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 15 毫秒
1.
A systematic genetic analysis was performed to identify the inner membrane proteins essential for type IV pilus (T4P) expression in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. By inactivating the retraction aspect of pilus function, genes essential for T4P assembly were discriminated. In contrast to previous studies in the T4P system of Neisseria spp., we found that components of the inner membrane subcomplex consisting of PilMNOP were not essential for surface pilus expression, whereas the highly conserved inner membrane protein PilC was essential. Here, we present data that PilC may coordinate the activity of cytoplasmic polymerization (PilB) and depolymerization (PilT) ATPases via their interactions with its two cytoplasmic domains. Using in vitro co-affinity purification, we show that PilB interacts with the N-terminal cytoplasmic domain of PilC. We hypothesized that PilT similarly interacts with the PilC C-terminal cytoplasmic domain. Overexpression of that domain in the wild-type protein reduced twitching motility by ∼50% compared with the vector control. Site-directed mutagenesis of conserved T4P-specific residues in the PilC C-terminal domain yielded mutant proteins that supported wild-type pilus assembly but had a reduced capacity to support twitching motility, suggesting impairment of putative PilC-PilT interactions. Taken together, our results show that PilC is an essential inner membrane component of the T4P system, controlling both pilus assembly and disassembly.  相似文献   

2.
The type IV pilus (T4P) system of Neisseria gonorrhoeae is the strongest linear molecular motor reported to date, but it is unclear whether high-force generation is conserved between bacterial species. Using laser tweezers, we found that the average stalling force of single-pilus retraction in Myxococcus xanthus of 149 ± 14 pN exceeds the force generated by N. gonorrhoeae. Retraction velocities including a bimodal distribution were similar between M. xanthus and N. gonorrhoeae, but force-dependent directional switching was not. Force generation by pilus retraction is energized by the ATPase PilT. Surprisingly, an M. xanthus mutant lacking PilT apparently still retracted T4P, although at a reduced frequency. The retraction velocity was comparable to the high-velocity mode in the wild type at low forces but decreased drastically when the force increased, with an average stalling force of 70 ± 10 pN. Thus, M. xanthus harbors at least two different retraction motors. Our results demonstrate that the major physical properties are conserved between bacteria that are phylogenetically distant and pursue very different lifestyles.Type IV pili (T4P) are among the most widespread cell surface appendages in bacteria and have been found in beta-, gamma-, delta-, and epsilonproteobacteria and cyanobacteria, as well as in firmicutes (27). As opposed to other filamentous surface structures, T4P are highly dynamic structures and undergo cycles of extension and retraction (22, 30, 34). During the retraction step, sufficient force is generated to pull a bacterial cell forward in a type of surface movement referred to as twitching motility (30). The dynamic behavior is central to most of the functions of T4P, which in addition to cell motility, include surface adhesion, horizontal gene transfer, biofilm formation, and protein secretion (3).T4P are thin (5- to 8-nm) flexible filaments with a length of several micrometers (7). A core set of 10 proteins is conserved between different T4P systems and is required for T4P dynamics in Myxococcus xanthus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Neisseria meningitidis, and Synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803 (24, 27). Genetic and biochemical data suggest that the proteins required for T4P function interact to form a complex that spans the cell envelope (2, 9, 10, 14, 28). The molecular mechanism underlying the assembly of T4P involves the incorporation of pilin subunits in the base of the pilus (8) from a reservoir in the cytoplasmic membrane (15, 30), and retraction involves the removal and transfer of pilin subunits from the pilus base into the cytoplasmic membrane (23). Genetic and biochemical evidence suggest that assembly of T4P is energized by ATP hydrolysis by the assembly ATPase PilB (PilF in Neisseria spp.) (15, 29) and that T4P retraction is energized by ATP hydrolysis by