首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
The purpose of the present study was to investigate the inhibition of Vibrio by Roseobacter in a combined liquid-surface system. Exposure of Vibrio anguillarum to surface-attached roseobacters (107 CFU/cm2) resulted in significant reduction or complete killing of the pathogen inoculated at 102 to 104 CFU/ml. The effect was likely associated with the production of tropodithietic acid (TDA), as a TDA-negative mutant did not affect survival or growth of V. anguillarum.Antagonistic interactions among marine bacteria are well documented, and secretion of antagonistic compounds is common among bacteria that colonize particles or surfaces (8, 13, 16, 21, 31). These marine bacteria may be interesting as sources for new antimicrobial drugs or as probiotic bacteria for aquaculture.Aquaculture is a rapidly growing sector, but outbreaks of bacterial diseases are a limiting factor and pose a threat, especially to young fish and invertebrates that cannot be vaccinated. Because regular or prophylactic administration of antibiotics must be avoided, probiotic bacteria are considered an alternative (9, 18, 34, 38, 39, 40). Several microorganisms have been able to reduce bacterial diseases in challenge trials with fish or fish larvae (14, 24, 25, 27, 33, 37, 39, 40). One example is Phaeobacter strain 27-4 (17), which inhibits Vibrio anguillarum and reduces mortality in turbot larvae (27). The antagonism of Phaeobacter 27-4 and the closely related Phaeobacter inhibens is due mainly to the sulfur-containing tropolone derivative tropodithietic acid (TDA) (2, 5), which is also produced by other Phaeobacter strains and Ruegeria mobilis (28). Phaeobacter and Ruegeria strains or their DNA has been commonly found in marine larva-rearing sites (6, 17, 28).Phaeobacter and Ruegeria (Alphaproteobacteria, Roseobacter clade) are efficient surface colonizers (7, 11, 31, 36). They are abundant in coastal and eutrophic zones and are often associated with algae (3, 7, 41). Surface-attached Phaeobacter bacteria may play an important role in determining the species composition of an emerging biofilm, as even low densities of attached Phaeobacter strain SK2.10 bacteria can prevent other marine organisms from colonizing solid surfaces (30, 32).In continuation of the previous research on roseobacters as aquaculture probiotics, the purpose of this study was to determine the antagonistic potential of Phaeobacter and Ruegeria against Vibrio anguillarum in liquid systems that mimic a larva-rearing environment. Since production of TDA in liquid marine broth appears to be highest when roseobacters form an air-liquid biofilm (5), we addressed whether they could be applied as biofilms on solid surfaces.  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Low-G+C thermophilic obligate anaerobes in the class Clostridia are considered among the bacteria most resistant to genetic engineering due to the difficulty of introducing foreign DNA, thus limiting the ability to study and exploit their native hydrolytic and fermentative capabilities. Here, we report evidence of natural genetic competence in 13 Thermoanaerobacter and Thermoanaerobacterium strains previously believed to be difficult to transform or genetically recalcitrant. In Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum JW/SL-YS485, natural competence-mediated DNA incorporation occurs during the exponential growth phase with both replicating plasmid and homologous recombination-based integration, and circular or linear DNA. In T. saccharolyticum, disruptions of genes similar to comEA, comEC, and a type IV pilus (T4P) gene operon result in strains unable to incorporate further DNA, suggesting that natural competence occurs via a conserved Gram-positive mechanism. The relative ease of employing natural competence for gene transfer should foster genetic engineering in these industrially relevant organisms, and understanding the mechanisms underlying natural competence may be useful in increasing the applicability of genetic tools to difficult-to-transform organisms.The genera Thermoanaerobacter and Thermoanaerobacterium contain bacteria which are thermophilic, obligate anaerobes that specialize in polysaccharide and carbohydrate fermentation, producing primarily l-lactic acid, acetic acid, ethanol, CO2, and H2 (24, 27, 49). Taxonomically, they are distinguished from other anaerobic thermophilic clostridia by the ability to reduce thiosulfate to hydrogen sulfide or elemental sulfur (21). The majority of characterized Thermoanaerobacter and Thermoanaerobacterium strains have been isolated from hot springs and other thermal environments (20-22, 38, 47); however, they have also been isolated from canned foods (4, 10), soil (48), paper mills and breweries (41, 43), and deep subsurface environments (5, 13, 35), suggesting a somewhat ubiquitous environmental presence.Representatives of the Thermoanaerobacter and Thermoanaerobacterium genera have been considered for biotechnological applications, such as conversion of lignocellulosic biomass to ethanol (8, 27) or other fuels and chemicals (3, 24). However, the branched fermentation pathways of these organisms generally require modification for industrial application. Several studies have investigated manipulating bioprocess and growth conditions to alter end product ratios and yields, but this has not resulted in reliable conditions to maximize the yield of a single end product (18, 25). Genetic engineering is likely necessary for commercial application of Thermanaerobacter or Thermoanaerobacterium species (26, 27, 44). As genetic systems for these bacteria have emerged (28, 45), increased product yields have been demonstrated by gene knockout of l-lactate dehydrogenase (9, 14), phosphotransacetylase and acetate kinase (40), and hydrogenase (39). Despite this recent progress, genetic transformation is still considered the greatest barrier for engineering these organisms (44).In contrast, some of the bacteria most amenable to genetic manipulation are those exhibiting natural competence; for example, work with the naturally competent Streptococcus pneumoniae first established DNA as the molecule containing inheritable information (42). Naturally competent organisms are found in many bacterial phyla, although the overall number of bacteria known to be naturally competent is relatively small (16).The molecular mechanisms of natural competence are often divided into two stages: early-stage genes that encode regulatory and signal cascades to control competence induction, and late-stage genes that encode the machinery of DNA uptake and integration (16). The Gram-positive late-stage consensus mechanism for DNA uptake and assimilation, elucidated primarily through work with Bacillus subtilis, occurs through several molecular machinery steps. First, DNA is believed to interact with a type IV pilus (T4P) or pseudopilus that brings it into close proximity of the cell membrane. The precise mechanism of this phenomenon is unclear; although components of the T4P in both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria have been shown to bind DNA (7, 19), in specific studies, a full pilus structure has been either not observed or shown not to be essential during natural competence (6, 36). Two proteins, ComEA and ComEC, are then involved in creation and transport of single-stranded DNA across the membrane, where it is subsequently bound by CinA-localized RecA and either integrated into the genome or replicated at an independent origin, as for plasmid DNA (6).Here, we report that several Thermoanaerobacter and Thermoanaerobacterium strains are naturally competent, characterize growth conditions conducive to natural competence, and identify genes in Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum JW/SL-YS485 required for competence exhibition.  相似文献   

11.
