housekeeping" enzyme, was detected in both cytoplasmic and periplasmic extracts. A P. aeruginosa katB mutant demonstrated 50% greater sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide than wild-type bacteria, suggesting that KatB is essential for optimal resistance of P. aeroginosa to exogenous hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

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Microorganisms employ diverse mechanisms to withstand physiological stress conditions exerted by reactive or toxic oxygen and nitrogen species such as hydrogen peroxide, organic hydroperoxides, superoxide anions, nitrite, hydroxylamine, nitric oxide or NO-generating compounds. This study identified components of the oxidative and nitrosative stress defence network of Wolinella succinogenes, an exceptional Epsilonproteobacterium that lacks both catalase and haemoglobins. Various gene deletion-insertion mutants were constructed, grown by either fumarate respiration or respiratory nitrate ammonification and subjected to disc diffusion, growth and viability assays under stress conditions. It was demonstrated that mainly two periplasmic multihaem c-type cytochromes, namely cytochrome c peroxidase and cytochrome c nitrite reductase (NrfA), mediated resistance to hydrogen peroxide. Two AhpC-type peroxiredoxin isoenzymes were shown to be involved in protection against different organic hydroperoxides. The phenotypes of two superoxide dismutase mutants lacking either SodB or SodB2 implied that both isoenzymes play important roles in oxygen and superoxide stress defence although they are predicted to reside in the cytoplasm and periplasm respectively. NrfA and a cytoplasmic flavodiiron protein (Fdp) were identified as key components of nitric oxide detoxification. In addition, NrfA (but not the hybrid cluster protein Hcp) was found to mediate resistance to hydroxylamine stress. The results indicate the presence of a robust oxidative and nitrosative stress defence network and identify NrfA as a multifunctional cytochrome c involved in both anaerobic respiration and stress protection.  相似文献   

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Alcohol dehydrogenase E (AdhE) is an Fe-enzyme that, under anaerobic conditions, is involved in dissimilation of glucose. The enzyme is also present under aerobic conditions, its amount is about one-third and its activity is only one-tenth of the values observed under anaerobic conditions. Nevertheless, its function in the presence of oxygen remained ignored. The data presented in this paper led us to propose that the enzyme has a protective role against oxidative stress. Our results indicated that cells deleted in adhE gene could not grow aerobically in minimal media, were extremely sensitive to oxidative stress and showed division defects. In addition, compared with wild type, mutant cells displayed increased levels of internal peroxides (even higher than those found in a Delta katG strain) and increased protein carbonyl content. This pleiotropic phenotype disappeared when the adhE gene was reintroduced into the defective strain. The purified enzyme was highly reactive with hydrogen peroxide (with a Ki of 5 microM), causing inactivation due to a metal-catalyzed oxidation reaction. It is possible to prevent this reactivity to hydrogen peroxide by zinc, which can replace the iron atom at the catalytic site of AdhE. This can also be achieved by addition of ZnSO4 to cell cultures. In such conditions, addition of hydrogen peroxide resulted in reduced cell viability compared with that obtained without the Zn treatment. We therefore propose that AdhE acts as a H2O2 scavenger in Escherichia coli cells grown under aerobic conditions.  相似文献   

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The oxidative stress response in Bacillus subtilis   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Abstract Bacillus subtilis undergoes a typical bacterial stress response when exposed to low concentrations (0.1 mM) of hydrogen peroxide. Protection is thereby induced against otherwise lethal, challenge concentrations (10 mM) of this oxidant and a number of proteins are induced including the scavenging enzymes, catalase and alkyl hydroperoxide reductase, and a putative DNA binding and protecting protein. Induced protection against higher concentrations (10–30 mM) of hydrogen peroxide is eliminated in a catalase-deficient mutant. Both RecA and Spo0A influence the basal but not the induced resistance to hydrogen peroxide. A regulatory mutation has been characterized that affects the inducible phenotype and is constitutively resistant to high concentrations of hydrogen peroxide. This mutant constitutively overexpresses the proteins induced by hydrogen peroxide in the wild-type. The resistance of spores to hydrogen peroxide is partly attributable to binding of small acid soluble proteins by the spore DNA and partly to a second step which coincides with the depletion of the NADH pool, which may inhibit the generation of hydroxyl radicals from hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