the retraction ATPase PilT (5, 11, 15).The soil-dwelling bacterium M. xanthus (a rod-shaped bacterium belonging to the deltaproteobacteria) requires T4P-dependent motility for the formation of spreading colonies in vegetative cells and fruiting bodies in starving cells. T4P extension and retraction have not been quantified in M. xanthus; however, indirect evidence for T4P retraction was obtained by characterizing the “jiggling” movement of isolated, individual M. xanthus cells adhering to polystyrene-coated surfaces (34).The dynamics and force generation of individual T4P have been characterized in detail in the human pathogen N. gonorrhoeae (6, 19-21), a diplococcus belonging to the betaproteobacteria. Generation of high forces in the range of 110 pN is a remarkable quality of T4P retractions in N. gonorrhoeae (21). It has been suggested that high-force generation may have evolved with the “lifestyle” of N. gonorrhoeae to induce signaling processes in the host cells during infections and to induce cytoprotection and cytoskeletal rearrangements (13). Here, we show that T4P retractions in M. xanthus, which lives in an entirely different habitat, has a different morphology, and is phylogenetically distant from N. gonorrhoeae, generate high forces in the range of 150 pN. On the basis of these observations, we suggest that high-force generation and bimodal velocity distributions are inherent properties of all T4P systems independent of phylogeny and bacterial lifestyle. Intriguingly, retractions still occurred at a low frequency in an M. xanthus strain lacking PilT, providing evidence for a PilT-independent retraction mechanism in M. xanthus. The physical characteristics of the PilT-independent T4P retractions were distinct from those in a PilT+ strain.  相似文献   

3.
4.
PilA, the major pilin subunit of Pseudomonas aeruginosa type IV pili (T4P), is a principal structural component. PilA has a conserved C-terminal disulfide-bonded loop (DSL) that has been implicated as the pilus adhesinotope. Structural studies have suggested that DSL is involved in intersubunit interactions within the pilus fiber. PilA mutants with single-residue substitutions, insertions, or deletions in the DSL were tested for pilin stability, pilus assembly, and T4P function. Mutation of either Cys residue of the DSL resulted in pilins that were unable to assemble into fibers. Ala replacements of the intervening residues had a range of effects on assembly or function, as measured by changes in surface pilus expression and twitching motility. Modification of the C-terminal P-X-X-C type II beta-turn motif, which is one of the few highly conserved features in pilins across various species, caused profound defects in assembly and twitching motility. Expression of pilins with suspected assembly defects in a pilA pilT double mutant unable to retract T4P allowed us to verify which subunits were physically unable to assemble. Use of two different PilA antibodies showed that the DSL may be an immunodominant epitope in intact pili compared with pilin monomers. Sequence diversity of the type IVa pilins likely reflects an evolutionary compromise between retention of function and antigenic variation. The consequences of DSL sequence changes should be evaluated in the intact protein since it is technically feasible to generate DSL-mimetic peptides with mutations that will not appear in the natural repertoire due to their deleterious effects on assembly.The gram-negative opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa uses polar type IV pili (T4P) to attach to various materials, to move across surfaces via twitching motility, and to initiate host colonization and biofilm formation. T4P are widely distributed among bacteria and have been most extensively studied in Neisseria spp., Escherichia coli, Vibrio cholerae, and P. aeruginosa (8, 16, 42). T4P are divided into two major groups, type IVa and type IVb pili (T4aP and T4bP, respectively); there are several differences that distinguish these subfamilies (reviewed in reference 16). Most P. aeruginosa strains express T4aP composed of one of five different variants of the 15- to 17-kDa PilA protein (37).The crystal structures of N-terminally truncated or full-length forms of PilA from P. aeruginosa strains PAK and K122-4 have been solved (17, 18, 28, 34), as has the structure of the type IVa pilin from Neisseria gonorrhoeae MS11, called PilE (45). The pilins have a ladle-like structure, with