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.
HPr is a protein of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) that participates in the concomitant transport and phosphorylation of sugars in bacteria. In gram-positive bacteria, HPr is also reversibly phosphorylated at a seryl residue at position 46 (Ser-46) by a metabolite-activated ATP-dependent kinase and a Pi-dependent HPr(Ser-P) phosphatase. We report in this article the isolation of a spontaneous mutant (mutant A66) from a streptococcus (Streptococcus salivarius) in which the methionine at position 48 (Met-48) in the protein HPr has been replaced by a valine (Val). The mutation inhibited the phosphorylation of HPr on Ser-46 by the ATP-dependent kinase but did not prevent phosphorylation of HPr by enzyme I or the phosphorylation of enzyme II complexes by HPr(His-P). The results, however, suggested that replacement of Met-48 by Val decreased the affinity of enzyme I for HPr or the affinity of enzyme II proteins for HPr(His-P) or both. Characterization of mutant A66 demonstrated that it has pleiotropic properties, including the lack of IIILman, a specific protein of the mannose PTS; decreased levels of HPr; derepression of some cytoplasmic proteins; reduced growth on PTS as well as on non-PTS sugars; and aberrant growth in medium containing a mixture of sugars.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract HPr is a protein of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS). Streptococci possess two forms of HPr which differ by the presence or the absence of the N-terminal methionine (Met). These forms are called HPr-1 (without Met) and HPr-2 (with Met). In order to determine whether the ratio of these two forms varies with growth conditions, we measured the amount of HPr-1 and HPr-2 present in Streptococcus salivarius grown in continuous culture at pH 7.5. The results indicated that the HPr-1/HPr-2 ratio: 1) was not related to the cellular amount of total HPr; 2) was highest (10.2±3.5) under glucose (a PTS sugar) limitation (10 mM) and low dilution rate (D = 0.1 h−1; g = 6.9 h); 3) was decreased 2.4- to 5.7-fold when the amount of glucose and/or D was increased; 4) was not influenced by D when cells were cultured on galactose (a non-PTS sugar) but was two-fold higher under conditions of galactose excess (200 mM). We suggest that the cleavage of the N-terminal HPr Met is not a stochastic phenomenon but is dictated by growth conditions.  相似文献   

3.
The phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) is made of several proteins. Two of them are designated general proteins because they are required for the transport and phosphorylation of all sugars of the PTS. These two proteins are found in the soluble fraction of cellular extracts and are termed HPr and enzyme I (EI). We reported in this work the purification and the characterization of these two proteins from Streptococcus salivarius ATCC 25975. HPr was purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, molecular sieving on Ultrogel AcA44, and carboxymethylcellulose chromatography. Sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis in the presence of urea revealed a single band with a molecular weight of 6700. The protein contained no tryptophan and had a pI of 4.8. The purification scheme of EI was as follows: DEAE-cellulose chromatography, hydroxylapatite chromatography, DEAE-Sephadex A-50 chromatography, preparative electrophoresis, and molecular sieving on Ultrogel AcA34. The five-step purification for EI produced a 199-fold purified preparation with a specific activity of 530 mumol of HPr phosphorylated per minute per milligram of protein at 37 degrees C. The fraction obtained after filtration on Ultrogel AcA34 gave one band (68 000) on sodium dodecyl sulfate - polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight of the native enzyme determined by gel filtration at 4 degrees C was 135 000, suggesting that it was a dimer. Enzyme I had a pI of 4.2, a pH optimum of 6.7, a Km for HPr of about 27 microM, a Km for phosphoenolpyruvate of 0.48 mM, and kinetics that were consistent with a Ping-Pong mechanism. Evidence had been obtained which indicated that S. salivarius enzyme I was antigenically very similar to enzyme I from various strains of Streptococcus mutans, but not to the enzyme from Bacillus subtilis, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus faecalis, and Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

4.
Analysis of a primer-independent GTF-I from Streptococcus salivarius   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Abstract A glucosyltransferase (GTF) gene, designated gtfL , from Streptococcus salivarius was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli and its nucleotide sequence determined. The GTF-L enzyme catalysed the synthesis of water-insoluble glucan in a primer-independent manner. The nucleotide sequence and derived amino acid sequence of GTF-L were similar in size and domain structure to previously sequenced glucosyltransferases. However, a 464-bp region of high variability was identified which could be selectively amplified from strains of S. salivarius by the polymerase chain reaction and could therefore form the basis for species identification. No sequence-specific motifs related to the solubility and linkage of the glucan product or its need for a dextran primer could be ascertained.  相似文献   

