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1.
Although the insertion of heme into proteins enables their function in bioenergetics, metabolism, and signaling, the mechanisms and regulation of this process are not fully understood. We developed a means to study cellular heme insertion into apo-protein targets over a 3-h period and then investigated how nitric oxide (NO) released from a chemical donor (NOC-18) might influence heme (protoporphyrin IX) insertion into seven targets that present a range of protein structures, heme ligation states, and functions (three NO synthases, two cytochrome P450's, catalase, and hemoglobin). NO blocked cellular heme insertion into all seven apo-protein targets. The inhibition occurred at relatively low (nM/min) fluxes of NO, was reversible, and did not involve changes in intracellular heme levels, activation of guanylate cyclase, or inhibition of mitochondrial ATP production. These aspects and the range of protein targets suggest that NO can act as a global inhibitor of heme insertion, possibly by inhibiting a common step in the process.  相似文献   
2.

Background

Unsafe water supplies continue to raise public health concerns, especially in urban areas in low resource countries. To understand the extent of public health risk attributed to supply water in Dhaka city, Bangladesh, Escherichia coli isolated from tap water samples collected from different locations of the city were characterized for their antibiotic resistance, pathogenic properties and genetic diversity.

Methodology/Principal Findings

A total of 233 E. coli isolates obtained from 175 tap water samples were analysed for susceptibility to 16 different antibiotics and for the presence of genes associated with virulence and antibiotic resistance. Nearly 36% (n = 84) of the isolates were multi-drug(≥3 classes of antibiotics) resistant (MDR) and 26% (n = 22) of these were positive for extended spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL). Of the 22 ESBL-producers, 20 were positive for bla CTX-M-15, 7 for bla OXA-1-group (all had bla OXA-47) and 2 for bla CMY-2. Quinolone resistance genes, qnrS and qnrB were detected in 6 and 2 isolates, respectively. Around 7% (n = 16) of the isolates carried virulence gene(s) characteristic of pathogenic E. coli; 11 of these contained lt and/or st and thus belonged to enterotoxigenic E. coli and 5 contained bfp and eae and thus belonged to enteropathogenic E. coli. All MDR isolates carried multiple plasmids (2 to 8) of varying sizes ranging from 1.2 to >120 MDa. Ampicillin and ceftriaxone resistance were co-transferred in conjugative plasmids of 70 to 100 MDa in size, while ampicillin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and tetracycline resistance were co-transferred in conjugative plasmids of 50 to 90 MDa. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis revealed diverse genetic fingerprints of pathogenic isolates.