a long, hydrophobic, kinked N-terminal alpha helix joined to a C-terminal domain of antiparallel beta-sheet architecture, terminating in a characteristic disulfide-bonded loop (DSL; also called the D-region). In a recent report describing the cryo-electron microscopy-derived ultrastructure of an assembled type IV pilus from N. gonorrhoeae, Craig and colleagues confirmed the predictions of earlier models that the N-terminal alpha helices of the subunits form the hydrophobic core of the fiber, with the hydrophilic C-terminal beta sheet and loop domains forming its outer surface (17).P. aeruginosa T4P mediate attachment to, and twitching motility on, an astonishing array of living and nonliving surfaces, from stainless steel and plastic to living cells (15, 20, 22, 25, 27, 44), contributing to the ability of this organism to cause opportunistic infections in a wide range of hosts. Twitching motility involves cycles of pilus extension, adherence, and subsequent pilus retraction that pulls the cell body forward (51). For twitching to occur, the pilus must adhere with sufficient strength that retraction of the pilus will result in translocation of the cell, overcoming the combination of surface tension and other cell surface adhesins that hold the cell body in place.Most bacterial pili, such as the types 1 and P pili of uropathogenic E. coli, are composed of separate structural (FimA and PapA) and adhesive (FimH and PapG) subunits, with the adhesive subunit present only at the tip of the pilus fiber (7, 32). P. aeruginosa T4P are unusual in this respect, in that the PilA subunit has been reported to act as both the main structural component and the tip adhesin (39, 50). The C-terminal DSL of the PilA subunit has been shown to mediate attachment of piliated P. aeruginosa to host cells and to abiotic surfaces such as stainless steel (25, 39, 50). This subdomain of PilA was shown by immunogold labeling studies to be exposed only at the pilus tip, suggesting that it is otherwise masked by adjacent subunits in the assembled pilus (39). These data are consistent with recent ultrastructural studies of N. gonorrhoeae T4P, which suggest that the C termini of the pilins are involved in intersubunit contacts throughout the length of the pilus fiber (17).To address the roles of specific residues within the DSL in host cell attachment, Wong and colleagues synthesized peptides corresponding to C-terminal residues 128 to 144 of the pilins from strains PAK and KB7, as well as analogues thereof containing Ala substitutions at each position (57). The peptides were oxidized to allow disulfide bond formation and used in a competition assay, measuring their ability to block binding of biotinylated PAK pili to buccal epithelial cells. Their study confirmed earlier observations that the Cys residues involved in disulfide bond formation contributed significantly to adhesin function and implicated a number of other residues in binding. However, a single adhesinotope common to both peptides could not be defined since they have only partial sequence identity. Conserved residues contributing to conformational elements, particularly type I and type II beta turns, were found to be important while a conserved hydrophobic residue (F137 in the PAK pilin) was not crucial for binding (57).As a prelude to studies examining the effects of sequence variation within the key DSL region on the adhesive capacity of the pilin subunit, we investigated the effects of PilA mutations on its multiple functions, including participation in protein secretion via the structurally related type II secretion (T2S) system in P. aeruginosa. A previous study (41) reported that PilA could form heterodimers with XcpT, the major pseudopilin of the Xcp T2S, and that PilA mutants were defective in T2S of proteases. In this work, the pilA gene from the laboratory strain PAO1 was mutagenized to generate single-residue variants of PilA that were expressed from an l-arabinose-inducible promoter in a pilA mutant background. This approach permitted the simultaneous interrogation of the effects of the mutations on pilin stability, assembly, and function in terms of twitching motility and pilus-specific bacteriophage susceptibility, as well as potential dominant-negative effects in the wild type upon induction. Here, we show that it is possible to identify single-residue variants of PilA that are affected in each step of pilus assembly and function.  相似文献   

5.
