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1.
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In this work, two proteins, Z-domains and bovine casein, were autodisplayed on the outer membrane of the same Escherichia coli cells by co-transformation of two different autodisplay vectors. On the basis of SDS-PAGE densitometry, Z-domains and bovine casein were expressed at 3.12 × 105 and 1.55 × 105 proteins/E. coli cell, respectively. The co-autodisplayed Z-domains had antibody-binding activity and the bovine casein had adhesive properties. E. coli with co-autodisplayed proteins were analyzed by fluorescence assisted cell sorting (FACS). E. coli with co-autodisplayed Z-domains and bovine casein aggregated due to hydrophobic interaction. For application to immunoassays, the Z-domain activity was estimated after (1) immobilizing the E. coli and (2) forming an OM layer. E. coli with co-autodisplayed two proteins that were immobilized on a polystyrene microplate had the same antibody-binding activity as did E. coli with autodisplayed Z-domains only. The OM layer from the co-transformed E. coli had Z-domains and bovine casein expressed at a 1:2 ratio from antibody-binding activity measurements.  相似文献   

3.
Gram-negative bacteria contain a double membrane which serves for both protection and for providing nutrients for viability. The outermost of these membranes is called the outer membrane (OM), and it contains a host of fully integrated membrane proteins which serve essential functions for the cell, including nutrient uptake, cell adhesion, cell signalling and waste export. For pathogenic strains, many of these outer membrane proteins (OMPs) also serve as virulence factors for nutrient scavenging and evasion of host defence mechanisms. OMPs are unique membrane proteins in that they have a β-barrel fold and can range in size from 8 to 26 strands, yet can still serve many different functions for the cell. Despite their essential roles in cell survival and virulence, the exact mechanism for the biogenesis of these OMPs into the OM has remained largely unknown. However, the past decade has witnessed significant progress towards unravelling the pathways and mechanisms necessary for moulding a nascent polypeptide into a functional OMP within the OM. Here, we will review some of these recent discoveries that have advanced our understanding of the biogenesis of OMPs in Gram-negative bacteria, starting with synthesis in the cytoplasm to folding and insertion into the OM.  相似文献   

4.
High-resolution two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry has been used to identify the outer membrane (OM) subproteome of the Gram-negative bacterium Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath). Twenty-eight unique polypeptide sequences were identified from protein samples enriched in OMs. Only six of these polypeptides had previously been identified. The predictions from novel bioinformatic methods predicting β-barrel outer membrane proteins (OMPs) and OM lipoproteins were compared to proteins identified experimentally. BOMP () predicted 43 β-barrel OMPs (1.45%) from the 2,959 annotated open reading frames. This was a lower percentage than predicted from other Gram-negative proteomes (1.8–3%). More than half of the predicted BOMPs in M. capsulatus were annotated as (conserved) hypothetical proteins with significant similarity to very few sequences in Swiss-Prot or TrEMBL. The experimental data and the computer predictions indicated that the protein composition of the M. capsulatus OM subproteome was different from that of other Gram-negative bacteria studied in a similar manner. A new program, Lipo, was developed that can analyse entire predicted proteomes and give a list of recognised lipoproteins categorised according to their lipo-box similarity to known Gram-negative lipoproteins (). This report is the first using a proteomics and bioinformatics approach to identify the OM subproteome of an obligate methanotroph.  相似文献   

