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The function of the mitochondrial phospholipid cardiolipin (CL) is thought to depend on its acyl chain composition. The present study aims at a better understanding of the way the CL species profile is established in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by using depletion of the acyl-CoA-binding protein Acb1p as a tool to modulate the cellular acyl chain content. Despite the presence of an intact CL remodeling system, acyl chains shorter than 16 carbon atoms (C16) were found to accumulate in CL in cells lacking Acb1p. Further experiments revealed that Taz1p, a key CL remodeling enzyme, was not responsible for the shortening of CL in the absence of Acb1p. This left de novo CL synthesis as the only possible source of acyl chains shorter than C16 in CL. Experiments in which the substrate specificity of the yeast cardiolipin synthase Crd1p and the acyl chain composition of individual short CL species were investigated, indicated that both CL precursors (i.e. phosphatidylglycerol and CDP-diacylglycerol) contribute to comparable extents to the shorter acyl chains in CL in acb1 mutants. Based on the findings, we conclude that the fatty acid composition of mature CL in yeast is governed by the substrate specificity of the CL-specific lipase Cld1p and the fatty acid composition of the Taz1p substrates.Cardiolipin (CL)5 is a unique anionic glycerophospholipid with dimeric structure containing four acyl chains, which is almost exclusively localized to the mitochondrial inner membrane in eukaryotic cells (1, 2). CL has been shown to co-isolate with, and to be required for optimal activity of a number of enzymes in the respiratory chain (35), and it has been implicated in the stability and assembly of protein (super)complexes (68). In the presence of divalent cations and dependent on the acyl chain composition, CL has a propensity for membrane negative curvature, a property that may be important in, e.g. membrane fusion and fission (9, 10). In addition, CL is thought to serve as a proton trap in oxidative phosphorylation (11). In recent years, CL has also been implicated in apoptosis (12, 13).CL is synthesized in the inner mitochondrial membrane by condensation of PG and CDP-DAG, catalyzed by the cardiolipin synthase Crd1p (see Fig. 1; reviewed in Ref. 4). Compared with the other phospholipid classes, CL is enriched in unsaturated acyl chains, and the molecular species of CL possess a high degree of molecular symmetry (14). The CL-specific acyl chain pattern originates from substrate preferences during biosynthesis and subsequent remodeling by acyl chain exchange (15). The finding of an aberrant CL species profile in patients suffering from Barth syndrome, which results from mutations in the tafazzin gene (16), revealed the importance of CL remodeling, and set the stage for the identification of tafazzin as the acyltransferase involved (17, 18). The Drosophila homologue of tafazzin was shown to be a CoA-independent phospholipid transacylase with substrate preference for CL and PC (19).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.The cardiolipin biosynthetic pathway in the context of phospholipid biosynthesis in yeast. The enzymes of the CL biosynthetic pathway identified at the gene level are indicated: Cds1p, CDP-DAG synthase; Pgs1p, phosphatidylglycerolphosphate synthase; Crd1p, CL synthase; Taz1p, Tafazzin; Cld1p, CL-specific deacylase.The biosynthesis and remodeling of CL have been extensively studied in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. After synthesis by Crd1p, CL is subject to deacylation and reacylation, which involves the yeast homologue of tafazzin encoded by the TAZ1 gene. The yeast taz1 mutant has defects similar to those found in Barth syndrome, including reduced CL content, an aberrant CL species profile, and an accumulation of monolyso-CL (20). The bioenergetic coupling of isolated mitochondria from a taz1 mutant is compromised (21), which may be accounted for by the impaired assembly of the III2IV2 supercomplex (22). Recently, the CL-specific phospholipase Cld1p was identified, which functions upstream of Taz1p (23).Because the acyl chain composition of CL is important for its function, we investigated how the molecular species profile of CL is attained by using depletion of the 10-kDa cytosolic acyl-CoA-binding protein Acb1p as a tool to modify the cellular acyl chain content. Deletion of the ACB1 gene increases the cellular