Type IV pili (T4P) contain hundreds of major subunits, but minor subunits are also required for assembly and function. Here we show that Pseudomonas aeruginosa minor pilins prime pilus assembly and traffic the pilus-associated adhesin and anti-retraction protein, PilY1, to the cell surface. PilV, PilW, and PilX require PilY1 for inclusion in surface pili and vice versa, suggestive of complex formation. PilE requires PilVWXY1 for inclusion, suggesting that it binds a novel interface created by two or more components. FimU is incorporated independently of the others and is proposed to couple the putative minor pilin-PilY1 complex to the major subunit. The production of small amounts of T4P by a mutant lacking the minor pilin operon was traced to expression of minor pseudopilins from the P. aeruginosa type II secretion (T2S) system, showing that under retraction-deficient conditions, T2S minor subunits can prime T4P assembly. Deletion of all minor subunits abrogated pilus assembly. In a strain lacking the minor pseudopilins, PilVWXY1 and either FimU or PilE comprised the minimal set of components required for pilus assembly. Supporting functional conservation of T2S and T4P minor components, our 1.4 Å crystal structure of FimU revealed striking architectural similarity to its T2S ortholog GspH, despite minimal sequence identity. We propose that PilVWXY1 form a priming complex for assembly and that PilE and FimU together stably couple the complex to the major subunit. Trafficking of the anti-retraction factor PilY1 to the cell surface allows for production of pili of sufficient length to support adherence and motility.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a Gram-negative opportunistic pathogen that trimethylates elongation factor-thermo-unstable (EF-Tu) on lysine 5. Lysine 5 methylation occurs in a temperature-dependent manner and is generally only seen when P. aeruginosa is grown at temperatures close to ambient (25 °C) but not at higher temperatures (37 °C). We have previously identified the gene, eftM (for EF-Tu-modifying enzyme), responsible for this modification and shown its activity to be associated with increased bacterial adhesion to and invasion of respiratory epithelial cells. Bioinformatic analyses predicted EftM to be a Class I S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM)-dependent methyltransferase. An in vitro methyltransferase assay was employed to show that, in the presence of SAM, EftM directly trimethylates EF-Tu. A natural variant of EftM, with a glycine to arginine substitution at position 50 in the predicted SAM-binding domain, lacks both SAM binding and enzyme activity. Mass spectrometry analysis of the in vitro methyltransferase reaction products revealed that EftM exclusively methylates at lysine 5 of EF-Tu in a distributive manner. Consistent with the in vivo temperature dependence of methylation of EF-Tu, preincubation of EftM at 37 °C abolished methyltransferase activity, whereas this activity was retained when EftM was preincubated at 25 °C. Irreversible protein unfolding at 37 °C was observed, and we propose that this instability is the molecular basis for the temperature dependence of EftM activity. Collectively, our results show that EftM is a thermolabile, SAM-dependent methyltransferase that directly trimethylates lysine 5 of EF-Tu in P. aeruginosa.  相似文献   

8.
铜绿假单胞菌由于对抗生素的固有耐药和多重抗药性, 已成为医院内感染的重要病原菌之一。谷胱甘肽是细胞内最重要的抗氧化剂, 保护细胞免受氧化压力的损害。但是在铜绿假单胞菌感染的组织中, 由于绿脓菌素等致病因子的存在, 可以导致谷胱甘肽的水平降低。同时, 谷胱甘肽又可以增强绿脓菌素的致病性。本文就谷胱甘肽与铜绿假单胞菌关系的最新研究进展并结合作者的工作, 对上述问题进行了综述和探讨。  相似文献   

9.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa uses type IV pili to colonize various materials and for surface-associated twitching motility. We previously identified five phylogenetically distinct alleles of pilA in P. aeruginosa, four of which occur in genetic cassettes with specific accessory genes (J. V. Kus, E. Tullis, D. G. Cvitkovitch, and L. L. Burrows, Microbiology 150:1315-1326, 2004). Each of the five pilin alleles, with and without its associated pilin accessory gene, was used to complement a group II PAO1 pilA mutant. Expression of group I or IV pilA genes restored twitching motility to the same extent as the PAO1 group II pilin. In contrast, poor twitching resulted from complementation with group III or