Significance

Multi-drug resistant E. coli are wide spread in public water supply in Dhaka city, Bangladesh. Transmission of resistant bacteria and plasmids through supply water pose serious threats to public health in urban areas.  相似文献   
3.
The nitric oxide synthase of Drosophila melanogaster (dNOS) participates in essential developmental and behavioral aspects of the fruit fly, but little is known about dNOS catalysis and regulation. To address this, we expressed a construct comprising the dNOS reductase domain and its adjacent calmodulin (CaM) binding site (dNOSr) and characterized the protein regarding its catalytic, kinetic, and regulatory properties. The Ca2+ concentration required for CaM binding to dNOSr was between that of the mammalian endothelial and neuronal NOS enzymes. CaM binding caused the cytochrome c reductase activity of dNOSr to increase 4 times and achieve an activity comparable to that of mammalian neuronal NOS. This change was associated with decreased shielding of the FMN cofactor from solvent and an increase in the rate of NADPH-dependent flavin reduction. Flavin reduction in dNOSr was relatively slow following the initial 2-electron reduction, suggesting a slow inter-flavin electron transfer, and no charge-transfer complex was observed between bound NADP+ and reduced FAD during the process. We conclude that dNOSr catalysis and regulation is most similar to the mammalian neuronal NOS reductase domain, although differences exist in their flavin reduction behaviors. The apparent conservation between the fruit fly and mammalian enzymes is consistent with dNOS operating in various signal cascades that involve NO.  相似文献   
4.
The mangrove forest of Bangladesh, the largest continuous mangrove forest of the world, is one of the most important coastal features of the country. The existence of the mangrove has increased the values of other coastal and marine resources such as the coastal and marine fisheries by increasing productivity and supporting a wide biological diversity. The artisanal fishery, which is highly influenced by mangroves, has been contributing 85–95% of the total coastal and marine catch of Bangladesh. The mangrove also supports offshore and deep sea fisheries by playing a significant role as nursery ground for many deep sea fishes and shrimps including the giant tiger shrimp (Penaeus monodon) which is the major species of the industrial bottom trawl fishery of Bangladesh. The mangrove also contributes significantly in shrimp farming which has been the most significant export-oriented industry since the 1970s. However, the mangrove fisheries have been under intensive pressure from deleterious fishing activities and deliberate aquaculture development by destructing mangrove habitats. The impacts of mangrove have been reflected in the contribution of artisanal fishery catch that has been in a continuous decline since the 1980s. Shrimp farming has been the most destructive contributor to mangrove destruction with a corresponding loss of biological resources particularly the wild shrimp fishery. This paper reviews different aspects of the mangrove fisheries of Bangladesh and discusses the impacts of different fisheries. The paper identifies the importance of reviewing, amending and/or replacing the traditional management approaches by the new management techniques such as habitat restoration and stock enhancement in the natural environment; the paper also identifies the need for research findings in formulating and implementing new management approaches.  相似文献   
5.
Nitric-oxide synthases (NOSs) are calmodulin-dependent flavoheme enzymes that oxidize l-Arg to nitric oxide (NO) and l-citrulline. Their catalytic behaviors are complex and are determined by their rates of heme reduction (kr), ferric heme-NO dissociation (kd), and ferrous heme-NO oxidation (kox). We found that point mutation (E762N) of a conserved residue on the enzyme''s FMN subdomain caused the NO synthesis activity to double compared with wild type nNOS. However, in the absence of l-Arg, NADPH oxidation rates suggested that electron flux through the heme was slower in E762N nNOS, and this correlated with the mutant having a 60% slower kr. During NO synthesis, little heme-NO complex accumulated in the mutant, compared with ∼50–70% of the wild-type nNOS accumulating as this complex. This suggested that the E762N nNOS is hyperactive because it minimizes buildup of an inactive ferrous heme-NO complex during NO synthesis. Indeed, we found that kox was 2 times faster in the E762N mutant than in wild-type nNOS. The mutational effect on kox was independent of calmodulin. Computer simulation and experimental measures both indicated that the slower kr and faster kox of E762N nNOS combine to lower its apparent Km,O2 for NO synthesis by at least 5-fold, which in