5.
《Biophysical journal》2021,120(23):5295-5308
The outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria presents a robust physicochemical barrier protecting the cell from both the natural environment and acting as the first line of defense against antimicrobial materials. The proteins situated within the outer membrane are responsible for a range of biological functions including controlling influx and efflux. These outer membrane proteins (OMPs) are ultimately inserted and folded within the membrane by the β-barrel assembly machine (Bam) complex. The precise mechanism by which the Bam complex folds and inserts OMPs remains unclear. Here, we have developed a platform for investigating Bam-mediated OMP insertion. By derivatizing a gold surface with a copper-chelating self-assembled monolayer, we were able to assemble a planar system containing the complete Bam complex reconstituted within a phospholipid bilayer. Structural characterization of this interfacial protein-tethered bilayer by polarized neutron reflectometry revealed distinct regions consistent with known high-resolution models of the Bam complex. Additionally, by monitoring changes of mass associated with OMP insertion by quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring, we were able to demonstrate the functionality of this system by inserting two diverse OMPs within the membrane, pertactin, and OmpT. This platform has promising application in investigating the mechanism of Bam-mediated OMP insertion, in addition to OMP function and activity within a phospholipid bilayer environment.  相似文献   

6.
The outer membrane (OM) of Gram-negative bacteria is an essential organelle that serves as a selective permeability barrier by keeping toxic compounds out of the cell while allowing vital nutrients in. How the OM and its constituent lipid and protein components are assembled remains an area of active research. In this review, we describe our current understanding of how outer membrane proteins (OMPs) are delivered to and then assembled in the OM of the model Gram-negative organism Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

7.
Francisella tularensis is a gram-negative coccobacillus that is capable of causing severe, fatal disease in a number of mammalian species, including humans. Little is known about the proteins that are surface exposed on the outer membrane (OM) of F. tularensis, yet identification of such proteins is potentially fundamental to understanding the initial infection process, intracellular survival, virulence, immune evasion and, ultimately, vaccine development. To facilitate the identification of putative F. tularensis outer membrane proteins (OMPs), the genomes of both the type A strain (Schu S4) and type B strain (LVS) were subjected to six bioinformatic analyses for OMP signatures. Compilation of the bioinformatic predictions highlighted 16 putative OMPs, which were cloned and expressed for the generation of polyclonal antisera. Total membranes were extracted from both Schu S4 and LVS by spheroplasting and osmotic lysis, followed by sucrose density gradient centrifugation, which separated OMs from cytoplasmic (inner) membrane and other cellular compartments. Validation of OM separation and enrichment was confirmed by probing sucrose gradient fractions with antibodies to putative OMPs and inner membrane proteins. F. tularensis OMs typically migrated in sucrose gradients between densities of 1.17 and 1.20 g/ml, which differed from densities typically observed for other gram-negative bacteria (1.21 to 1.24 g/ml). Finally, the identities of immunogenic proteins were determined by separation on two-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometric analysis. This is the first report of a direct method for F. tularensis OM isolation that, in combination with computational predictions, offers a more comprehensive approach for the characterization of F. tularensis OMPs.  相似文献   

8.
We successfully enriched a novel anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacterium affiliated with the genus ‘Candidatus Brocadia’ with high purity (>90%) in a membrane bioreactor (MBR). The enriched bacterium was distantly related to the hitherto characterized ‘Ca. Brocadia fulgida’ and ‘Ca. Brocadia sinica’ with 96% and 93% of 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequence identity, respectively. The bacterium exhibited the common structural features of anammox bacteria and produced hydrazine in the presence of hydroxylamine under anoxic conditions. The temperature range of anammox activity was 20–45 °C with a maximum activity at 37 °C. The maximum specific growth rate (μmax) was 0.0082 h?1 at 37 °C, corresponding to a doubling time of 3.5 days. The half-saturation constant (KS) for nitrite was 5 ± 2.5 μM. The anammox activity was inhibited by nitrite (IC50 = 11.6 mM) but not by formate and acetate. The major respiratory quinone was identified to be menaquinone-7 (MK-7). The enriched anammox bacterium shared nearly half of genes with ‘Ca. Brocadia sinica’ and ‘Ca. Brocadia fulgida’. The enriched bacterium showed all known physiological characteristics of anammox bacteria and can be distinguished from the close relatives by its 16S rRNA gene sequence. Therefore, we proposed the name ‘Ca. Brocadia sapporoensis’ sp. nov.  相似文献   