group V pilA genes but increased significantly when the cognate tfpY or tfpZ accessory genes were cointroduced. The enhanced motility was linked to an increase in recoverable surface pili and not to alterations in total pilin pools. Expression of the group III or V pilins in a PAO1 pilA-pilT double mutant yielded large amounts of surface pili, regardless of the presence of the accessory genes. Therefore, poor piliation in the absence of the TfpY and TfpZ accessory proteins results from a net increase in PilT-mediated retraction. Similar phenotypes were observed for tfpY single and tfpY-pilT double knockout mutants of group III strain PA14. A PilAV-TfpY chimera produced few surface pili, showing that the accessory proteins are specific for their cognate pilin. The genetic linkage between specific pilin and accessory genes may be evolutionarily conserved because the accessory proteins increase pilus expression on the cell surface, thereby enhancing function.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) is the leading bacterial cause of diarrhea in the developing world, as well as the most common cause of traveler''s diarrhea. The main hallmarks of this type of bacteria are the expression of one or more enterotoxins and fimbriae used for attachment to host intestinal cells. Longus is a pilus produced by ETEC. These bacteria grown in pleuropneumonia-like organism (PPLO) broth at 37°C and in 5% CO2 produced longus, showing that the assembly and expression of the pili depend on growth conditions and composition of the medium. To explore the role of longus in the adherence to epithelial cells, quantitative and qualitative analyses were done, and similar levels of adherence were observed, with values of 111.44 × 104 CFU/ml in HT-29, 101.33 × 104 CFU/ml in Caco-2, and 107.11 × 104 CFU/ml in T84 cells. In addition, the E9034AΔlngA strain showed a significant reduction in longus adherence of 32% in HT-29, 22.28% in Caco-2, and 21.68% in T84 cells compared to the wild-type strain. In experiments performed with nonintestinal cells (HeLa and HEp-2 cells), significant differences were not observed in adherence between E9034A and derivative strains. Interestingly, the E9034A and E9034AΔlngA(pLngA) strains were 30 to 35% more adherent in intestinal cells than in nonintestinal cells. Twitching motility experiments were performed, showing that ETEC strains E9034A and E9034AΔlngA(pLngA) had the capacity to form spreading zones while ETEC E9034AΔlngA does not. In addition, our data suggest that longus from ETEC participates in the colonization of human colonic cells.Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) is an important cause of infant diarrhea in developing countries, a leading cause of traveler''s diarrhea, and a reemergent diarrheal pathogen in the United States (1, 25, 29, 33, 38, 40, 41, 44, 51, 52, 55). ETEC strains were first recognized as a cause of diarrheal disease in animals, especially in piglets and calves, where the disease continues to cause lethal infection in newborn animals (3, 37). Studies of ETEC in piglets first elucidated the mechanisms of disease, including the presence of two plasmid-encoded enterotoxins. In humans, the clinical appearance of ETEC infection is identical to that of cholera, with severe dehydrating illness not commonly seen in adults (38, 46). DuPont et al. (12) subsequently showed that ETEC strains were able to cause diarrhea in adult volunteers. ETEC strains cause watery diarrhea similar to that caused by Vibrio cholerae through the action of two enterotoxins, the cholera-like heat-labile and heat-stable enterotoxins (LT and ST, respectively) (38). These strains may express an LT only, an ST only, or both LT and ST. To cause diarrhea, ETEC strains must first adhere to small bowel enterocytes, an event mediated by a variety of surface fimbrial appendages called colonization factor antigens (CFAs), coli surface antigens (CSs), and putative colonization factors (PCF) (22, 33, 38). Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of ETEC strains typically reveals many peritrichously arranged fimbriae around the bacterium; often, multiple fimbrial morphologies can be visualized on the same bacterium (6, 19, 31, 38). ETEC strains also express the K99 fimbriae, which are pathogenic for calves, lambs, and pigs, whereas K88-expressing organisms are able to cause disease only in pigs (8). Human ETEC strains possess their own array of colonization fimbriae, the CFAs usually encoded in plasmids (10). Currently, more than 20 CFAs known in human ETEC infections have been described (17). The CFAs can be subdivided based on their morphological characteristics. Three major morphological varieties exist: rigid rods (CFA I), bundle-forming flexible rods (CFA III), and thin, flexible, wiry structures (CFA II and CFA IV) (7, 8, 26, 30, 49, 53, 54).A high proportion of human ETEC strains contain a plasmid-encoded type IV pilus (T4P) antigen (CS20) also called longus for its length (19, 21). Longus is a T4P composed of a repeating structural subunit called LngA of 22 kDa, and its N-terminal amino acid sequences shares similarities with the class B type IV pili. These pili include the CFA III pilin subunit CofA of ETEC, the toxin-coregulated pilin (TCP) of V. cholerae, and the bundle-forming pilin (BFP) found in enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) and in a small percentage in other Gram-negative pathogens (21, 23). The lngA gene, which encodes the longus pilus in ETEC strains, is widely distributed in different geographic regions such Bangladesh, Chile, Brazil, Egypt, and Mexico (23). Interestingly, the lngA gene has been observed in association with ETEC strain producers of LT and ST (23). Sequence analysis of the fimbrial genes provided insight into the evolutionary history of longus. It appears that the highly conserved nonstructural lngA genes evolved in a similar manner to that of housekeeping genes.Recently, another important adherence factor called E. coli common pilus (ECP) has been identified; it is composed of a 21-kDa pilin subunit whose amino acid sequence corresponds to the product of the yagZ (renamed ecpA) gene present in all E. coli genomes sequenced to date (47). ECP production was demonstrated in strains representing intestinal (enterohemorrhagic E. coli [EHEC], EPEC, and ETEC) and extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli as well as normal-flora E. coli.In this study we report that longus plays an important role in the adherence to colonic epithelial cells. In addition to mediating cell adherence, longus is also associated with other pathogenicity attributes exhibited by other Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria producing T4P, which can contribute in part to the virulence of ETEC.  相似文献   

12.
Twitching motility allows Pseudomonas aeruginosa to respond to stimuli by extending and retracting its type IV pili (TFP). PilJ is a protein necessary for this surface-associated twitching motility and bears high sequence identity with Escherichia coli methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCP). Here, we report that whereas wild-type P. aeruginosa PAO1 cells have extended pili at a single pole, pilJ mutant cells have shortened pili often at both poles despite normal levels of pilin accumulation, suggesting that PilJ is required for full TFP assembly/extension. Using yellow fluorescent protein fusions (pilJ-yfp), both plasmid born and in-frame chromosomal constructs, we determined that PilJ localizes to both poles of the cell. Overexpression of pilJ-yfp resulted in the protein accumulating between the poles. Paul DeLange and Tracy Collins contributed equally to this work.  相似文献   

13.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a Gram-negative, opportunistic pathogen that utilizes polar type IV pili (T4P) for twitching motility and adhesion in the environment and during infection. Pilus assembly requires FimX, a GGDEF/EAL domain protein that binds and hydrolyzes cyclic di-GMP (c-di-GMP). Bacteria lacking FimX are deficient in twitching motility and microcolony formation. We carried out an extragenic suppressor screen in PA103ΔfimX bacteria to identify additional regulators of pilus assembly. Multiple suppressor mutations were mapped to PA0171, PA1121 (yfiR), and PA3703 (wspF), three genes previously associated with small-colony-variant phenotypes. Multiple independent techniques confirmed that suppressors assembled functional surface pili, though at both polar and nonpolar sites. Whole-cell c-di-GMP levels were elevated in suppressor strains, in agreement