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Monoraphidium braunii glutamine synthetase is inactivated by several mixed-function oxidation systems. Inactivation requires oxygen and a metal cation as it does not take place under anaerobic conditions or in the presence of EDTA. Glutamine synthetase can be protected against that inactivation by peroxidase and catalase but not by superoxide dismutase indicating that hydrogen peroxide is involved in the process, although hydrogen peroxide is not itself effective. The oxidative modification of glutamine synthetase renders the protein more sensitive to temperature and susceptible to proteolytic attack. This has been demonstrated by measuring by quantitative immunoelectrophoresis the levels of glutamine synthetase antigen, in enzymatic preparations treated with different oxidation systems. Besides, immunoblotting of crude extracts in the presence of mixed-function oxidation systems shows the disappearance of material cross-reacting with anti-glutamine synthetase antibodies. Other results show that glutamine synthetase from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii could be subjected to the same kind of oxidative inactivation. The possible regulatory role of oxidative modification of glutamine synthetase in green algae is discussed.  相似文献   

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Mutant strains in the tsaA gene encoding alkyl hydroperoxide reductase were more sensitive to O(2) and to oxidizing agents (paraquat, cumene hydroperoxide and t-butylhydroperoxide) than the wild type, but were markedly more resistant to hydrogen peroxide. The mutant strains resistance phenotype could be attributed to a 4-fold and 3-fold increase in the catalase protein amount and activity, respectively compared to the parent strain. The wild type did not show an increase in catalase expression in response to sequential increases in O(2) exposure or to oxidative stress reagents, so an adaptive compensatory mutation has probably occurred in the mutants. In support of this, chromosomal complementation of tsaA mutants restored alkyl hydroperoxide reductase, but catalase was still up-expressed in all complemented strains. The katA promoter sequence was the same in all mutant strains and the wild type. Like its Helicobacter pylori counterpart strain, a H. hepaticus tsaA mutant contained more lipid hydroperoxides than the wild type strain. Hepatic tissue from mice inoculated with a tsaA mutant had lesions similar to those inoculated with the wild type, and included coagulative necrosis of hepatocytes. The liver and cecum colonizing abilities of the wild type and tsaA mutant were comparable. Up-expression of catalase in the tsaA mutants likely permits the bacterium to compensate (in colonization and virulence attributes) for the loss of an otherwise important oxidative stress-combating enzyme, alkyl hydroperoxide reductase. The use of erythromycin resistance insertion as a facile way to screen for gene-targeted mutants, and the chromosomal complementation of those mutants are new genetic procedures for studying H. hepaticus.  相似文献   

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The action of reactive oxygen species, i.e. hydrogen peroxide, cupric sulphate and ascorbic acid, added at different concentrations to culture media, has been studied in two strains of Deinococcus radiodurans (red-pigmented parental and colourless mutant strains) in relation to their defense antioxidant systems. While the pigmented bacteria were more resistant to elevated concentrations of the different oxidants, the colourless bacteria were more sensitive and their sensitivity was dose-dependent. Reactive oxygen species induced oxidative damage, particularly to the polyethylenic fatty acids, which were more abundant in the mutant strain. Similarly, a significant increase in lipid peroxide levels was observed, whatever the chemical added during the growth of the mutant bacteria. The parental strain required high concentrations of oxidants to shorten its survival. Vitamins A and E, carotenoids and enzymes, largely present in the parental strain, could be responsible for its higher resistance to the lethal effects of radicals generated within the cells.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of hydrogen peroxide on the activities of catalase and superoxide dismutase (SOD) in S. cerevisiae has been studied under different experimental conditions: various H2O2 concentrations, time exposures, yeast cell densities and media for stress induction. The yeast treatment with 0.25–0.50 mM H2O2 led to an increase in catalase activity by 2–3-fold. At the same time, hydrogen peroxide caused an elevation by 1.6-fold or no increase in SOD activity dependently on conditions used. This effect was cancelled by cycloheximide, an inhibitor of protein synthesis in eukaryotes. Weak elevation of catalase and SOD activities in cells treated with 0.25–0.50 mM H2O2 found in this study does not correspond to high level of synthesis of the respective enzyme molecules observed earlier by others. It is well known that exposure of microorganisms to low sublethal concentrations of hydrogen peroxide leads to the acquisition of cellular resistance to a subsequent lethal oxidative stress. Hence, it makes possible to suggest that S. cerevisiae cells treated with low sublethal doses of hydrogen peroxide accumulate non-active stress-protectant molecules of catalase and SOD to survive further lethal oxidant concentrations.  相似文献   

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