levels of C14 and C16 fatty acids at the expense of C18, without having adverse effects on cell growth or on the rate of glycerophospholipid synthesis (2426). The changes in fatty acid composition are reflected to varying extents in the molecular species profile of phospholipids in Acb1p-depleted cells as determined by electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) (27, 28). We first determined by mass spectrometry that in the absence of Acb1p acyl chains shorter than C16 accumulate in CL as in the other phospholipid classes despite the Cld1p-Taz1p remodeling system. Using appropriate mutants and analysis by mass spectrometry, we investigated two possible origins of the shorter acyl chains in CL: (i) remodeling by Taz1p and (ii) de novo synthesis of CL from PG and CDP-DAG.  相似文献   

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Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) have been extensively studied because of their functional attributes in development and diseases. However, relatively few in vivo functional studies have been reported on the roles of MMPs in postembryonic organ development. Amphibian metamorphosis is a unique model for studying MMP function during vertebrate development because of its dependence on thyroid hormone (T3) and the ability to easily manipulate this process with exogenous T3. The MMP stromelysin-3 (ST3) is induced by T3, and its expression correlates with cell death during metamorphosis. We have previously shown that ST3 is both necessary and sufficient for larval epithelial cell death in the remodeling intestine. To investigate the roles of ST3 in other organs and especially on different cell types, we have analyzed the effect of transgenic overexpression of ST3 in the tail of premetamorphic tadpoles. We report for the first time that ST3 expression, in the absence of T3, caused significant muscle cell death in the tail of premetamorphic transgenic tadpoles. On the other hand, only relatively low levels of epidermal cell death were induced by precocious ST3 expression in the tail, contrasting what takes place during natural and T3-induced metamorphosis when ST3 expression is high. This cell type-specific apoptotic response to ST3 in the tail suggests distinct mechanisms regulating cell death in different tissues. Furthermore, our analyses of laminin receptor, an in vivo substrate of ST3 in the intestine, suggest that laminin receptor cleavage may be an underlying mechanism for the cell type-specific effects of ST3.The extracellular matrix (ECM),3 the dynamic milieu of the cell microenvironment, plays a critical role in dictating the fate of the cell. The cross-talk between the cell and ECM and the timely catabolism of the ECM are crucial for tissue remodeling during development (1). Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), extrinsic proteolytic regulators of the ECM, mediate this process to a large extent. MMPs are a large family of Zn2+-dependent endopeptidases potentially capable of cleaving the extracellular as well as nonextracellular proteins (29). The MMP superfamily includes collagenases, gelatinases, stromelysins, and membrane-type MMPs based on substrate specificity and domain organization (24). MMPs have been implicated to influence a wide range of physiological and pathological processes (1013). The roles of MMPs appear to be very complex. For example, MMPs have been suggested to play roles in both tumor promotion and suppression (1319). Unfortunately, relatively few functional studies have been carried out in vivo, especially in relation to the mechanisms involved during vertebrate development.Amphibian metamorphosis presents a fascinating experimental model to study MMP function during postembryonic development. A unique and salient feature of the metamorphic process is the absolute dependence on the signaling of thyroid hormone (2023). This makes it possible to prevent metamorphosis by simply inhibiting the synthesis of endogenous T3 or to induce precocious metamorphosis by merely adding physiological levels of T3 in the rearing water of premetamorphic tadpoles. Gene expression screens have identified the MMP stromelysin-3 (ST3) as a direct T3 response gene (2427). Expression studies have revealed a distinct spatial and temporal ST3 expression profile in correlation with metamorphic event, especially cell death (25, 2831). Organ culture studies on intestinal remodeling have directly substantiated an essential role of ST3 in larval epithelial