9.
The outer membrane (OM) of Gram-negative bacteria is positioned at the frontline of the cell's interaction with its environment and provides a barrier against influx of external toxins while still allowing import of nutrients and excretion of wastes. It is a remarkable asymmetric bilayer with a glycolipid surface-exposed leaflet and a glycerophospholipid inner leaflet. Lipid asymmetry is key to OM barrier function and several different systems actively maintain this lipid asymmetry. All OM components are synthesized in the cytosol before being secreted and assembled into a contiguous membrane on the other side of the cell wall. Work in recent years has uncovered the pathways that transport and assemble most of the OM components. However, our understanding of how phospholipids are delivered to the OM remains notably limited. Here we will review seminal works in phospholipid transfer performed some 40 years ago and place more recent insights in their context. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Bacterial Lipids edited by Russell E. Bishop.  相似文献   

10.
《Process Biochemistry》2010,45(3):323-334
Enrichment of anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) bacteria using five activated sludges in three domestic wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) were processed in a short term of 70 days and evaluated by real-time quantitative PCR (RTQ-PCR). Before the enrichment, building phylogenetic trees of Planctomycetes phylum in four reactors of sequencing batch reactor (SBR), anoxic and oxic reactors of anaerobic–anoxic–oxic (A2O) process, and rotating biological contactor (RBC) revealed six groups of distantly relative genera of Planctomyces, Pirellula, Gemmata, Isophaera, Candidatus and putative anammox bacteria. All clones of Candidatus sp. were affiliated with anammox bacteria and the majority of anammox clones were related to Planctomycete KSU-1 (AB057453). The discovery of anammox bacteria in raw activated sludges provided a partial rationale for the utilization of activated sludge as a seeding source of the anammox process. To verify the activity of anammox bacteria in the activated sludges, enrichment cultivations were conducted using SBRs. The enrichment of anammox bacteria resulted in the significant anammox activity of three samples. Quantification of 16S rRNA gene of anammox bacteria using RTQ-PCR showed the highest concentration of anammox bacteria of 2.48 ± 0.22 × 109 copies of 16S rRNA gene/mg-volatile suspended solids (VSS), which was the same order of magnitude as that of the referential granular anammox sludge, 6.23 ± 0.59 × 109 copies of 16S rRNA gene/mg-VSS, taken from an anammox upflow anaerobic sludge blanket (UASB) reactor. The doubling time of anammox bacteria enriched in this study was 1.18 days. The growth yield of anammox bacteria enriched in this study was 4.75 ± 0.57 × 106 copies of 16S rRNA gene/mg of ammonium- and nitrite-nitrogen, which was similar to 4.50 ± 0.61 × 106 copies of 16S rRNA gene/mg of ammonium- and nitrite-nitrogen for the referential anammox sludge. Substrate uptake rates of three successful enrichments at the end of the enrichment were comparable to those of granular and suspended anammox sludges. Rapid enrichment of anammox bacteria using activated sludge could offer an alternative method for obtaining a large volume of seeding anammox sludge.  相似文献   