Deleting individual genes for outer surface c-type cytochromes in Geobacter sulfurreducens partially inhibited the reduction of humic substances and anthraquinone-2,6,-disulfonate. Complete inhibition was obtained only when five of these genes were simultaneously deleted, suggesting that diverse outer surface cytochromes can contribute to the reduction of humic substances and other extracellular quinones.Humic substances can play an important role in the reduction of Fe(III), and possibly other metals, in sedimentary environments (6, 34). Diverse dissimilatory Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms (3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 19-22, 25) can transfer electrons onto the quinone moieties of humic substances (38) or the model compound anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS). Reduced humic substances or AQDS abiotically reduces Fe(III) to Fe(II), regenerating the quinone. Electron shuttling in this manner can greatly increase the rate of electron transfer to insoluble Fe(III) oxides, presumably because soluble quinone-containing molecules are more accessible for microbial reduction than insoluble Fe(III) oxides (19, 22). Thus, catalytic amounts of humic substances have the potential to dramatically influence rates of Fe(III) reduction in soils and sediments and can promote more rapid degradation of organic contaminants coupled to Fe(III) reduction (1, 2, 4, 10, 24).To our knowledge, the mechanisms by which Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms transfer electrons to humic substances have not been investigated previously for any microorganism. However, reduction of AQDS has been studied using Shewanella oneidensis (17, 40). Disruption of the gene for MtrB, an outer membrane protein required for proper localization of outer membrane cytochromes (31), inhibited reduction of AQDS, as did disruption of the gene for the outer membrane c-type cytochrome, MtrC (17). However, in each case inhibition was incomplete, and it was suggested that there was a possibility of some periplasmic reduction (17), which would be consistent with the ability of AQDS to enter the cell (40).The mechanisms for electron transfer to humic substances in Geobacter species are of interest because molecular studies have frequently demonstrated that Geobacter species are the predominant Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms in sedimentary environments in which Fe(III) reduction is an important process (references 20, 32, and 42 and references therein). Geobacter sulfurreducens has routinely been used for investigations of the physiology of Geobacter species because of the availability of its genome sequence (29), a genetic system (8), and a genome-scale metabolic model (26) has made it possible to take a systems biology approach to understanding the growth of this organism in sedimentary environments (23).  相似文献   

12.
Sister chromatid recombination (SCR) is a potentially error-free pathway for the repair of DNA lesions associated with replication and is thought to be important for suppressing genomic instability. The mechanisms regulating the initiation and termination of SCR in mammalian cells are poorly understood. Previous work has implicated all the Rad51 paralogs in the initiation of gene conversion and the Rad51C/XRCC3 complex in its termination. Here, we show that hamster cells deficient in the Rad51 paralog XRCC2, a component of the Rad51B/Rad51C/Rad51D/XRCC2 complex, reveal a bias in favor of long-tract gene conversion (LTGC) during SCR. This defect is corrected by expression of wild-type XRCC2 and also by XRCC2 mutants defective in ATP binding and hydrolysis. In contrast, XRCC3-mediated homologous recombination and suppression of LTGC are dependent on ATP binding and hydrolysis. These results reveal an unexpectedly general role for Rad51 paralogs in the control of the termination of gene conversion between sister chromatids.DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are potentially dangerous lesions, since their misrepair may cause chromosomal translocations, gene amplifications, loss of heterozygosity (LOH), and other types of genomic instability characteristic of human cancers (7, 9, 21, 40, 76, 79). DSBs are repaired predominantly by nonhomologous end joining or homologous recombination (HR), two evolutionarily conserved DSB repair mechanisms (8, 12, 16, 33, 48, 60, 71). DSBs generated during the S or G2 phase of the cell cycle may be repaired preferentially by HR, using the intact sister chromatid as a template for repair (12, 26, 29, 32, 71). Sister chromatid recombination (SCR) is a potentially error-free pathway for the repair of DSBs, which has led to the proposal that SCR protects against genomic instability, cancer, and aging. Indeed, a number of human cancer predisposition genes are implicated in SCR control (10, 24, 45, 57, 75).HR entails an initial processing of the DSB to generate a free 3′ single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) overhang (25, 48, 56). This is coupled to the loading of Rad51, the eukaryotic homolog of Escherichia coli RecA, which polymerizes to form an ssDNA-Rad51 “presynaptic” nucleoprotein filament. Formation of the presynaptic filament is tightly regulated and requires the concerted action of a large number of gene products (55, 66, 68). Rad51-coated ssDNA engages in a homology search by invading homologous duplex DNA. If sufficient homology exists between the invading and invaded strands, a triple-stranded synapse (D-loop) forms, and the 3′ end of the invading (nascent) strand is extended, using the donor as a template for gene conversion. This recombination intermediate is thought to be channeled into one of the following two major subpathways: classical gap repair or