cell death and ECM remodeling (32). Furthermore, precocious expression of ST3 alone in premetamorphic tadpoles through transgenesis is sufficient to induce ECM remodeling and larval epithelial apoptosis in the tadpole intestine (33). Thus, ST3 appears to be necessary and sufficient for intestinal epithelial cell death during metamorphosis.ST3 was first isolated as a breast cancer-associated gene (34), and unlike most other MMPs, ST3 is secreted as an active protease through a furin-dependent intracellular activation mechanism (35). Like many other MMPs, ST3 is expressed in a number of pathological processes, including most human carcinomas (11, 3640), as well as in many developmental processes in mammals (10, 34, 4143), although the physiological and pathological roles of ST3 in vivo are largely unknown in mammals. Interestingly, compared with other MMPs, ST3 has only weak activities toward ECM proteins in vitro but stronger activities against non-ECM proteins like α1 proteinase inhibitor and IGFBP-1 (4446). Although ST3 may cleave ECM proteins strongly in the in vivo environment, these findings suggest that the cleavage of non-ECM proteins is likely important for its biological roles. Consistently, we have recently identified a cell surface receptor, laminin receptor (LR) as an in vivo substrate of ST3 in the tadpole intestine during metamorphosis (4749). Analyses of LR expression and cleavage suggest that LR cleavage by ST3 is likely an important mechanism by which ST3 regulates the interaction between the larval epithelial cells and the ECM to induce cell death during intestinal remodeling (47, 48).Here, to investigate the role of ST3 in the apoptosis in other tissues during metamorphosis and whether LR cleavage serves as a mechanism for ST3 to regulate the fate of different cell types, we have analyzed the effects of precocious expression of ST3 in premetamorphic tadpole tail. The tail offers an opportunity to examine the effects of ST3 on different cell types. The epidermis, the fast and slow muscles, and the connective tissue underlying the epidermis in the myotendinous junctions and surrounding the notochord constitute the major tissue types in tail (50). Even though death is the destiny of all these cell types, it is not clear whether they all die through similar or different mechanisms. Microscopic and histochemical analyses have shown that at least the muscle and epidermal cells undergo T3-dependent apoptosis during metamorphosis (23, 29, 51, 52). To study whether ST3 regulates apoptosis of these two cell types, we have made use of the transgenic animals that express a transgenic ST3 under the control of a heat shock-inducible promoter (33). We show that whereas extensive apoptosis is present in both the epidermis and muscles during natural as well as T3-induced metamorphosis, transgenic expression of ST3 induces cell death predominantly in the muscles. Furthermore, we show that LR is expressed in the epidermis and connective tissue but not in muscles of the tadpole tail. More importantly, LR cleavage products are present in the tail during natural metamorphosis but not in transgenic tadpoles overexpressing ST3. These results suggest that ST3 has distinct effects on the epidermis and muscles in the tail, possibly because of the tissue-specific expression and function of LR.  相似文献   

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A uniquely sensitive method for ceramide domain detection allowed us to study in detail cholesterol-ceramide interactions in lipid bilayers with low (physiological) ceramide concentrations, ranging from low or no cholesterol (a situation similar to intracellular membranes, such as endoplasmic reticulum) to high cholesterol (similar to mammalian plasma membrane). Diverse fluorescence spectroscopy and microscopy experiments were conducted showing that for low cholesterol amounts ceramide segregates into gel domains that disappear upon increasing cholesterol levels. This was observed in different raft (sphingomyelin/cholesterol-containing) and non-raft (sphingomyelin-absent) membranes, i.e. mimicking different types of cell membranes. Cholesterol-ceramide interactions have been described mainly as raft sphingomyelin-dependent. Here sphingomyelin independence is demonstrated. In addition, ceramide-rich domains re-appear when either cholesterol is converted by cholesterol oxidase to cholestenone or the temperature is decreased. Ceramide is more soluble in cholesterol-rich fluid membranes