turn increases its V/Km value and enables it to be hyperactive in steady-state NO synthesis. Our work underscores how sensitive nNOS activity is to changes in the kox and reveals a novel means for the FMN module or protein-protein interactions to alter nNOS activity.Nitric oxide (NO)2 is a biological mediator that is produced in animals by three NO synthase isozymes (NOS, EC 1.14.13.39): inducible NOS (iNOS), neuronal NOS (nNOS), and endothelial NOS (eNOS) (1, 2). The NOS are modular enzymes composed of an N-terminal oxygenase domain and a C-terminal flavoprotein domain, with a calmodulin (CaM)-binding site connecting the two domains (3). During NO synthesis, the flavoprotein domain transfers NADPH-derived electrons through its FAD and FMN cofactors to a heme located in the oxygenase domain. The FMN-to-heme electron transfer enables heme-dependent oxygen activation and a stepwise conversion of l-Arg to NO and citrulline (4, 5). Heme reduction also requires that CaM be bound to NOS and is rate-limiting for NO biosynthesis (69).NOS enzymes operate under the constraint of having their newly made NO bind to the ferric heme before it can exit the enzyme (10). How this intrinsic heme-NO binding event impacts NOS catalytic cycling is shown in Fig. 1 and has previously been discussed in detail (1013). The l-Arg to NO biosynthetic reaction (FeIII to FeIIINO in Fig. 1) is limited by the rate of ferric heme reduction (kr), because all biosynthetic steps downstream are faster than kr. However, once the ferric heme-NO complex forms at the end of each catalytic cycle, it can either dissociate to release NO into the medium (at a rate kd as shown in Fig. 1) or become reduced by the flavoprotein domain (at a rate kr in Fig. 1; equal to kr) to form the enzyme ferrous heme-NO species (FeIINO), which releases NO very slowly (11, 12). Consequently, two cycles compete during steady-state NO synthesis (Fig. 1); NO dissociation from the ferric heme (kd) is part of a “productive cycle” that releases NO and is essential for NOS bioactivity, whereas reduction of the ferric heme-NO complex (kr′) channels the enzyme into a “futile cycle” that actually represents a NO dioxygenase activity. The rate of futile cycling is also determined by the rate of O2 reaction with the ferrous heme-NO complex (at a rate kox in Fig. 1), which regenerates the ferric enzyme. Surprisingly, NOS enzymes have evolved to have a broad range of kr (varies 40×), kox (varies 15×), and kd (varies 30×) values (Table S1) (12). This causes each NOS to distribute quite differently during steady-state NO synthesis and gives each NOS a unique catalytic profile (12).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Global kinetic model for NOS catalysis. Ferric enzyme reduction (kr) is rate-limiting for the biosynthetic reactions (central linear portion). kcat1 and kcat2 are the conversion rates of the enzyme FeIIO2 species to products in the l-Arg and Nω-hydroxy-l-arginine (NOHA) reactions, respectively. The ferric heme-NO product complex (FeIIINO) can either release NO (kd) or become reduced (kr) to a ferrous heme-NO complex (FeIINO), which reacts with O2 (kox) to regenerate ferric enzyme. Enzyme partitioning and NO release are determined by the relative rates of kr, kox, and kd. This figure is adapted from Ref. 12.The enzyme physical and electronic factors that may set and regulate each of the three kinetic parameters (kr, kox, and kd) in NOS enzymes remain to be fully described. At present, the composition of the NOS flavoprotein domain and CaM appear to be primarily responsible for determining the kr (1417), whereas the composition of the NOS oxygenase domain is presumed to determine the kd and kox (18, 19). Indeed, our recent point mutagenesis study identified a patch of electronegative residues on the FMN subdomain that are required to maintain a normal kr and NO synthesis activity in nNOS, suggesting that subdomain electrostatic interactions are important in the process (20). We found particularly large effects when the negative charge at Glu762 was neutralized via mutation to Asn. Remarkably, the NO synthesis activity of E762N nNOS was double that of wild-type nNOS, despite the mutant displaying a slow kr that was half of wild type. In the current report, we show that the E762N mutation has an additional, unsuspected effect on the kox kinetic parameter of nNOS. How this effect alters distribution of the nNOS enzyme during steady-state catalysis, impacts the apparent Km,O2, and leads to hyperactive NO synthesis is described. Our finding that the nNOS flavoprotein domain can tune a key kinetic parameter that defines the rate of a heme-based reaction in the nNOS oxygenase domain is unusual and suggests a means by which protein-protein interactions could regulate the catalytic behavior of nNOS.  相似文献   
6.