synthesis-dependent strand annealing (SDSA) (48). Gap repair entails the formation of a double Holliday junction, which may resolve into either crossover or noncrossover products. Although this is a major pathway in meiotic recombination, crossing-over is highly suppressed in somatic eukaryotic cells (26, 44, 48). Indeed, the donor DNA molecule is seldom rearranged during somatic HR, suggesting that SDSA is the major pathway for the repair of somatic DSBs (26, 44, 49, 69). SDSA terminates when the nascent strand is displaced from the D-loop and pairs with the second end of the DSB to form a noncrossover product. The mechanisms underlying displacement of the nascent strand are not well understood. However, failure to displace the nascent strand might be expected to result in the production of longer gene conversion tracts during HR (36, 44, 48, 63).Gene conversion triggered in response to a Saccharomyces cerevisiae or mammalian chromosomal DSB generally results in the copying of a short (50- to 300-bp) stretch of information from the donor (short-tract gene conversion [STGC]) (14, 47, 48, 67, 69). A minority of gene conversions in mammalian cells entail more-extensive copying, generating gene conversion tracts that are up to several kilobases in length (long-tract gene conversion [LTGC]) (26, 44, 51, 54, 64). In yeast, very long gene conversions can result from break-induced replication (BIR), a highly processive form of gene conversion in which a bona fide replication fork is thought to be established at the recombination synapse (11, 36, 37, 39, 61, 63). In contrast, SDSA does not require lagging-strand polymerases and appears to be much less processive than a conventional replication fork (37, 42, 78). BIR in yeast has been proposed to play a role in LOH in aging yeast, telomere maintenance, and palindromic gene amplification (5, 41, 52). It is unclear to what extent a BIR-like mechanism operates in mammalian cells, although BIR has been invoked to explain telomere elongation in tumors lacking telomerase (13). It is currently unknown whether LTGC and STGC in somatic mammalian cells are products of mechanistically distinct pathways or whether they represent alternative outcomes of a common SDSA pathway.Vertebrate cells contain five Rad51 paralogs—polypeptides with limited sequence homology to Rad51—Rad51B, Rad51C, Rad51D, XRCC2, and XRCC3 (74). The Rad51 paralogs form the following two major complexes: Rad51B/Rad51C/Rad51D/XRCC2 (BCDX2) and Rad51C/XRCC3 (CX3) (38, 73). Genetic deletion of any one of the rad51 paralogs in the mouse germ line produces early embryonic lethality, and mouse or chicken cells lacking any of the rad51 paralogs reveal hypersensitivity to DNA-damaging agents, reduced frequencies of HR and of sister chromatid exchanges, increased chromatid-type errors, and defective sister chromatid cohesion (18, 72, 73, 82). Collectively, these data implicate the Rad51 paralogs in SCR regulation. The purified Rad51B/Rad51C complex has been shown to assist Rad51-mediated strand exchange (62). XRCC3 null or Rad51C null hamster cells reveal a bias toward production of longer gene conversion tracts, suggesting a role for the CX3 complex in late stages of SDSA (6, 44). Rad51C copurifies with branch migration and Holliday junction resolution activities in mammalian cell extracts (35), and XRCC3, but not XRCC2, facilitates telomere shortening by reciprocal crossing-over in telomeric T loops (77). These data, taken together with the meiotic defects observed in Rad51C hypomorphic mice, suggest a specialized role for CX3, but not for BCDX2, in resolving Holliday junction structures (31, 58).To further address the roles of Rad51 paralogs in late stages of recombination, we have studied the balance between long-tract (>1-kb) and short-tract (<1-kb) SCR in XRCC2 mutant hamster cells. We found that DSB-induced gene conversion in both XRCC2 and XRCC3 mutant cells is biased in favor of LTGC. These defects were suppressed by expression of wild-type (wt) XRCC2 or XRCC3, respectively, although the dependence upon ATP binding and hydrolysis differed between the two Rad51 paralogs. These results indicate that Rad51 paralogs play a more general role in determining the balance between STGC and LTGC than was previously appreciated and suggest roles for both the BCDX2 and CX3 complexes in influencing the termination of gene conversion in mammals.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Nitrofurazone is reduced by cellular nitroreductases to form N2-deoxyguanine (N2-dG) adducts that are associated with mutagenesis and lethality. Much attention recently has been given to the role that the highly conserved polymerase IV (Pol IV) family of polymerases plays in tolerating adducts induced by nitrofurazone and other N2-dG-generating agents, yet little is known about how nitrofurazone-induced DNA damage is processed by the cell. In this study, we characterized the genetic repair pathways that contribute to survival and mutagenesis in Escherichia coli cultures grown in the presence of nitrofurazone. We find that nucleotide excision repair is a primary mechanism for processing damage induced by nitrofurazone. The contribution of translesion synthesis to survival was minor compared to that of nucleotide excision repair and depended upon Pol IV. In addition, survival also depended on both the RecF and RecBCD pathways. We also found that nitrofurazone acts as a direct inhibitor of DNA replication at higher concentrations. We show that the direct inhibition of replication by nitrofurazone occurs independently of DNA damage and is reversible once the nitrofurazone is removed. Previous studies that reported nucleotide excision repair mutants that were fully resistant to nitrofurazone used high concentrations of the drug (200 μM) and