11.
Folding and stability of bacterial outer membrane proteins (OMPs) are typically studied in vitro using model systems such as phospholipid vesicles or surfactant. OMP folding requires surfactant concentrations above the critical micelle concentration (cmc) and usually only occurs in neutral or zwitterionic surfactants, but not in anionic or cationic surfactants. Various Gram-negative bacteria produce the anionic biosurfactant rhamnolipid. Here we show that the OMP OmpA can be folded in rhamnolipid at concentrations above the cmc, though the thermal stability is reduced compared to the non-ionic surfactant dodecyl maltoside. We discuss implications for possible interactions between OMPs and biosurfactants in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
Despite the great progress recently made in resolving their structures, investigation of the structural biology of membrane proteins still presents major challenges. Even with new technical advances such as lipidic cubic phase crystallisation, obtaining well-ordered crystals remains a significant hurdle in membrane protein X-ray crystallographic studies. As an alternative, electron microscopy has been shown to be capable of resolving > 3.5 Å resolution detail in membrane proteins of modest (~ 300 kDa) size, without the need for crystals. However, the conventional use of detergents for either approach presents several issues, including the possible effects on structure of removing the proteins from their natural membrane environment. As an alternative, it has recently been demonstrated that membrane proteins can be effectively isolated, in the absence of detergents, using a styrene maleic acid co-polymer (SMA). This approach yields SMA lipid particles (SMALPs) in which the membrane proteins are surrounded by a small disk of lipid bilayer encircled by polymer. Here we use the Escherichia coli secondary transporter AcrB as a model membrane protein to demonstrate how a SMALP scaffold can be used to visualise membrane proteins, embedded in a near-native lipid environment, by negative stain electron microscopy, yielding structures at a modest resolution in a short (days) timeframe. Moreover, we show that AcrB within a SMALP scaffold is significantly more active than the equivalent DDM stabilised form. The advantages of SMALP scaffolds within electron microscopy are discussed and we conclude that they may prove to be an important tool in studying membrane protein structure and function.  相似文献   

13.
Outer membrane protein A (OmpA) is a component of the outer membrane of Edwardsiella tarda and is wildly distributed in Enterobacteriaceae family. The gene encoding the OmpA protein was cloned from E. tarda and expressed in Escherichia coli M15 cells. The recombinant OmpA protein containing His6 residues was estimated to have a molecular weight of ∼38 kDa. In Western blot the native protein showed expression at ∼36 kDa molecular weight which was within the range of major outer membrane proteins (36–44 kDa) observed in this study. All E. tarda isolates tested harbored the ompA gene and the antibody raised to this protein was seen to cross react with other Gram negative bacteria. The OmpA protein characterized in this study was observed to be highly immunogenic in both rabbit and fish. In Enzyme linked immunosorbent assay, rabbit antisera showed an antibody titer of 1: 128,000. Common carp vaccinated with recombinant OmpA protein elicited high antibody production and immunized fish showed a relative percentage survival of 54.3 on challenge.  相似文献   

14.
Cell-free extracts of Synechocystis 6803 were fractionated by successive ultracentrifugation at 40,000 × g, 90,000 × g and 150,000 × g to obtain the three thylakoid fractions designated as 40 k, 90 k and 150 k fractions respectively. These fractions showed differences in absorption and emission spectra. Nano-LC-ESI-Q-TOF MS analysis identified 123 proteins belonging to membrane as well as cytosolic fraction. Out of these proteins, there were 22 proteins with transmembrane helices and 12 proteins with signal peptide. There were 77 proteins common across all the three fractions. Most of these proteins were subunits of photosynthetic complexes, CF0–CF1 ATP synthase or ribosomal proteins. Among the rest of the proteins, 8 were exclusive to 40 k fraction, 3 were exclusive to 90 k fraction and 13 were exclusive to 150 k fraction. There were 10 proteins common between 40 k and 90 k fractions and 12 proteins common between 90 k and 150 k fractions. There were no common proteins detected between 40 k and 150 fractions. The results suggested existence of heterogeneity in thylakoids of Synechocystis 6803, which may lead to micro-compartmentation and functional heterogeneity in the thylakoids of this organism as seen previously.  相似文献   

15.
In this work, adrenodoxin (Adx) was expressed on the outer membrane of E. coli by autodisplay and then the iron–sulfur cluster was incorporated into apo-Adx by an anaerobic reconstitution process. For the determination of the redox potentials of the iron–sulfur clusters of the autodisplayed Adx, E. coli cells with autodisplayed Adx were immobilized on a gold electrode modified with a self-assembled monolayer of mercaptoundecanoic acid (MUA). From the repeated cyclic voltammetry (CV) analysis, the E. coli (10 mM HEPES buffer, pH 7.0) with autodisplayed Adx showed significant changes in shape with an oxidation peak at + 0.4 V (vs. Ag/AgCl) and a reduction peak at − 0.3 V (vs. Ag/AgCl) after the reconstitution process for the incorporation of the iron–sulfur cluster. From the repeated CV analysis in the reduction and oxidation potential ranges, the iron–sulfur clusters of the autodisplayed Adx were observed to undergo reversible redox reactions via direct electron transfer to the MUA-modified gold electrode.  相似文献   