5.
Phosphoproteins which arise from incubation of Streptococcus salivarius ATCC25975 crude extracts with [32P]phosphoenolpyruvate and [gamma-32P]ATP, were separated and detected by sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. These procedures were carried out using the methodology that has been developed to allow for the detection of phosphoproteins containing 1-P-histidinyl and 3-P-histidinyl residues, and also to distinguish between these and phosphoproteins containing acid-stable phosphoamino acids such as phosphoserine, phosphothreonine, and phosphotyrosine. Extracts of cells which had been grown with various sugars as carbon sources were investigated to determine both constitutive and inducible phosphoproteins. No evidence was found for phosphoproteins specifically induced by a sugar, and in particular no evidence was found for any IIIsugar phosphocarrier protein of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS). Incubation with [gamma-32P]ATP showed that histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein (HPr) of the PTS could be phosphorylated to give both acid-stable and acid-labile phosphoamino acid residues. The acid-labile ATP-dependent phosphorylation activity was activated by glucose-6-P and appeared to produce a 3-P-histidinyl residue in HPr.  相似文献   

6.
Cells of Streptococcus sanguis strain Challis were incubated with sodium lauroylsarcosinate to extract surface proteins. A polypeptide of apparent molecular mass 16 kDa comprising about 12% of the extract was purified using anion-exchange chromatography. The polypeptide was shown to be a phosphocarrier protein (HPr) that could also be found in the soluble (cytoplasmic) fraction from cells broken by homogenization with glass beads. In vivo labelling of S. sanguis cells with 32Pi showed that the polypeptide carried a heat- and acid-stable phosphorylation and that during sucrose starvation the HPr became dephosphorylated. Antiserum raised to the S. sanguis HPr reacted on Western blots with HPrs from all oral streptococci tested, together with strains of S. pyogenes and S. salivarius, but not with HPrs from S. faecalis or S. bovis, nor with proteins from Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus subtilis, Actinomyces viscosus and various lactobacilli. The S. sanguis HPr had a high content of alanine (17.2%) and was similar in overall amino acid composition to the HPrs from S. mutans an S. salivarius. The N-terminal residues (to 37) of the S. sanguis HPr showed strong sequence identity (82%) with the N-terminal sequence of S. faecalis HPr. It is suggested that HPr in S. sanguis is associated closely with the cytoplasmic membrane. Non-disruptive methods of removing cell-surface proteins from streptococci effect release of HPr and possibly other cytoplasmic components.  相似文献   

7.
In gram-positive bacteria, HPr, a protein of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system, is phosphorylated on a serine residue at position 46 by an ATP-dependent protein kinase. The HPr(Ser) kinase of Streptococcus salivarius ATCC 25975 was purified, and the encoding gene (hprK) was cloned by using a nucleotide probe designed from the N-terminal amino acid sequence. The predicted amino acid sequence of the S. salivarius enzyme showed 45% identity with the Bacillus subtilis enzyme, the conserved residues being located mainly in the C-terminal half of the protein. The predicted hprK gene product has a molecular mass of 34,440 Da and a pI of 5.6. These values agree well with those found experimentally by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, molecular sieve chromatography in the presence of guanidine hydrochloride, and chromatofocusing using the purified protein. The native protein migrates on a Superdex 200 HR column as a 330,000-Da protein, suggesting that the HPr(Ser) kinase is a decamer. The enzyme requires Mg2+ for activity and functions optimally at pH 7.5. Unlike the enzyme from other gram-positive bacteria, the HPr(Ser) kinase from S. salivarius is not stimulated by FDP or other glycolytic intermediates. The enzyme is inhibited by inorganic phosphate, and its Kms for HPr and ATP are 31 μM and 1 mM, respectively.  相似文献   