Background

Cronobacter sakazakii is considered as an emerging foodborne pathogen. The aim of this study was to isolate and characterize virulent strains of Cronobacter sakazakii from food samples of Bangladesh.

Result

Six (6) Cronobacter sakazakii was isolated and identified from 54 food samples on the basis of biochemical characteristics, sugar fermentation, SDS-PAGE of whole cell protein, plasmid profile and PCR of Cronobacter spp. specific genes (esak, gluA, zpx, ompA, ERIC, BOX-AIR) and sequencing. These strains were found to have moderately high antibiotic resistance against common antibiotics and some are ESBL producer. Most of the C. sakazakii isolates were capable of producing biofilm (strong biofilm producer), extracellular protease and siderophores, curli expression, haemolysin, haemagglutinin, mannose resistant haemagglutinin, had high cell surface hydrophobicity, significant resistance to human serum, can tolerate high concentration of salt, bile and DNase production. Most of them produced enterotoxins of different molecular weight. The isolates pose significant serological cross-reactivity with other gram negative pathogens such as serotypes of Salmonella spp., Shigella boydii, Shigella sonnei, Shigella flexneri and Vibrio cholerae. They had significant tolerance to high temperature, low pH, dryness and osmotic stress.

Conclusion

Special attention should be given in ensuring hygiene in production and post-processing to prevent contamination of food with such stress-tolerant virulent Cronobacter sakazakii.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/0717-6287-47-63) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   
7.
Soybean carbohydrate is often found to limit the use of protein in soy flour as food and animal feed due to its indigestibility to monogastric animal. In the current study, an enzymatic process was developed to produce not only soy protein concentrate and soy protein isolate without indigestible carbohydrate but also soluble reducing sugar as potential fermentation feedstock. For increasing protein content in the product and maximizing protein recovery, the process was optimized to include the following steps: hydrolysis of soy flour using an Aspergillus niger enzyme system; separation of the solid and liquid by centrifugation (10 min at 7500×g); an optional step of washing to remove entrapped hydrolysate from the protein-rich wet solid stream by ethanol (at an ethanol-to-wet-solid ratio (v/w) of 10, resulting in a liquid phase of approximately 60 % ethanol); and a final precipitation of residual protein from the sugar-rich liquid stream by heat treatment (30 min at 95 °C). Starting from 100 g soy flour, this process would produce approximately 54 g soy protein concentrate with 70 % protein (or, including the optional solid wash, 43 g with 80 % protein), 9 g soy protein isolate with 89 % protein, and 280 ml syrup of 60 g/l reducing sugar. The amino acid composition of the soy protein concentrate produced was comparable to that of the starting soy flour. Enzymes produced by three fungal species, A. niger, Trichoderma reesei, and Aspergillus aculeatus, were also evaluated for effectiveness to use in this process.  相似文献   
8.
In nitric-oxide synthases (NOSs), two flexible hinges connect the FMN domain to the rest of the enzyme and may guide its interactions with partner domains for electron transfer and catalysis. We investigated the role of the FMN-FAD/NADPH hinge in rat neuronal NOS (nNOS) by constructing mutants that either shortened or lengthened this hinge by 2, 4, and 6 residues. Shortening the hinge progressively inhibited electron flux through the calmodulin (CaM)-free and CaM-bound nNOS to cytochrome c, whereas hinge lengthening relieved repression of electron flux in CaM-free nNOS and had no impact or slowed electron flux through CaM-bound nNOS to cytochrome c. How hinge length influenced heme reduction depended on whether enzyme flavins were pre-reduced with NADPH prior to triggering heme reduction. Without pre-reduction, changing the hinge length was deleterious; with pre-reduction, the hinge shortening was deleterious, and hinge lengthening increased heme reduction rates beyond wild type. Flavin fluorescence and stopped-flow kinetic studies on CaM-bound enzymes suggested hinge lengthening slowed the domain-domain interaction needed for FMN reduction. All hinge length changes lowered NO synthesis activity and increased uncoupled NADPH consumption. We conclude that several aspects of catalysis are sensitive to FMN-FAD/NADPH hinge length and that the native hinge allows a best compromise among the FMN domain interactions and associated electron transfer events to maximize NO synthesis and minimize uncoupled NADPH consumption.  相似文献   
9.
The FMN module of nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) plays a pivotal role by transferring NADPH-derived electrons to the enzyme heme for use in oxygen activation. The process may involve a swinging mechanism in which the same face of the FMN module accepts and provides electrons during catalysis. Crystal structure shows that this face of the FMN module is electronegative, whereas the complementary interacting surface is electropositive, implying that charge interactions enable function. We used site-directed mutagenesis to investigate the roles of six electronegative surface residues of the FMN module in electron transfer and catalysis in neuronal NOS. Results are interpreted in light of crystal structures of NOS and related flavoproteins. Neutralizing or reversing the negative charge of each residue altered the NO synthesis, NADPH oxidase, and cytochrome c reductase activities of neuronal NOS and also altered heme reduction. The largest effects occurred at the NOS-specific charged residue Glu(762). Together, the results suggest that electrostatic interactions of the FMN module help to regulate electron transfer and to minimize flavin autoxidation and the generation of reactive oxygen species during NOS catalysis.  相似文献   
10.
Neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) contains a unique autoinhibitory insert (AI) in its FMN subdomain that represses nNOS reductase activities and controls the calcium sensitivity of calmodulin (CaM) binding to nNOS. How the AI does this is unclear. A conserved charged residue (Lys842) lies within a putative CaM binding helix in the middle of the AI. We investigated its role by substituting residues that neutralize (Ala) or reverse (Glu) the charge at Lys842. Compared with wild type nNOS, the mutant enzymes had greater cytochrome c reductase and NADPH oxidase activities in the CaM-free state, were able to bind CaM at lower calcium concentration, and had lower rates of heme reduction and NO synthesis in one case (K842A). Moreover, stopped-flow spectrophotometric experiments with the nNOS reductase domain indicate that the CaM-free mutants had faster flavin reduction kinetics and had less shielding of their FMN subdomains compared with wild type and no longer increased their level of FMN shielding in response to NADPH binding. Thus, Lys842 is critical for the known functions of the AI and also enables two additional functions of the AI as newly identified here: suppression of electron transfer to FMN and control of the conformational equilibrium of the nNOS reductase domain. Its effect on the conformational equilibrium probably explains suppression of catalysis by the AI.  相似文献   
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