than in cholesterol-poor ones, thereby increasing the chemical potential of cholesterol. Ceramide solubility depends on the average gel-fluid transition temperature of the remaining membrane lipids. The inability of cholestenone-rich membranes to dissolve ceramide gel domains shows that the cholesterol ordering and packing properties are fundamental to the mixing process. We also show that the solubility of cholesterol in ceramide domains is low. The results are rationalized by a ternary phospholipid/ceramide/cholesterol phase diagram, providing the framework for the better understanding of biochemical phenomena modulated by cholesterol-ceramide interactions such as cholesterol oxidase activity, lipoprotein metabolism, and lipid targeting in cancer therapy. It also suggests that the lipid compositions of different organelles are such that ceramide gel domains are not formed unless a stress or pathological situation occurs.Cholesterol (Chol)3 is the most abundant sterol in mammalian plasma membrane and has unique biophysical properties (1, 2). Chol interacts with the high melting temperature (Tm) sphingolipids (SL) in the membrane, leading to the formation of SL/Chol-enriched microdomains (so-called lipid rafts). These domains are in a more ordered state (usually referred to as liquid-ordered (lo) phase) than the bulk membrane (liquid-disordered phase (ld)) (3, 4). Ceramide (Cer) is an SL formed in stress situations either from sphingomyelin (SM) in rafts or synthesized de novo by serine palmitoyltransferase and ceramide synthase. Both of these processes can be induced by diverse stimuli (5). Cer-induced membrane alterations (e.g. raft fusion into large signaling platforms (6)) were proposed to be the mechanism by which this lipid mediates diverse cellular processes, namely apoptosis (710). Cer presents an unusually small polar headgroup and in general very high gel-fluid Tm (e.g. for palmitoyl-Cer (PCer) it is ∼90 °C) (11). Membrane Cer levels are usually very low, although in cells undergoing apoptosis it can reach values up to 12 mol % total lipid (7), a percentage that in model membranes leads to Cer-rich gel domain formation (1217). It was suggested that the formation of these domains might also be involved in Cer biological action (8, 18, 19).However, Cer effects on membrane properties are extremely dependent on membrane lipid composition, especially on Chol amounts (13, 2023). For instance, in raft-forming model membranes (i.e. ternary mixtures of phosphocholines (PC), sphingomyelin (SM), and Chol), Cer-rich gel domains are formed at low but not at high Chol content (23). This result was explained by the competition between the two small headgroup molecules, Chol and Cer, for the bulkier headgroup, SM, to minimize acyl chain exposure to water. In fact, it is suggested that Cer selectively displaces Chol molecules from rafts, both in model (2427) and in cell membranes (28, 29). However, a recent study showed that Cer-generated from SM hydrolysis leads to the formation of gel domains in these ternary mixtures only when Chol levels are low, suggesting that even for SM-depleted mixtures Chol is still able to modulate Cer effects (30). Therefore, to fully disclose the conditions that lead to the activation/regulation of Cer-mediated processes, further knowledge about Cer effects on membrane properties and their modulation by Chol is required.It is important to clarify the relation between Cer threshold for gel formation, cholesterol amount, and the properties of the remaining lipids (namely their propensity to form gel phases, which depends mainly on their gel-fluid transition temperature). This is because of the fact that each organelle membrane has its own specific composition. For example, there is a gradient of cholesterol concentration from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the plasma membrane (PM) (31). In addition, there is a close relation between intracellular Cer levels, Ca2+ release from the ER, and Cer-induced permeability increase of the mitochondrial outer membrane (but not the inner membrane) (32, 33).The application of a uniquely sensitive method for Cer-rich gel detection allowed us to study for the first time Chol-Cer interactions in detail for high Chol and low Cer concentrations, i.e. a composition similar to mammalian plasma membranes. In addition, low Chol membranes were also studied. Our results clearly show that in a fluid matrix of representative mammalian membranes lipids, Cer-rich gel domains are destroyed by high amounts of Chol in the absence of SM and even in the absence of an lo phase. We show that this outcome is a consequence of the higher solubility of Cer in Chol-rich membranes than in poor ones, the low solubility of Chol in Cer domains, and that it depends on the average Tm of the remaining lipids. These solubility differences offer a unified rationale for all Cer-Chol biophysical studies that can be translated into a ternary phase diagram, and the biological implications of the results are discussed.  相似文献   