8.
Phosphorylation of HPr on a serine residue at position 46 (Ser-46) by an ATP-dependent protein kinase has been reported in several Gram-positive bacteria, and the resulting intermediate, HPr(Ser-P), has been shown to mediate inducer exclusion in lactococci and lactobacilli and catabolite repression in Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus megaterium . We report here the phenotypic properties of an isogenic spontaneous mutant (G22.4) of Streptococcus salivarius ATCC 25975, in which a missense mutation results in the replacement of isoleucine at position 47 (Ile-47) by threonine (Thr) in HPr. This substitution did not prevent the phosphorylation of HPr on Ser-46, nor did it impede the phosphorylation of HPr on His-15 by EI or the transfer of the phosphoryl group from HPr(His∼P) to other PTS proteins. However, the I47T substitution did perturb, in glucose-grown but not in galactose-grown cells, the cellular equilibrium between the various forms of HPr, resulting in an increase in the amount of free HPr at the expense of HPr(His∼P)(Ser-P); the levels of HPr(His∼P) and HPr(Ser-P) were not affected. Growth on melibiose was virtually identical for the wild-type and mutant strains, whereas the generation time of the mutant on the other sugars tested (glucose, fructose, mannose, lactose and galactose) increased 1.2- to 1.5-fold. The preferential metabolism of PTS sugars (glucose and fructose) over non-PTS sugars (lactose and melibiose) that is observed in wild-type cells was abolished in cells of mutant G22.4. Moreover, α- and β-galactosidases were derepressed in glucose- and fructose-grown cells of the mutant. The data suggest that HPr regulates the preferential metabolism of PTS sugars over the non-PTS sugars, lactose and melibiose, through the repression of the pertinent catabolic genes. This HPr-dependent repression, however, seems to occur solely when cells are growing on a PTS sugar.  相似文献   

9.
Transport of sugars across the cytoplasmic membranes of gram-positive bacteria appears to be regulated by the action of a metabolite-activated, ATP-dependent protein kinase that phosphorylates a seryl residue in the phosphocarrier protein of the phosphotransferase system, HPr. We have developed a quantitative assay for measuring the activity of this enzyme from Streptococcus pyogenes. The product of the in vitro protein kinase-catalyzed reaction was shown to be phosphoseryl-HPr by several independent criteria (rates of hydrolysis in the presence of various agents, detection of serine-phosphate in acid hydrolysates, immunological assay, and electrophoretic migration rates). HPrs isolated from four different gram-positive bacteria (S. pyogenes, Streptococcus faecalis, Staphylococcus aureus, and Bacillus subtilis) were shown to be phosphorylated by the kinase from S. pyogenes. In contrast, Escherichia coli HPr was not a substrate of this enzyme. The soluble kinase released from the particulate fraction of the cells with high salt in the presence of a protease inhibitor was shown to have an approximate molecular weight of 60,000 as estimated by gel filtration. Its activity was dependent on divalent cations, with Mg2+ and Mn2+ being most active. EDTA, Pi, and high concentrations of salt were strongly inhibitory. The enzyme was optimally active at pH 7.0, exhibited high affinity for its substrates, and was dependent on the presence of one of several metabolites. Of these compounds, fructose 1-6-diphosphate was most active, with gluconate 6-phosphate, 2-phosphoglycerate, 2,3-diphosphoglycerate, phosphoenolpyruvate, and pyruvate exhibiting moderate to low stimulatory activities. Other compounds tested, including a variety of sugar phosphates, pyridine nucleotides, and other metabolites were without effect. The ATP-dependent phosphorylation of HPr on the seryl residue was strongly inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphorylation of the active histidyl residue of this protein. Treatment of the kinase with diethyl pyrocarbonate strongly inhibited the ATP-dependent phosphorylation activity, although the sulfhydryl reagents N-ethylmaleimide, p-chloromercuribenzoate, and iodoacetate were without effect. These results serve to characterize the HPr (serine) kinase, which apparently regulates the rates of carbohydrate transport in streptococcal cells via the phosphotransferase system. A primary role of this kinase in the control of cellular inducer levels and carbohydrate metabolic rates is proposed.  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
Unlike Streptococcus salivarius subspecies thermophilus, Streptococcus salivarius subspecies salivarius fails to grow symbiotically in milk in the presence of Lacto-bacillus bulgaricus , does not produce large quantities of the flavour volatiles, acetal-dehyde or diacetyl and is unable to stimulate growth of Lact. bulgaricus by producing formate. Although Strep, salivarius subspecies salivarius and thermophilus have similar DNA base composition and belong in the same DNA homology group, the former is unsuitable for milk fermentations such as yoghurt because fermentation of milk using this organism results in products with poor flavour, aroma and texture.  相似文献   