short exposure times. We demonstrate here that these conditions inhibit replication but are insufficient in duration to induce significant levels of DNA damage.Replication in the presence of DNA damage is thought to produce most of the mutagenesis, genomic rearrangements, and lethality that occur in all cells. UV-induced photoproducts, X-ray-induced strand breaks, psoralen- or cis-platin-interstrand cross-links, oxidized bases from reactive oxygen species, and base depurination are just a few of the structurally distinct challenges that the replication machinery must overcome. It seems likely that the mechanisms that process these lesions will vary depending on the nature of the impediment.While a number of the lesions described above are known to block replication, the events associated with UV-induced damage have been the most extensively characterized. UV irradiation causes the formation of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers and 6-4 photoproducts in DNA that block the progression of the replication fork (16, 29, 30, 37). Following the arrest of replication at UV-induced damage, RecA and several RecF pathway proteins are required to process the replication fork such that the blocking lesion is removed or bypassed (2, 5, 6, 8-10). Cells lacking either RecA or any of several RecF pathway proteins are hypersensitive to UV-induced damage and fail to recover replication following disruption by the lesions (2, 6, 10). RecBCD is an exonuclease/helicase complex that is involved in repairing double-strand breaks (38). It also is required for resistance to UV-induced damage, although it is not required to process or restore disrupted replication forks, and the substrates it acts upon after UV irradiation currently remain unclear (3, 10, 19).Survival and the ability to resume DNA synthesis following UV-induced damage depend predominantly on the removal of the lesions by nucleotide excision repair (5, 7, 36). Cells deficient in nucleotide excision repair are unable to remove UV-induced DNA lesions and exhibit elevated levels of mutagenesis, strand exchanges, rearrangements, and cell lethality (16, 33, 34). In cases where replication fork processing or lesion repair is prevented, the recovery of replication and survival become entirely dependent on translesion synthesis by DNA polymerase V (Pol V) (6). However, in repair-proficient cells, the contribution of translesion synthesis to recovery and survival is minor and is detected only following UV doses that exceed the repair capacity of the cell (5, 6).Less is known about how replication recovers from other forms of DNA damage. We chose to characterize nitrofurazone, because a number of studies suggested that N2-deoxyguanine (N2-dG) adducts induced by this and other agents would be processed differently than UV-induced lesions. Nitrofurazone is a topical antibacterial agent that historically has been used for treating burns and skin grafts in patients and animals (14, 15, 32). Nitrofurazone toxicity is known to require activation by cellular nitroreductases (25, 42). However, the mechanism and targets of its antimicrobial properties have yet to be fully elucidated. In addition to its antimicrobial properties, the reduced nitrofurazone metabolites also target DNA and have been shown to induce free radical damage, strand breaks, and N2-dG adducts (26, 40, 42, 45), and they are mutagenic and carcinogenic in rodent models (1, 15, 24, 39).Whereas nucleotide excision repair is the predominant mechanism required for survival after UV-induced damage, a number of studies suggest that translesion synthesis plays a larger role in survival after nitrofurazone-induced DNA damage. dinB mutants lacking Pol IV were shown to be hypersensitive to nitrofurazone compared to cells that constitutively express the polymerase (17). Biochemically, Pol IV and a number of Pol IV homologs from other organisms have been shown to efficiently replicate over a range of N2-dG adducts in vitro (17, 35, 44). In addition, several studies have reported that uvrA mutants, which are defective in nucleotide excision repair, do not exhibit any hypersensitivity to nitrofurazone or other agents that induce similar adducts in vivo (12, 21, 27). Early studies also observed a direct correlation between nitrofurazone-induced mutations and lethality, suggesting that mutagenic lesions persist in the DNA to cause toxicity (21, 23, 27, 43). Consistent with these observations, nitrofuran-induced lesions were found to be poor substrates for nucleotide excision repair in vitro (46).Taken together, these observations suggest to us that the cellular response to nitrofurazone will be distinct from its response to UV irradiation. However, no study has examined the relative contributions that nucleotide excision repair, translesion synthesis, or recombination has in recovering from nitrofurazone-induced damage. In this study, we characterized the mechanism by which nitrofurazone inhibits DNA replication and identified the genes that contribute to the recovery, survival, and mutagenesis of Escherichia coli treated with nitrofurazone. In contrast to previous studies, we found that survival following nitrofurazone-induced damage depends predominantly on nucleotide excision repair. Similarly to UV-induced DNA damage, both the RecF and RecBC pathways contribute to survival following nitrofurazone-induced DNA damage. The contribution of translesion polymerases to survival was minor and was mediated by Pol IV. In addition, we found that nitrofurazone can act to inhibit DNA replication directly when used at higher concentrations. The direct inhibition of replication is reversible and occurs independently of DNA damage, suggesting that DNA is not the primary target of its antimicrobial properties.  相似文献   

15.