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The general stress response of Bacillus subtilis can be activated by stimuli such as the addition of salt or ethanol and with blue light. In the latter response, YtvA activates σB through a cascade of Rsb proteins, organized in stressosomes. YtvA is composed of an N-terminal LOV (light, oxygen, and voltage) domain and a C-terminal STAS (sulfate transporter and anti-sigma factor) domain and shows light-modulated GTP binding in vitro. Here, we examine the mechanism of YtvA-mediated activation of σB in vivo with site-directed mutagenesis. Constitutive off and constitutive on mutations have been identified. Disruption of GTP binding in the STAS domain eliminates light activation of σB. In contrast, modification of sites relevant for phosphorylation of STAS domains does not affect the stress response significantly. The data obtained are integrated into a model for the structure of full-length YtvA, which presumably functions as a dimer.LOV2 domains (1), members of the superfamily of PAS domains (2, 3), are abundant in all domains of life and were first identified in plant phototropins (4). These photoreceptors regulate stomatal opening, phototropism, etc. and contain two N-terminal LOV domains that confer light regulation on the C-terminal Ser/Thr kinase domain (4). They also occur in bacteria, in which YtvA from Bacillus subtilis has been best characterized (for a review, see e.g. Ref. 5). Its N-terminal LOV domain binds FMN and shows the typical LOV photochemistry (6, 7): covalent adduct formation between a cysteine and the FMN chromophore. A linker helix, denoted Jα (7), connects the LOV domain to a STAS domain. The latter domain is present in many regulators of the general stress response of B. subtilis (8, 9). Stress via the addition of salt or ethanol (for a review, see Ref. 10) and blue light (11, 12) activates the general stress response via the environmental pathway, which integrates various signals via a large multiprotein complex, called the stressosome (13, 14). YtvA, which mediates light activation of σB (11, 12, 15), co-purifies with other STAS domain proteins in the stressosomes (16).When cells are stressed, STAS domains of several stressosome proteins (e.g. RsbS and RsbR) are phosphorylated by another intrinsic stressosome component, the serine/threonine kinase RsbT (9, 14, 17, 18). Next, RsbT is released from the complex to trigger RsbU, a protein phosphatase, thus (indirectly) activating σB (19). Phosphorylation of YtvA, however, has never been detected. Rather, it has been demonstrated in vitro that YtvA shows light-dependent GTP binding, presumably at its NTP-binding site in the STAS domain (20).Little is known about the mechanism of signal transmission in and by YtvA, except that in the C62A mutant, photochemistry in vitro (12) and light activation of σB in vivo (12, 15) are abolished. More detailed information is available for LOV domains of phototropins. A conserved glutamine, which is in hydrogen-bonding contact with the isoalloxazine ring of FMN, rotates its side chain by 180° upon covalent adduct formation (21). Replacement of this residue by leucine in the LOV2 domain of Phy3 from Adiantum results in a considerable reduction of the light-induced structural change (22). The corresponding mutation in phototropin 1 from Arabidopsis impairs autophosphorylation activity (23). The signal generated in the LOV2 domain is transmitted to the downstream kinase domain of phototropin 1 of Avena sativa through disruption of the interaction between its central β-sheet and the C-terminal linker region, the Jα-helix (24).Here, we study the mechanism of activation of YtvA in vivo, i.e. light-induced activation of the σB response, with site-directed mutagenesis. We focus on three regions of the protein, the flavin-binding pocket, the β-sheet of the LOV domain, and the GTP-binding site, and on potential phosphorylation sites of the STAS domain. We demonstrate that light-activated GTP binding is crucial for functional YtvA. A computational approach was used to model the structure of full-length YtvA. The model suggests that light modulates accessibility of the GTP-binding site of the STAS domain of YtvA.  相似文献   