13.
HPr is a protein of the bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase transport system (PTS). In Gram-positive bacteria, HPr can be phosphorylated on Ser(46) by HPr(Ser) kinase/phosphorylase (HPrK/P) and on His(15) by enzyme I (EI) of the PTS. In vitro studies have shown that phosphorylation on one residue greatly inhibits the second phosphorylation. However, streptococci contain significant amounts of HPr(Ser-P)(His approximately P) during exponential growth, and recent studies suggest that phosphorylation of HPr(Ser-P) by EI is involved in the recycling of HPr(Ser-P)(His approximately P). We report in this paper a study on the phosphorylation of Streptococcus salivarius HPr, HPr(Ser-P), and HPr(S46D) by EI. Our results indicate that (i) the specificity constant (k(cat)/K(m)) of EI for HPr(Ser-P) at pH 7.9 was approximately 5000-fold smaller than that observed for HPr, (ii) no metabolic intermediates were able to stimulate HPr(Ser-P) phosphorylation, (iii) the rate of HPr phosphorylation decreased at pHs below 6.5, while that of HPr(Ser-P) increased and was almost 10-fold higher at pH 6.1 than at pH 7.9, (iv) HPr(S46D), a mutated HPr alleged to mimic HPr(Ser-P), was also phosphorylated more efficiently under acidic conditions, and, lastly, (v) phosphorylation of Bacillus subtilis HPr(Ser-P) by B. subtilis EI was also stimulated at acidic pH. Our results suggest that the high levels of HPr(Ser-P)(His approximately P) in streptococci result from the combination of two factors, a high physiological concentration of HPr(Ser-P) and stimulation of HPr(Ser-P) phosphorylation by EI at acidic pH, an intracellular condition that occurs in response to the acidification of the external medium during growth of the culture.  相似文献   

14.
The mutant adenoviruses H5sub304 and H5RIr were isolated sequentially from adenovirus 5 wild type by selection for the loss of EcoRI restriction endonuclease sites by Jones and Shenk (Cell 13:181-188, 1978). sub304 lacks the site at 84.0 map units (m.u.), and RIr lacks both that and the site at 75.9 m.u. A set of derivatives of RIr that lack the site at 75.9 m.u. accumulated virus more slowly at 38.8 or 39.5 degrees C than those with the site present, as measured by low-multiplicity passage or single-step replication cycles, respectively. Since the EcoRI site at 75.9 m.u. is predicted to lie in the gene encoding the precursor to virion polypeptide VIII (pVIII), the failure to accumulate virus rapidly could lie either in some step in processing and assembly of virions or in an increased virion thermolability. The latter possibility was shown to be the case, as all strains mutated at the EcoRI 75.9 m.u. site were extremely thermolabile in vitro, even at 37 degrees C. CsCl equilibrium density centrifugation of heated crude stocks of RIr and sub304 demonstrated that loss of infectivity in RIr was accompanied by physical disruption of virions. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of infected cell extracts or of purified virions showed that pVIII of RIr had an apparent molecular weight that was slightly greater than that of sub304, and mature RIr and sub304 virions displayed polypeptide VIIIs which appeared to be of identical molecular weights. Nucleotide sequence analysis of RIr demonstrated that it contained a 9-base-pair (bp) substitution for 6 bp found in sub304, leading to a loss of the EcoRI site and a predicted insertion of a single amino acid. Comparison of the sequence of sub304 with the published sequence of adenovirus 2 revealed two changes, a single transversion at bp 1,722 and a bp deletion at 1,749, leading to the loss of a TaqI site. The predicted reading frame change would lead to a stop codon at bp 1,885. This raises the question of whether adenovirus 2 and adenovirus 5 use the same reading fame for pVIII.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
Purified (200-fold) glycogen phosphorylase (EC 2.4.1.1) of Streptococcus salivarius was activated by AMP and NaF when assayed both in the direction of synthesis and in the direction of phosphorolysis. Activation by NaF + AMP was greater than the sum of their individual effects. In the direction of synthesis, the Km for AMP was 0.25 mm and was decreased to 0.125 mm in the presence of NaF. The Km for NaF was 0.49 m and was decreased to 0.40 m in the presence of AMP. Glycogen phosphorolysis was similarly affected by AMP and NaF, except that above a concentration of 2 mm AMP was inhibitory. The effects of AMP and NaF were reversible since preincubation with these compounds, followed by dialysis, restored activity almost to the control values although some inhibition of enzyme activity was noted with the samples preincubated with NaF. The presence of both NaF and AMP had no effect on the Km values for glucose-1-P and glycogen in the direction of synthesis, but increased the V of the enzyme.When assayed in the absence of AMP and NaF in the direction of synthesis, the enzyme was slightly inhibited by glucose and glucose-6-P, and activated by P-enolpyruvate and ADP-glucose. In the presence of AMP and NaF, the enzyme was inhibited by glucose, glucose-6-P and ADP-glucose, but was activated by P-enolpyruvate. Fructose-1,6-P2 had no effect on the enzyme. The enzyme was further activated in the absence of AMP and NaF by adenosine, ATP, GMP, cyclic AMP and ADP, and was slightly inhibited by GTP and GDP. In the presence of AMP and NaF, however, these compounds, with the exception of adenosine, either did not show any effect or were slightly inhibitory. Adenosine was slightly stimulatory with NaF + AMP, but not with AMP alone. In the direction of phosphorolysis, the enzyme was inhibited by glucose and ADP-glucose, and activated by P-enolpyruvate, fructose-1,6-P2 and ATP, both in the presence and absence of AMP + NaF.  相似文献   

