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33.
Treponema pedis and T. denticola are two genetically related species with different origins of isolation. Treponema denticola is part of the human oral microbiota and is associated with periodontitis while T. pedis has been isolated from skin lesions in animals, e.g., digital dermatitis in cattle and necrotic ulcers in pigs. Although multiple Treponema phylotypes may exist in ulcerative lesions in pigs, T. pedis appears to be a predominant spirochete in these lesions. Treponema pedis can also be present in pig gingiva. In this study, we determined the complete genome sequence of T. pedis strain T A4, isolated from a porcine necrotic ear lesion, and compared its genome with that of T. denticola. Most genes in T. pedis were homologous to those in T. denticola and the two species were similar in general genomic features such as size, G+C content, and number of genes. In addition, many homologues of specific virulence-related genes in T. denticola were found in T. pedis. Comparing a selected pair of strains will usually not give a complete picture of the relatedness between two species. We therefore complemented the analysis with draft genomes from six T. pedis isolates, originating from gingiva and necrotic ulcers in pigs, and from twelve T. denticola strains. Each strain carried a considerable amount of accessory genetic material, of which a large part was strain specific. There was also extensive sequence variability in putative virulence-related genes between strains belonging to the same species. Signs of lateral gene-transfer events from bacteria known to colonize oral environments were found. This suggests that the oral cavity is an important habitat for T. pedis. In summary, we found extensive genomic similarities between T. pedis and T. denticola but also large variability within each species.  相似文献   
34.
The root extract of Operculina turpethum (OTE) has been used as an anti-inflammatory, purgative, and hepato-protective agent. N-Nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) is a potent hepatotoxin that induces fibrosis of the liver. In the present study, we examined the therapeutic effects of OTE root extract against NDMA-induced hepatotoxicity and clastogenicity in rats. Hepatic fibrosis was induced in adult male albino rats through serial intraperitoneal administrations of NDMA at a concentration of 10 mg/kg body weight on three consecutive days of each week over a period of three weeks. A group of rats received OTE orally in doses of 75, 150 and 200 mg/kg body weight at 5 h after the administration of NDMA. The controls and treated animals were sacrificed on days-7, 14 and 21 after the start of the administration of NDMA. The progression of hepatic fibrosis as well as the amelioration effect of OTE was evaluated through histopathologically as well as by immunohistochemical staining for the activation of hepatic stellate cells. Alterations in serum and liver biochemical parameters and LDH isoenzymes were also studied. Serial administration of NDMA resulted in well formed fibrosis in the liver and induction of micronuclei in the bone marrow cells. Staining of α-SMA demonstrated activated stellate cells from day-7 onwards which was dramatically increased on day-21. An elevation of micronuclei count, liver function enzymes, serum hydroxyproline levels and LDH isoenzymes 4 and 5 were also observed. All these changes were remarkably reduced in OTE administered animals and fibrogenesis was completely absent. Our results suggest that OTE has hepatoprotective and anti-clastogenic effects against NDMA-induced hepatic fibrosis. Therefore OTE may be used as a hepatoprotective agent against various liver diseases including toxic liver injury.  相似文献   
35.
Sixteen Bacillus strains isolated from rhizosphere, histoplane and phyllosphere of different plant species were identified by 16S rDNA gene sequencing and evaluated for in vitro auxin production as well as growth stimulation of Vigna radiata (L.) Wilczek. Auxin production by Bacillus spp. in L-broth medium supplemented with 1,000 μg ml−1 L-tryptophan ranges from 0.60 to 3.0 μg IAA ml−1 as revealed by gas chromatography and mass spectrometric (GC–MS) analysis. Rhizospheric isolates exhibit relatively more IAA synthesis than histoplane and phyllosphere isolates. Plant microbe interaction experiments conducted under gnotobiotic conditions recorded 55.55, 46.46 and 46.20% increase in shoot length with Bacillus megaterium MiR-4, B. pumilus NpR-1 and B. subtilis TpP-1, respectively, over control. Bacillus inoculations also increased shoot fresh weight with B. megaterium MiR-4 (60.94%) and B. pumilus NpR-1 (37.76%). Highly significant positive correlation between auxin production analyzed by GC–MS and shoot length (r = 0.687**, P = 0.01) and shoot fresh weight (r = 0.703**, P = 0.01) was noted under gnotobiotic conditions. Similarly, significant correlation was also found between auxin production by Bacillus spp. (GC–MS analysis) and different growth parameters such as shoot length (r = 0.495*, P = 0.05), number of pods (r = 0.498*, P = 0.05) and grain weight (r = 0.537*, P = 0.05) at full maturity under natural wire house conditions. Results showed that auxin production potential of plant associated Bacillus spp. can be effectively exploited to enhance the growth and yield of V. radiata.  相似文献   
36.