The cationic lytic peptide cecropin B (CB), isolated from the giant silk moth (Hyalophora cecropia), has been shown to effectively eliminate Gram-negative and some Gram-positive bacteria. In this study, the effects of chemically synthesized CB on plant pathogens were investigated. The S50s (the peptide concentrations causing 50% survival of a pathogenic bacterium) of CB against two major pathogens of the tomato, Ralstonia solanacearum and Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria, were 529.6 μg/ml and 0.29 μg/ml, respectively. The CB gene was then fused to the secretory signal peptide (sp) sequence from the barley α-amylase gene, and the new construct, pBI121-spCB, was used for the transformation of tomato plants. Integration of the CB gene into the tomato genome was confirmed by PCR, and its expression was confirmed by Western blot analyses. In vivo studies of the transgenic tomato plant demonstrated significant resistance to bacterial wilt and bacterial spot. The levels of CB expressed in transgenic tomato plants (∼0.05 μg in 50 mg of leaves) were far lower than the S50 determined in vitro. CB transgenic tomatoes could therefore be a new mode of bioprotection against these two plant diseases with significant agricultural applications.Bacterial plant diseases are a source of great losses in the annual yields of most crops (5). The agrochemical methods and conventional breeding commonly used to control these bacterially induced diseases have many drawbacks. Indiscriminate use of agrochemicals has a negative impact on human, as well as animal, health and contributes to environmental pollution. Conventional plant-breeding strategies have limited scope due to the paucity of genes with these traits in the usable gene pools and their time-consuming nature. Consequently, genetic engineering and transformation technology offer better tools to test the efficacies of genes for crop improvement and to provide a better understanding of their mechanisms. One advance is the possibility of creating transgenic plants that overexpress recombinant DNA or novel genes with resistance to pathogens (36). In particular, strengthening the biological defenses of a crop by the production of antibacterial proteins with other origins (not from plants) offers a novel strategy to increase the resistance of crops to diseases (35, 39, 41). These antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) include such peptides as cecropins (2, 15, 20, 23-24, 27, 31, 42, 50), magainins (1, 9, 14, 29, 47), sarcotoxin IA (35, 40), and tachyplesin I (3). The genes encoding these small AMPs in plants have been used in practice to enhance their resistance to bacterial and fungal pathogens (8, 22, 40). The expression of AMPs in vivo (mostly cecropins and a synthetic analog of cecropin and magainin) with either specific or broad-spectrum disease resistance in tobacco (14, 24, 27), potato (17, 42), rice (46), banana (9), and hybrid poplar (32) have been reported. The transgenic plants showed considerably greater resistance to certain pathogens than the wild types (4, 13, 24, 27, 42, 46, 50). However, detailed studies of transgenic tomatoes expressing natural cecropin have not yet been reported.The tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is one of the most commonly consumed vegetables worldwide. The annual yield of tomatoes, however, is severely affected by two common bacterial diseases, bacterial wilt and bacterial spot, which are caused by infection with the Gram-negative bacteria Ralstonia solanacearum and Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria, respectively. Currently available pesticides are ineffective against R. solanacearum, and thus bacterial wilt is a serious problem.Cecropins, one of the natural lytic peptides found in the giant silk moth, Hyalophora cecropia (25), are synthesized in lipid bodies as proteins consisting of 31 to 39 amino acid residues. They adopt an α-helical structure on interaction with bacterial membranes, resulting in the formation of ion channels (12). At low concentrations (0.1 μM to 5 μM), cecropins exhibit lytic antibacterial activity against a number of Gram-negative and some Gram-positive bacteria, but not against eukaryotic cells (11, 26, 33), thus making them potentially powerful tools for engineering bacterial resistance in crops. Moreover, cecropin B (CB) shows the strongest activity against Gram-negative bacteria within the cecropin family and therefore has been considered an excellent candidate for transformation into plants to improve their resistance against bacterial diseases.The introduction of genes encoding cecropins and their analogs into tobacco has been reported to have contradictory results regarding resistance against pathogens (20). However, subsequent investigations of these tobacco plants showed that the expression of CB in the plants did not result in accumulation of detectable levels of CB, presumably due to degradation of the peptide by host peptidases (20, 34). Therefore, protection of CB from cellular degradation is considered to be vital for the exploitation of its antibacterial activity in transgenic plants. The secretory sequences of several genes are helpful, because they cooperate with the desired genes to enhance extracellular secretion (24, 40, 46). In the present study, a natural CB gene was successfully transferred into tomatoes. The transgenic plants showed significant resistance to the tomato diseases bacterial wilt and bacterial spot, as well as with a chemically synthesized CB peptide.  相似文献   

16.