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The emergence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has created the need for better therapeutic options. In this study, five natural xanthones were extracted and purified from the fruit hull of Garcinia mangostana and their antimicrobial properties were investigated. α-Mangostin was identified as the most potent among them against Gram-positive pathogens (MIC = 0.78–1.56 μg/mL) which included two MRSA isolates. α‐Mangostin also exhibited rapid in vitro bactericidal activity (3-log reduction within 5 min). In a multistep (20 passage) resistance selection study using a MRSA isolated from the eye, no resistance against α-mangostin in the strains tested was observed. Biophysical studies using fluorescence probes for membrane potential and permeability, calcein encapsulated large unilamellar vesicles and scanning electron microscopy showed that α‐mangostin rapidly disrupted the integrity of the cytoplasmic membrane leading to loss of intracellular components in a concentration-dependent manner. Molecular dynamic simulations revealed that isoprenyl groups were important to reduce the free energy for the burial of the hydrophobic phenyl ring of α-mangostin into the lipid bilayer of the membrane resulting in membrane breakdown and increased permeability. Thus, we suggest that direct interactions of α-mangostin with the bacterial membrane are responsible for the rapid concentration-dependent membrane disruption and bactericidal action.  相似文献   

18.
The outer membrane (OM) of the pathogenic diderm spirochete, Borrelia burgdorferi, contains integral β‐barrel outer membrane proteins (OMPs) in addition to its numerous outer surface lipoproteins. Very few OMPs have been identified in B. burgdorferi, and the protein machinery required for OMP assembly and OM localization is currently unknown. Essential OM BamA proteins have recently been characterized in Gram‐negative bacteria that are central components of an OM β‐barrel assembly machine and are required for proper localization and insertion of bacterial OMPs. In the present study, we characterized a putative B. burgdorferi BamA orthologue encoded by open reading frame bb0795. Structural model predictions and cellular localization data indicate that the B. burgdorferi BB0795 protein contains an N‐terminal periplasmic domain and a C‐terminal, surface‐exposed β‐barrel domain. Additionally, assays with an IPTG‐regulatable bb0795 mutant revealed that BB0795 is required for B. burgdorferi growth. Furthermore, depletion of BB0795 results in decreased amounts of detectable OMPs in the B. burgdorferi OM. Interestingly, a decrease in the levels of surface‐exposed lipoproteins was also observed in the mutant OMs. Collectively, our structural, cellular localization and functional data are consistent with the characteristics of other BamA proteins, indicating that BB0795 is a B. burgdorferi BamA orthologue.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Recent advances in the study of bacterial membranes have led to the identification of a multicomponent YaeT complex in the outer membrane (OM) of Gram-negative bacteria that is involved in the targeting and folding of beta-barrel outer membrane proteins (OMPs). In Escherichia coli, this complex consists of an essential OMP, YaeT, and three OM lipoproteins, YfgL, NlpB and YfiO. YfiO is the only essential lipoprotein component of the complex. We show that this lipoprotein is required for the proper assembly and/or targeting of OMPs to the OM but not the assembly of lipopolysaccharides (LPS). Depletion of YfiO causes similar phenotypes as does the depletion of YaeT, and we conclude that YfiO plays a critical role in YaeT-mediated OMP folding. We demonstrate that YfiO and YfgL directly interact with YaeT in vitro, while NlpB interacts directly with YfiO. Genetic analysis verifies the importance of YfiO and its interactions with NlpB in maintaining the functional integrity of the YaeT complex.  相似文献   

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