A culture collection of 110 indigenous Streptomyces strains originally isolated from saline farmlands (Punjab, Pakistan) using stringent methods was screened biologically and chemically to investigate their potential for the production of bioactive secondary metabolites. In a biological screening the crude extracts obtained from the culture broth of selected strains were analysed for their activity against a set of test organisms, including Gram-positive, Gram-negative bacteria, fungi and microalgae using the disk diffusion bioassay method. Additionally a cytotoxicity test was performed by means of the brine shrimp microwell cytotoxicity assay. In a chemical screening each of the crude extracts was analysed by TLC using various staining reagents and by HPLC-MS/MS measurements. The results depicted an impressive chemical diversity of crude extracts produced by these strains. The taxonomic status of the selected strains was confirmed by preliminary physiological testing and 16S rRNA gene sequencing.  相似文献   
37.
The reduction of nitrite (NO2) into nitric oxide (NO), catalyzed by nitrite reductase, is an important reaction in the denitrification pathway. In this study, the catalytic mechanism of the copper-containing nitrite reductase from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans (AxNiR) has been studied using single and multiple turnover experiments at pH 7.0 and is shown to involve two protons. A novel steady-state assay was developed, in which deoxyhemoglobin was employed as an NO scavenger. A moderate solvent kinetic isotope effect (SKIE) of 1.3 ± 0.1 indicated the involvement of one protonation to the rate-limiting catalytic step. Laser photoexcitation experiments have been used to obtain single turnover data in H2O and D2O, which report on steps kinetically linked to inter-copper electron transfer (ET). In the absence of nitrite, a normal SKIE of ∼1.33 ± 0.05 was obtained, suggesting a protonation event that is kinetically linked to ET in substrate-free AxNiR. A nitrite titration gave a normal hyperbolic behavior for the deuterated sample. However, in H2O an unusual decrease in rate was observed at low nitrite concentrations followed by a subsequent acceleration in rate at nitrite concentrations of >10 mm. As a consequence, the observed ET process was faster in D2O than in H2O above 0.1 mm nitrite, resulting in an inverted SKIE, which featured a significant dependence on the substrate concentration with a minimum value of ∼0.61 ± 0.02 between 3 and 10 mm. Our work provides the first experimental demonstration of proton-coupled electron transfer in both the resting and substrate-bound AxNiR, and two protons were found to be involved in turnover.Denitrification is an anaerobic respiration pathway found in bacteria, archaea, and fungi, in which ATP synthesis is coupled to the sequential reduction of nitrate (NO3) and nitrite (NO2) (NO3 → NO2 → NO → N2O → N2) (13).3 The first committed step in this reaction cascade is the formation of gaseous NO by nitrite reductase (NiR), the key enzyme of this pathway. Two distinct classes of periplasmic NiR are found in denitrifying bacteria, one containing cd1 hemes as prosthetic groups (46) and the other utilizing two copper centers to catalyze the one-electron reduction of nitrite (7). Copper-containing NiRs are divided into two main groups according to the color of their oxidized type 1 copper center (T1Cu), with shades ranging from blue to green (3, 7). NiR from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans subsp. xylosoxidans (NCIMB 11015, AxNiR), which is analyzed in this study, is a member of the blue CuNiR group. The blue and green subclasses show a high degree of sequence similarity (70%) (8) and have similar trimeric structures with each monomer (∼36.5 kDa in AxNiR) consisting of two greek key β-barrel cupredoxin-like motifs as well as one long and two short α-helical regions (7, 9).Each NiR monomer contains two copper-binding sites per catalytic unit. One is a T1Cu center, which receives electrons from a physiological redox partner protein and is buried 7 Å beneath the protein surface (10), and the other copper is a type 2 center (T2Cu), constituting the catalytically active substrate-binding site (11). The physiological electron donor for the blue NiRs are the small copper protein azurin (14 kDa) (7) and cytochrome c551 (7, 12, 13). The T1Cu, which is responsible for the color of NiR, serves as the electron delivery center and is coordinated by two histidine residues as well as one cysteine and one methionine residue. The catalytic T2Cu, which like all T2Cu centers has very weak optical bands, is ligated to three His residues and an H2O/OH ligand in the resting state. This H2O/OH ligand is held in place by hydrogen bonds to the active site