18.
Glucose-grown cells of Streptococcus salivarius have been shown to contain a polyglucose phosphorylase which had maximum activity in the stationary phase of growth. Despite the fact that activity in crude cell-free extracts was two- to threefold greater in the presence of corn dextrin than with oyster glycogen, subsequent purification (200-fold) of the enzyme from the soluble fraction of the organism by protamine sulfate treatment, ammonium sulfate fractionation (30–50%), ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and gel filtration on Sephadex G-200 demonstrated that this dextrin/glycogen activity was associated with a single enzyme. Since glucose-grown cells of S. salivarius are known to synthesize a typical glycogen polymer, the enzyme was named: glycogen phosphorylase. The purified enzyme preparation was devoid of phosphoglucomutase and ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, but contained a small amount of ADP-glucose: α-1,4 glucan transferase activity. The enzyme was stable at ?10 °C in the presence of 0.2 m NaF, while the pH optimum for the enzyme was 6.0 both with glycogen and with dextrin. With the purified enzyme, corn dextrin was the best primer, both in the direction of synthesis and in the direction of phosphorolysis, being 1.8–1.9 times more effective than purified S. salivarius glycogen. When the enzyme was assayed in the direction of glycogen synthesis, a Km value of 3.4 mm was obtained for glucose-1-P, while the values for S. salivarius glycogen, oyster glycogen and corn dextrin were 25, 42, and 40 mg/ml, respectively. In the direction of phosphorolysis, Km values were 20 mm for Pi obtained with oyster glycogen, 25 mm for Pi with corn dextrin, and 20 mg/ml and 26 mg/ml for oyster glycogen and corn dextrin, respectively. Present data suggests no involvement of -SH groups in enzyme catalysis, while the enzyme was inhibited by divalent ions with the severest inhibition being observed with Ca2+, Zn2+ and Fe2+. The two ion chelators, EDTA and EGTA, had no effect on enzyme activity.  相似文献   

19.
A double-spontaneous mutant resistant to the growth inhibitory effect of alpha-methylglucoside and 2-deoxyglucose was isolated from Streptococcus salivarius. This mutant strain, called alpha S3L11, did not grow on mannose and grew poorly on 5 mM fructose and 5 mM glucose. Isolated membranes of strain alpha S3L11 were unable to catalyse the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphorylation of mannose in the presence of purified enzyme I and HPr. Addition of dialysed membrane-free cellular extract of the wild-type strain to the reaction medium restored the activity. The factor that restored the phosphoenolpyruvate-mannose phosphotransferase activity to membranes of strain alpha S3L11 was called IIIman. This factor was partially purified from the wild-type strain by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, DEAE-TSK chromatography, and molecular seiving on a column of Ultrogel AcA 34. This partially purified preparation also enhanced the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphorylation of glucose, fructose, and 2-deoxyglucose in strain alpha S3L11.  相似文献   

20.
Using preparative electrophoresis, a low molecular weight protein has been partially purified from a cell extract of the equine pathogen Streptococcus equi susp. equi. N-terminal sequence analysis and Western blotting revealed the protein to be HPr, a central component of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS). Interestingly, the only form of the HPr protein detected in S. equi was one with the amino-terminal methionine removed, a modification that has previously been associated with surface localization of streptococcal HPr proteins.  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