The Target Of Rapamycin (TOR) kinase belongs to the highly conserved eukaryotic family of phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase-related kinases (PIKKs). TOR proteins are found at the core of two distinct evolutionarily conserved complexes, TORC1 and TORC2. Disruption of TORC1 or TORC2 results in characteristically dissimilar phenotypes. TORC1 is a major cell growth regulator, while the cellular roles of TORC2 are not well understood. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, Tor1 is a component of the TORC2 complex, which is particularly required during starvation and various stress conditions. Our genome-wide gene expression analysis of Δtor1 mutants indicates an extensive similarity with chromatin structure mutants. Consistently, TORC2 regulates several chromatin-mediated functions, including gene silencing, telomere length maintenance, and tolerance to DNA damage. These novel cellular roles of TORC2 are rapamycin insensitive. Cells lacking Tor1 are highly sensitive to the DNA-damaging drugs hydroxyurea (HU) and methyl methanesulfonate, similar to mutants of the checkpoint kinase Rad3 (ATR). Unlike Rad3, Tor1 is not required for the cell cycle arrest in the presence of damaged DNA. Instead, Tor1 becomes essential for dephosphorylation and reactivation of the cyclin-dependent kinase Cdc2, thus allowing reentry into mitosis following recovery from DNA replication arrest. Taken together, our data highlight critical roles for TORC2 in chromatin metabolism and in promoting mitotic entry, most notably after recovery from DNA-damaging conditions. These data place TOR proteins in line with other PIKK members, such as ATM and ATR, as guardians of genome stability.The TOR protein kinase is a major cell growth regulator that links cellular growth with cell divisions (18, 42, 64, 65). TOR is an atypical protein kinase conserved from yeast to humans that was isolated as the target of the immunosuppressive and anticancer drug rapamycin (28). TOR proteins can be found in two distinct complexes, known as TORC1 and TORC2 (27, 64). These complexes mediate their distinct cellular functions via phosphorylation and activation of different sets of AGC-like kinases, including mammalian p70S6K, downstream of TORC1, and AKT/protein kinase B (PKB) downstream of TORC2 (18). TORC1 in mammals contains mTOR (Tor1 or Tor2 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Tor2 in Schizosaccharomyces pombe) and the Raptor protein (Kog1 in S. cerevisiae; Mip1 in S. pombe). TORC1 in many different eukaryotes plays a central role in the control of growth (mass accumulation) in response to external stimuli, particularly nutrient availability. Disruption of TORC1, either by mutating its components or by rapamycin treatment, can lead to a starvation-like phenotype (64). The cellular roles of TORC2, on the other hand, are less well defined. TORC2 in mammals contains mTOR (Tor2 in S. cerevisiae; Tor1 in S. pombe) together with Rictor (Avo3 in S. cerevisiae; Ste20 in S. pombe) and mSin1 (Avo1 in S. cerevisiae; Sin1 in S. pombe). TORC2 plays a role in regulating the actin cytoskeleton and cell wall integrity pathway in S. cerevisiae (3, 15, 27), a function that is at least partially conserved in human cells (17, 47).Fission yeast contains two TOR homologues, Tor1 and Tor2 (59), which form the TORC2 and TORC1 complexes, respectively (14, 32). Disruption tor2+ (TORC1) mimics nitrogen starvation responses (1, 14, 32, 56, 57, 62), while disruption of tor1+ (TORC2) results in pleiotropic defects, including elongated cells, sensitivity to osmotic and oxidative stress, inability to execute developmental processes in response to nutrient depletion, and a decrease in amino acid uptake (16, 22, 59). Tor1 regulates cell survival under stress conditions and starvation responses via the AGC protein kinase Gad8, a putative homologue of mammalian AKT/PKB (16).In budding yeast and mammalian cells, TORC1 mediates the rapamycin-sensitive signaling branch while TORC2 is far less sensitive to inhibition by this drug (27, 48). Curiously, rapamycin does not inhibit growth of S. pombe cells but partially inhibits sexual development and amino acid uptake (60-62). Inhibition of amino acid uptake is likely a result of inhibiting Tor1 (61, 62). Accordingly, a tor1 rapamycin-defective allele (tor1S1834E) confers rapamycin resistance to strains that are dependent on amino acid uptake for their growth (61). Yet rapamycin also induces a response similar to that for a shift from rich to poor nitrogen conditions, an effect that may involve inhibition of both Tor1 and Tor2 (41).While other members of the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase-related kinase (PIKK) family of proteins, such as ATM and ATR, have been shown to play central roles in the DNA damage response, little is known about roles that TOR proteins might play in such processes. Recently it was shown that the rapamycin-sensitive TORC1 complex participates in regulating cell survival under DNA-damaging conditions (24, 42, 49). Currently, no such role has been attributed to TORC2.Here we show that Tor1 (TORC2) is critical for cell survival under DNA-damaging conditions, gene silencing at heterochromatic regions, and telomere length maintenance and for regulation of cell cycle progression. Since the TOR complexes are highly conserved in evolution, this novel TORC2 function may also be conserved in other organisms.  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
Selective substrate uptake controls initiation of macromolecular secretion by type IV secretion systems in gram-negative bacteria. Type IV coupling proteins (T4CPs) are essential, but the molecular mechanisms governing substrate entry to the translocation pathway remain obscure. We report a biochemical approach to reconstitute a regulatory interface between the plasmid R1 T4CP and the nucleoprotein relaxosome dedicated to the initiation stage of plasmid DNA processing and substrate presentation. The predicted cytosolic domain of T4CP TraD was purified in a predominantly monomeric form, and potential regulatory effects of this protein on catalytic activities exhibited by the relaxosome during transfer initiation were analyzed in vitro. TraDΔN130 stimulated the TraI DNA transesterase activity apparently via interactions on both the protein and the DNA levels. TraM, a protein interaction partner of TraD, also increased DNA transesterase activity in vitro. The mechanism may involve altered DNA conformation as TraM induced underwinding of oriT plasmid DNA in vivo (ΔLk = −4). Permanganate mapping of the positions of duplex melting due to relaxosome assembly with TraDΔN130 on supercoiled DNA in vitro confirmed localized unwinding at nic but ruled out formation of an open complex compatible with initiation of the TraI