residues, Asp-92 (AxNiR numbering) and His-249, and gets displaced by the substrate during catalytic turnover (14). The T2Cu is located at the base of a 13–14-Å substrate access channel at the interface of two monomers with one of the three His residues being part of the adjacent subunit (15, 16). The two copper centers are connected by a 12.6-Å covalent bridge provided by the T1Cu-coordinating Cys and by one of the T2Cu His ligands (17, 18). This linkage has been suggested to constitute the electron transfer (ET) pathway from the T1Cu center to the catalytically active T2Cu center via 11 covalent bonds (19).Intramolecular ET from T1- to T2Cu has been extensively examined using pulse radiolysis studies (7, 1924). In a variety of NiR species, ET could be measured, both in the presence and absence of substrate, with observed ET rate constants (kET(obs)) ranging from ∼150 to ∼2000 s−1. According to the Marcus semi-classical ET theory (25), the redox potentials (E0, redox midpoint potential at pH 7.0) of the copper centers affect both the thermodynamic equilibrium and the ET kinetics. In the absence of substrate, the difference in the redox potentials has been found to be insignificant at pH 7 (E0 (T1Cu) ∼240 mV and E0 (T2Cu) ∼230 mV (20)), implying a thermodynamically equal electron distribution between the two metal centers. From an enzymatic point of view, however, approaching this equilibrium position on such a fast time scale (≥150 s−1) is unfavorable in the absence of substrate, as NiR has been shown to form an inactive species with a reduced T2Cu that is devoid of the H2O/OH ligand and unable to bind nitrite (26, 27). Substrate binding has been proposed to induce a favorable shift in the T2Cu redox potential, which would be expected to result in an accelerated ET compared with the substrate-free reaction (7, 16, 25, 2730). However, kET(obs) values in AxgNiR (GIFU1051) have been demonstrated to be lower in the nitrite-bound than in the substrate-free enzyme between pH 7.7 and 5.5 (21). Below pH 5.5, the ET rate constants were observed to be similar in the nitrite-free and -bound enzyme (21).In addition to changes in the redox potentials and thus in the driving force of the ET reaction, several structural changes in the redox centers have been reported as a result of substrate binding, which may also influence the inter-copper ET rate by changing the reorganization energy (16, 25, 30, 31). These rearrangements include subtle changes in the Cys-His bridge linking T1- and T2Cu (32) and conformational transitions of the catalytically relevant active site residue Asp-92 (see below and Ref. 29). Moreover, the presence of nitrite has been postulated to be relayed to the T1Cu site via the so-called substrate sensor loop (via His-94, Asp-92, and His-89 in AxNiR), thereby triggering ET to the T2Cu (19, 27, 29, 32). The tight coupling of ET to the presence of substrate has been argued to prevent the formation of a deactivated enzyme species with a prematurely reduced T2Cu (14, 16, 19, 26, 27, 33). In accordance with such a feedback mechanism, in a combined crystallographic and single-crystal spectroscopic study, inter-copper ET could only be detected in crystals where nitrite was bound to the T2Cu site, whereas in the absence of substrate no such ET was observed (34). This finding, however, contradicts the pulse radiolysis results at room temperature (see above), and the apparent discrepancy between solution studies and x-ray crystallographic data collected at cryogenic temperature remains to be resolved.The one-electron reduction of nitrite to NO involves two protons according to the chemical net equation NO2 + 2H+ + e → NO + H2O, if the T2Cu is ligated by an H2O molecule in the resting state rather than an OH ion. Although the exact enzymatic mechanism is still somewhat controversial (35, 36), one suggested reaction sequence is given in Scheme 1. The potential participation of active site residues in catalyzing the proton transfer (PT) steps has been investigated by studying the pH dependence of NiR under steady-state conditions as well as by pulse radiolysis. The trends obtained for kcat and kET(obs), are similar with pH optima between 5.2 and 6, indicating the involvement of two amino acid residues (21, 22, 37). Asp-92 and His-249 have been proposed as acid-base catalysts (18, 21, 22, 28, 38), and the abrupt drop in rates at increasing pH may indicate that OH can act as a competitive inhibitor for nitrite (39). The relevance of these active site residues, however, as well as the timing of the two protonation steps is still a matter of debate (35, 40, 41).4Open in a separate windowSCHEME 1.A potential reaction mechanism proposed for CuNiRs. Adapted from Ref. 36. Nitrite is shown to bind to the oxidized T2Cu as nitrous acid, thus