with previous studies that had shown that the disrupted genes encoded negative regulators of diguanylate cyclases. Overexpression of the regulated diguanylate cyclases was sufficient to suppress the ΔfimX pilus assembly defect, as was overexpression of an unrelated diguanylate cyclase from Caulobacter crescentus. Furthermore, under natural conditions of high c-di-GMP, PA103ΔfimX formed robust biofilms that showed T4P staining and were structurally distinct from those formed by nonpiliated bacteria. These results are the first demonstration that P. aeruginosa assembles a surface organelle, type IV pili, over a broad range of c-di-GMP concentrations. Assembly of pili at low c-di-GMP concentrations requires a polarly localized c-di-GMP binding protein and phosphodiesterase, FimX; this requirement for FimX is bypassed at high c-di-GMP concentrations. Thus, P. aeruginosa can assemble the same surface organelle in distinct ways for motility or adhesion under very different environmental conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Candida albicans is the most frequent cause of oral fungal infections. However, the exact pathogenicity mechanisms that this fungus employs are largely unknown and many of the genes expressed during oral infection are uncharacterized. In this study we sought to functionally characterize 12 previously unknown function genes associated with oral candidiasis. We generated homozygous knockout mutants for all 12 genes and analyzed their interaction with human oral epithelium in vitro. Eleven mutants caused significantly less epithelial damage and, of these, deletion of orf19.6656 (DUR31) elicited the strongest reduction in pathogenicity. Interestingly, DUR31 was not only involved in oral epithelial damage, but in multiple stages of candidiasis, including surviving attack by human neutrophils, endothelial damage and virulence in vivo. In silico analysis indicated that DUR31 encodes a sodium/substrate symporter with 13 transmembrane domains and no human homologue. We provide evidence that Dur31 transports histatin 5. This is one of the very first examples of microbial driven import of this highly cytotoxic antimicrobial peptide. Also, in contrast to wild type C. albicans, dur31Δ/Δ was unable to actively increase local environmental pH, suggesting that Dur31 lies in the extracellular alkalinization hyphal auto-induction pathway; and, indeed, DUR31 was required for morphogenesis. In agreement with this observation, dur31Δ/Δ was unable to assimilate the polyamine spermidine.  相似文献   

15.
Clinical infections by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a deadly Gram-negative, opportunistic pathogen of immunocompromised hosts, often involve the formation of antibiotic-resistant biofilms. Although biofilm formation has been extensively studied in vitro on glass or plastic surfaces, much less is known about biofilm formation at the epithelial barrier. We have previously shown that when added to the apical surface of polarized epithelial cells, P. aeruginosa rapidly forms cell-associated aggregates within 60 minutes of infection. By confocal microscopy we now show that cell-associated aggregates exhibit key characteristics of biofilms, including the presence of extracellular matrix and increased resistance to antibiotics compared to planktonic bacteria. Using isogenic mutants in the type III secretion system, we found that the translocon, but not the effectors themselves, were required for cell-associated aggregation on the surface of polarized epithelial cells and at early time points in a murine model of acute pneumonia. In contrast, the translocon was not required for aggregation on abiotic surfaces, suggesting a novel function for the type III secretion system during cell-associated aggregation. Supernatants from epithelial cells infected with wild-type bacteria or from cells treated with the pore-forming toxin streptolysin O could rescue aggregate formation in a type III secretion mutant, indicating that cell-associated aggregation requires one or more host cell factors. Our results suggest a previously unappreciated function for the type III translocon in the formation of P. aeruginosa biofilms at the epithelial barrier and demonstrate that biofilms may form at early time points of infection.  相似文献   

16.