helicase activity. These data link relaxosome regulation to the T4CP and support the model that a committed step in the initiation of DNA export requires activation of TraI helicase loading or catalysis.Type IV secretion systems (T4SS) in gram-negative bacteria mediate translocation of macromolecules out of the bacterial cell (14). The transmission of effector proteins and DNA into plant cells or other bacteria via cell-cell contact is one example of their function, and conjugation systems as well as the transferred DNA (T-DNA) delivery system of the phytopathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens are prototypical of the T4SS family. Macromolecular translocation is achieved by a membrane-spanning protein machinery comprised of 12 gene products, VirB1 to VirB11 and an associated factor known as the coupling protein (VirD4) (66). The T4SS-associated coupling protein (T4CP) performs a crucial function in recognition of appropriate secretion substrates and governing entry of those molecules to the translocation pathway (7, 8, 10, 30, 41). In conjugation systems substrate recognition is applied to the relaxosome, a nucleoprotein complex of DNA transfer initiator proteins assembled specifically at the plasmid origin of transfer (oriT). In current models, initiation of the reactions that provide the single strand of plasmid (T-strand) DNA for secretion to recipient bacteria is expected to resemble the initiation of chromosomal replication (for reviews, see references 18, 54, and 81). Controlled opening of the DNA duplex is required to permit entry of the DNA processing machinery. The task of remodeling the conjugative oriT is generally ascribed to two or three relaxosome auxiliary factors, of host and plasmid origin, which occupy specific DNA binding sites at this locus. Intrinsic to the relaxosome is also a site- and strand-specific DNA transesterase activity that breaks the phosphodiester backbone at nic (5). Upon cleavage, the transesterase enzyme (also called relaxase) forms a reversible phosphotyrosyl linkage to the 5′ end of the DNA. Duplex unwinding initiating from this site produces the single-stranded T strand to be exported. A wealth of information is available supporting the importance of DNA sequence recognition and binding by relaxosome components at oriT to the transesterase reaction in vitro and for effective conjugative transfer (for reviews, see references 18, 54, and 81). On the other hand, the mechanisms controlling release of the 3′-OH generated at nic and the subsequent DNA unwinding stage remain obscure.Equally little is known about the process of nucleoprotein uptake by the transport channel. DNA-independent translocation of the relaxases TrwC (R388), MobA (RSF1010), and VirD2 (Ti plasmid) has been demonstrated; thus, current models propose that the relaxase component of the protein-DNA adduct is the substrate actively secreted by the transport system after interaction with the T4CP (42, 66). Cotransport of the covalently linked single-stranded T strand occurs concurrently (42). The mechanisms underlying relaxosome recognition by T4CPs are not understood. Direct interactions have been observed biochemically between the RP4 TraG protein and relaxase proteins of the cognate plasmid (65) and heterologous relaxosomes that it mobilizes (73, 76). TrwB of R388 interacts in vitro with relaxase TrwC and an auxiliary component, TrwA (44). TraD proteins of plasmid R1 and F are known to interact with the auxiliary relaxosome protein TraM (20) via a cluster of C-terminal amino acids (3, 62). Extensive mutagenic analyses (45) plus recent three-dimensional structural data for a complex of the TraM tetramerization domain and the C-terminal tail of TraD (46) have provided more detailed models for the intermolecular contacts involved in recognition.Application of the Cre recombinase assay for translocation of conjugative relaxases as well as effector proteins to eukaryotic cells is currently the most promising approach to elucidate protein motifs recognized by T4CPs (56, 68, 78, 79). Despite that progress, the nature of the interactions between a T4CP and its target protein that initiate secretion and the mechanisms controlling this step remain obscure. In contrast to systems dedicated specifically to effector protein translocation, conjugation systems mobilize nucleoprotein complexes that additionally exhibit catalytic activities, which can be readily monitored. These models are therefore particularly well suited to investigate aspects of regulation occurring at the physical interface of a T4CP and its secretion substrate. For this purpose the MOBF family of DNA-mobilizing systems is additionally advantageous, since DNA processing within this family features the fusion of a dedicated conjugative helicase to the DNA transesterase enzyme within a single bifunctional protein. The TraI protein of F-like plasmids, originally described as Escherichia coli DNA helicase I (1, 2, 23), and the related TrwC protein of plasmid R388 (25) are well characterized (reviewed in reference 18). Early work by Llosa et al. revealed a complex domain arrangement for TrwC (43). Similar analyses with TraI identified nonoverlapping transesterase and helicase domains (6, 77), while the remaining intermediate and C-terminal regions of the protein additionally provide functions essential to effective conjugative transfer (49, 71). The ability to physically separate the catalytic domains of TraI and TrwC has facilitated a detailed biochemical characterization of their DNA transesterase, ATPase, and DNA-unwinding reactions. Nonetheless, failure of the physically disjointed polypeptides to complement efficient conjugative transfer when coexpressed indicates a role(s) for these proteins in the strand transfer process that goes beyond the need for their dual catalytic activities (43, 50). The assignment of additional functional properties to regions within TraI is a focus of current investigation (16, 29, 49).In all systems studied thus far, conditions used to reconstitute relaxosomes on a supercoiled oriT plasmid have not supported the initiation steps necessary to enable duplex unwinding by a conjugative helicase. The question remains open whether additional protein components are required and/or whether the pathway of initiation is subject to specific repression. In the present study, we applied the IncFII plasmid R1 paradigm to investigate the potential for interaction between purified components of the relaxosome and its cognate T4CP, TraD, to exert regulatory effects on relaxosome activities in vitro. In this and in the accompanying report (72), we present evidence for wide-ranging stimulatory effects of the cytoplasmic domain of TraD protein and its interaction partner TraM on multiple aspects of relaxosome function.  相似文献   

20.