involving the first protonation step. It coordinates to the oxidized T2Cu center in a bidentate fashion. Following inter-copper ET yielding a reduced T2Cu center, the initially deprotonated Asp-92 accepts a proton, which is subsequently transferred to the substrate. His-249 may be a potential source of this second proton. PT and ET reactions may be reversible and they may be concerted rather than sequential as suggested by the arrows. See text for further information.There are no experimental studies that have been aimed at directly examining the kinetic coupling of PT and ET steps in AxNiR. In this study of the blue AxNiR, our aims were to gain further insight into the mechanism of nitrite reduction by combining multiple turnover experiments with laser photoexcitation studies to measure the (single turnover) inter-copper ET. An extensive analysis of the solvent kinetic isotope effect (SKIE) has been employed as a means of determining whether solvent-exchangeable protons and/or water molecules play a rate-limiting role in the catalytic turnover and/or in inter-copper ET.  相似文献   
38.
Hemoproteins play central roles in the formation and utilization of nitric oxide (NO) in cellular signaling, as well as in protection against nitrosative stress. Key to heme-nitrosyl function and reactivity is the Fe coordination number (5 or 6). For (five-coordinate) 5c-NO complexes, the potential for NO to bind on either heme face exists, as in the microbial cytochrome c′ from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans (AxCYTcp), which forms a stable proximal 5c-NO complex via a distal six-coordinate NO intermediate and a putative dinitrosyl species. Strong parallels between the NO-binding kinetics of AxCYTcp, the eukaryotic NO sensor soluble guanylate cyclase, and the ferrocytochrome c/cardiolipin complex have led to the suggestion that a distal-to-proximal NO switch could contribute to the selective ligand responses in gas-sensing hemoproteins. The proximal NO-binding site in AxCYTcp is close to a conserved basic (Arg124) residue that is postulated to modulate NO reactivity. We have replaced Arg124 by five different amino acids and have determined high-resolution (1.07-1.40 Å) crystallographic structures with and without NO. These, together with kinetic and resonance Raman data, provide new insights into the mechanism of distal-to-proximal heme-NO conversion, including the determinants of Fe-His bond scission. The Arg124Ala variant allowed us to determine the structure of an analog of the previously unobserved key 5c-NO distal intermediate species. The very high resolution structures combined with the extensive spectroscopic and kinetic data have allowed us to provide a fresh insight into heme reactivity towards NO, a reaction that is of wide importance in biology.  相似文献   
39.
Newcastle disease virus (NDV) is an infectious agent of a large variety of birds, including chicken, which poses a real threat to the agriculture industry. Matrix (M) proteins of NDV and many other viruses perform critical functions during viral assembly and budding from the host cell. M-proteins are well conserved and therefore are potential targets for antiviral therapies. To validate this, we expressed the NDV M-protein in its native form in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and in inclusion bodies in Escherichia coli. Proper refolding of the recombinant protein produced in E. coli was verified using circular dichroism and infrared spectroscopies and electron microscopy. Immunization of chickens with the NDV M-protein elicited significant serum antibody titers. However, the antibodies conferred little protection against the ND following lethal viral challenges. We conclude that the M-protein is not exposed on the surface of the host cell or the virus at any stage during its life cycle. We discuss how the conserved M-protein can further be exploited as an antiviral drug target.  相似文献   
40.
Trichoplusia ni and Spodoptera littoralis larvae were infected with a recombinant AcNPV, having the viral polyhedrin gene replaced with the cDNA encoding firefly luciferase. Both S. littoralis and T. ni synthesized very high levels of luciferase representing greater than or equal to 25% and greater than or equal to 15%, respectively of the total Coomassie blue stainable protein. Luciferase was apparently not secreted into the hemolymph but was contained within the body tissue. Expression in S. littoralis larvae suggests that luciferase can be an excellent reporter enzyme to study virus infection, dissemination and expression in different tissues, host range determination, insect physiology and also to monitor the release of recombinant virus in the environment when used as a biocide.  相似文献   
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