Thiol dioxygenation is the initial oxidation step that commits a thiol to important catabolic or biosynthetic pathways. The reaction is catalyzed by a family of specific non-heme mononuclear iron proteins each of which is reported to react efficiently with only one substrate. This family of enzymes includes cysteine dioxygenase, cysteamine dioxygenase, mercaptosuccinate dioxygenase, and 3-mercaptopropionate dioxygenase. Using sequence alignment to infer cysteine dioxygenase activity, a cysteine dioxygenase homologue from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (p3MDO) has been identified. Mass spectrometry of P. aeruginosa under standard growth conditions showed that p3MDO is expressed in low levels, suggesting that this metabolic pathway is available to the organism. Purified recombinant p3MDO is able to oxidize both cysteine and 3-mercaptopropionic acid in vitro, with a marked preference for 3-mercaptopropionic acid. We therefore describe this enzyme as a 3-mercaptopropionate dioxygenase. Mössbauer spectroscopy suggests that substrate binding to the ferrous iron is through the thiol but indicates that each substrate could adopt different coordination geometries. Crystallographic comparison with mammalian cysteine dioxygenase shows that the overall active site geometry is conserved but suggests that the different substrate specificity can be related to replacement of an arginine by a glutamine in the active site.  相似文献   

17.
《Applied microbiology》1973,25(4):704.1
[This corrects the article on p. 567 in vol. 24.].  相似文献   

18.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa was isolated from tomatoes, radishes, celery, carrots, endive, cabbage, cucumbers, onions, and lettuce obtained from the kitchen of a general hospital, with tomatoes yielding both highest frequencies of isolation and highest counts. Presence of P. aeruginosa on the hands of kitchen personnel and cutting boards and knives which they used suggests acquisition of the organism through contact with these vegetables. It is estimated that a patient consuming an average portion of tomato salad might ingest as many as 5 x 10(3) colony-forming units of P. aeruginosa. Pyocine types of P. aeruginosa isolated from clinical specimens were frequently identical to those recovered from vegetables, thus implicating tomatoes and other vegetables as an important source and vehicle by which P. aeruginosa colonizes the intestinal tract of patients.  相似文献   

19.
Our results demonstrated that Pseudomonas aeruginosa serine protease IV degraded apolipophorin III from the haemolymph of Galleria mellonella larvae. ApoLp-III protein was degraded in a stepwise manner. Four intermediate forms of 15, 13.3, 11.9 and 9.5 kDa were detected after 30 min digestion while only one of 5.6 kDa was released after 1-h incubation time. N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis of 5.6 kDa peptide revealed that it was released from apoLp-III after cleavage between lysine 70 and 71. ApoLp-III degradation by protease IV was inhibited by 1 mM TLCK but not 1 mM EDTA, additionally demonstrating that digestion was catalysed by a serine protease. Our data also indicated apoLp-III degradation in vivo during P. aeruginosa infection of G. mellonella larvae.  相似文献   

20.
The XcpR protein of Pseudomonas aeruginosa dimerizes via its N-terminus   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Extracellular protein secretion by the main terminal branch of the general secretory pathway in Pseudomonas aeruginosa requires a secretion machinery comprising the products of at least 12 genes. One of the components of this machinery, the XcpR protein, belongs to a large family of related proteins distinguished by the presence of a highly conserved nucleotide binding domain (Walker box A). The XcpR protein is essential for the process of extracellular secretion and amino acid substitutions within the Walker A sequence result in inactive XcpR. The same mutations exert a dominant negative effect on protein secretion when expressed in wild-type bacteria. Transdominance of XcpR mutants suggests that this protein is involved in interactions with other components of the secretion machinery or that it functions as a multimer. In this study, the amino-terminal portion of the cI repressor protein of phage λ was used as a reporter of dimerization in Escherichia coli following fusion to full-length as well as a truncated form of XcpR. The cI–XcpR hybrid proteins were able to dimerize, as demonstrated by the immunity of bacteria expressing them to killing by λ phage. The full-length XcpR as well as several deletion mutants of XcpR were able to disrupt the dimerization of the chimeric cI–XcpR protein. The disruption of cI–XcpR dimers using the deletion mutants of XcpR, combined with the analysis of their dominant negative effects on protein secretion, was used to map the minimal dimerization domain of XcpR, which is located within an 85 amino acid region in its N-terminal domain. Taken together, the data presented in this paper suggest that the XcpR protein dimerizes via its N-terminus and that this dimerization is essential for extracellular protein secretion.  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