Previous studies have shown that tumor progression in the transgenic adenocarcinoma of mouse prostate (TRAMP) model is characterized by global DNA hypomethylation initiated during early-stage disease and locus-specific DNA hypermethylation occurring predominantly in late-stage disease. Here, we utilized Dnmt1 hypomorphic alleles to examine the role of Dnmt1 in normal prostate development and in prostate cancer in TRAMP. Prostate tissue morphology and differentiation status was normal in Dnmt1 hypomorphic mice, despite global DNA hypomethylation. TRAMP; Dnmt1 hypomorphic mice also displayed global DNA hypomethylation, but were characterized by altered tumor phenotype. Specifically, TRAMP; Dnmt1 hypomorphic mice exhibited slightly increased tumor incidence and significantly increased pathological progression at early ages and, conversely, displayed slightly decreased tumor incidence and significantly decreased pathological progression at advanced ages. Remarkably, hypomorphic Dnmt1 expression abrogated local and distant site macrometastases. Thus, Dnmt1 has tumor suppressor activity in early-stage prostate cancer, and oncogenic activity in late stage prostate cancer and metastasis. Consistent with the biological phenotype, epigenomic studies revealed that TRAMP; Dnmt1 hypomorphic mice show dramatically reduced CpG island and promoter DNA hypermethylation in late-stage primary tumors compared to control mice. Taken together, the data reveal a crucial role for Dnmt1 in prostate cancer and suggest that Dnmt1-targeted interventions may have utility specifically for advanced and/or metastatic prostate cancer.Changes in DNA methyltransferase (Dnmt) expression and DNA methylation are observed in human prostate cancer (3, 38, 41). Of particular interest, genes with tumor suppressive function become hypermethylated and silenced, which correlates with the development of specific disease phenotypes (2, 3, 38). Although an association between prostate cancer and alterations in DNA methylation has been established, in vivo models are required to determine whether these changes functionally contribute to the disease. In this context, studies in which pharmacological inhibitors of Dnmts were shown to inhibit prostate cancer in murine models have proven informative (34, 56). However, it remains unknown whether genetic disruption of epigenetic components, such as Dnmts, also impacts prostate cancer development. This is a critical question since the pharmacological inhibitors of Dnmts have pleiotropic effects, including those unrelated to activation of methylation-silenced genes (21, 23, 31). Moreover, no studies to date have examined whether Dnmts or DNA methylation play roles in normal prostate development; this information is vital to fully understanding the effects that inhibiting DNA methylation may have on prostate cancer.Dnmt1 is a maintenance DNA methyltransferase that propagates preexisting DNA methylation patterns in genomic DNA (44). Dnmt1 also is involved in de novo DNA methylation in cancer cells and interacts with other key epigenetic control molecules, including histone-modifying enzymes (11, 19). Murine models have been used to investigate the in vivo functions of Dnmt1. Complete genetic knockout of Dnmt1 is embryonic lethal in mice (29). However, hypomorphic expression of Dnmt1 allows murine development to proceed but causes global DNA hypomethylation and impacts cancer development and progression (7, 14, 28). Specifically, hypomorphic expression of Dnmt1 can lead to the development of lymphoma (14). Furthermore, crossing Dnmt1 hypomorphic mice with murine tumor models alters tumor progression, resulting in either increased or decreased tumor development, depending on the disease stage and tissue site (1, 7, 53). For example, reduced expression of Dnmt1 dramatically decreases intestinal polyp formation in ApcMin/+ mice, either alone or in combination with 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine treatment (7, 27). However, it was later noted that reduced expression of Dnmt1 has a dual effect on intestinal cancer in ApcMin/+ mice, in which the development of early stage intestinal microadenomas is accelerated, whereas the formation of adenomatous polyps is significantly reduced (53). In addition, ApcMin/+ Dnmt1 hypomorphic mice develop liver cancer associated with the loss of heterozygosity of Apc (53). Similarly, in Dnmt1 hypomorphic mice crossed to Mlh1−/− mice, a dual effect was noted wherein mice developed fewer intestinal cancers but displayed increased T- and B-cell lymphomas (52). In addition, a recent study demonstrated that hypomorphic Dnmt1 expression is associated with reduced squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue and esophagus, resulting in decreased invasive cancer (1). Taken together, the data suggest that Dnmt1 has diverse effects on cancer development, which are dependent on tissue context and tumor stage.TRAMP is a well-established transgenic prostate cancer model driven by prostate-specific expression of the simian virus 40 (SV40) T/t oncogenes (16). TRAMP mice are characterized by Dnmt mRNA and protein overexpression, altered DNA methylation, and altered gene expression during prostate cancer development (2, 33, 35, 37). Of the three enzymatically active Dnmts, Dnmt1 shows the greatest level of overexpression in TRAMP, and this correlates with Rb inactivation, a key genetic event driving prostate cancer in the model (37). Most critically, global DNA hypomethylation occurs during early and late disease stages, while DNA hypermethylation occurs primarily at late disease stages in TRAMP (35).Here, we utilized Dnmt1 hypomorphic mice and the TRAMP model to assess the role of DNA methylation in both normal prostatic development and prostate cancer. The Dnmt1 hypomorphic mouse model used involves two different hypomorphic alleles (N and R), resulting in four genotypes with progressively reduced DNA methylation (Dnmt1+/+, Dnmt1R/+, Dnmt1N/+, and Dnmt1N/R) (7, 52). The N allele consists of a PGK-Neo insertion that deletes a portion of exon 4 of Dnmt1, resulting in severely reduced Dnmt1 expression, while the R allele involves a lacO insertion into intron 3 of Dnmt1, which partially reduces Dnmt1 expression (7, 52). Based on our previous work establishing the timing of DNA hypomethylation and DNA hypermethylation in TRAMP, we hypothesized that hypomorphic Dnmt1 expression in TRAMP may have tumor-promoting effects at early disease stages and tumor-inhibitory effects at later stages of prostate cancer progression. Our data are consistent with this hypothesis and, more importantly, reveal a critical and unanticipated role for Dnmt1 in prostate cancer metastasis.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号