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Mathematical tools developed in the context of Shannon information theory were used to analyze the meaning of the BLOSUM score, which was split into three components termed as the BLOSUM spectrum (or BLOSpectrum). These relate respectively to the sequence convergence (the stochastic similarity of the two protein sequences), to the background frequency divergence (typicality of the amino acid probability distribution in each sequence), and to the target frequency divergence (compliance of the amino acid variations between the two sequences to the protein model implicit in the BLOCKS database). This treatment sharpens the protein sequence comparison, providing a rationale for the biological significance of the obtained score, and helps to identify weakly related sequences. Moreover, the BLOSpectrum can guide the choice of the most appropriate scoring matrix, tailoring it to the evolutionary divergence associated with the two sequences, or indicate if a compositionally adjusted matrix could perform better.[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29]  相似文献   

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Mycobacterium tuberculosis modulates host immune responses through proteins and complex glycolipids. Here, we report that the glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor phosphatidyl-myo-inositol hexamannosides PIM6 or PIM2 exert potent anti-inflammatory activities. PIM strongly inhibited the Toll-like receptor (TLR4) and myeloid differentiation protein 88 (MyD88)-mediated release of NO, cytokines, and chemokines, including tumor necrosis factor (TNF), interleukin 12 (IL-12) p40, IL-6, keratinocyte-derived chemokine, and also IL-10 by lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-activated macrophages. This effect was independent of the presence of TLR2. PIM also reduced the LPS-induced MyD88-independent, TIR domain-containing adaptor protein inducing interferon β (TRIF)-mediated expression of co-stimulatory receptors. PIM inhibited LPS/TLR4-induced NFκB translocation. Synthetic PIM1 and a PIM2 mimetic recapitulated these in vitro activities and inhibited endotoxin-induced airway inflammation, TNF and keratinocyte-derived chemokine secretion, and neutrophil recruitment in vivo. Mannosyl, two acyl chains, and phosphatidyl residues are essential for PIM anti-inflammatory activity, whereas the inosityl moiety is dispensable. Therefore, PIM exert potent antiinflammatory effects both in vitro and in vivo that may contribute to the strategy developed by mycobacteria for repressing the host innate immunity, and synthetic PIM analogs represent powerful anti-inflammatory leads.Multifold interactions between Mycobacterium tuberculosis and host phagocytes determine immune responses to M. tuberculosis and tuberculosis pathogenesis (for review, see Refs. 1 and 2). Alveolar macrophages, the primary host cells for M. tuberculosis, and dendritic cells that carry mycobacterial antigens from the infection site to the draining lymph nodes to establish a T cell-mediated immune response contribute to modulate the innate immune response by secreting cytokines after recognition of microbial motives. Among them, TNF2 is an essential mediator for granuloma formation and containment of M. tuberculosis infection. Similarly, IL-12, interferon γ, but also IL-1, IL-18, IL-23, and nitric oxide are required for host defense (16). Phagocytes are also a source of immuno-modulatory cytokines, such as IL-10 and transforming growth factor-β, which dampen the immune response and inflammation. Mycobacteria-derived molecules down-modulating the immune system have been described, including the protein ESAT-6, mannose-capped lipoarabinomannan (ManLAM), and lipomannans (LM) (712). Here, we report that phosphatidyl-myo-inositol mannosides (PIM), the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor structure of LAM and LM, exert strong anti-inflammatory activities.Mycobacterial cell wall LAM, LM, and PIM are recognized by macrophages and dendritic cells through various pattern recognition receptors, including Toll-like receptors (TLRs) (1316) and C-type lectins such as mannose receptor (MR/CD206) and dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule-3 grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN/CD209), central to M. tuberculosis binding and internalization by human dendritic cells (1720). DC-SIGN and mannose receptor were proposed to mediate ManLAM inhibition of LPS-induced IL-12 production in dendritic cells, an activity ascribed to the mannosylated cap (8, 9). We showed recently that mycobacterial LM have a dual potential for pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory effects (11), tri- and tetra-acylated LM fractions exerting stimulatory effects through TLR2, TLR4, and MyD88 (21), whereas diacylated LM inhibit LPS-induced cytokine response independently of TLR2, SIGN-R1, and mannose receptor (12).PIM are biosynthetic precursors of LM and LAM (2225). Dimannoside (PIM2) and hexamannoside (PIM6) PIM are the two most abundant classes of PIM found in M. tuberculosis H37Rv and Mycobacterium bovis BCG (see Fig. 1). PIM purification and molecular chemical characterization revealed four major acyl forms, mono- to tetra-acylated (lyso-PIM for one acyl, PIM for two acyl, Ac1PIM for three acyl, and Ac2PIM for four acyl, respectively; see Fig. 1) for both PIM2 and PIM6 (2629). Higher order PIM with mannose cap-like structures were found to preferentially associate with human MR and to contribute to phagosome-lysosome fusion (20). The degree of acylation influenced higher order PIM association with the MR, whereas PIM2 was recognized by DC-SIGN independently of its acylation degree. The complete synthesis of the different PIM has recently been reported (3033).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Natural PIM and synthetic PIM1 and PIM2 mimetics used in the study. Shown is a schematic representation of natural lyso-PIM6, PIM6, Ac1PIM6, Ac2PIM6, and PIM2 (A) and synthetic PIM1 (B) showing the C16 and C18 acyl groups on glycerol chain positions sn-2 and sn-1, the precursor PI, a synthetic mimetic of PIM2 (PIM2 mimetic) bearing C16 and C18 acyl chains, the de-acylated control molecule precursor of the PIM2 mimetic (de-AcPIM2 mimetic), and a PIM2 mimetic with replacement of the phosphodiester moiety by a carbonate.Here, we analyzed isolated acyl forms of PIM and identified PIM2 and PIM6 but also synthetic PIM1 and a mimetic of PIM2 as strong inhibitors of endotoxin-induced proinflammatory responses in vitro and in vivo. Using macrophages from genetically modified mice, we characterized PIM inhibitory effects on MyD88, TRIF, and NFκB signaling pathways. Hence, not only complex mycobacterial lipoglycans like ManLAM and LM but also small molecular weight PIM analogues are potent inhibitors of host inflammatory responses.  相似文献   

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One of our goals is to understand the mechanisms that deposit mineral within collagen fibrils, and as a first step we recently determined the size exclusion characteristics of the fibril. This study revealed that apatite crystals up to 12 unit cells in size can access the water within the fibril, whereas molecules larger than a 40-kDa protein are excluded. Based on these observations, we proposed a novel mechanism for fibril mineralization: that macromolecular inhibitors of apatite growth favor fibril mineralization by selectively inhibiting crystal growth in the solution outside of the fibril. To test this mechanism, we developed a system in which crystal formation is driven by homogeneous nucleation at high calcium phosphate concentration and the only macromolecule in solution is fetuin, a 48-kDa inhibitor of apatite growth. Our experiments with this system demonstrated that fetuin determines the location of mineral growth; in the presence of fetuin mineral grows exclusively within the fibril, whereas in its absence mineral grows in solution outside the fibril. Additional experiments showed that fetuin is also able to localize calcification to the interior of synthetic matrices that have size exclusion characteristics similar to those of collagen and that it does so by selectively inhibiting mineral growth outside of these matrices. We termed this new calcification mechanism “mineralization by inhibitor exclusion,” the selective mineralization of a matrix using a macromolecular inhibitor of mineral growth that is excluded from that matrix. Future studies will be needed to evaluate the possible role of this mechanism in bone mineralization.The type I collagen fibril plays several critical roles in bone mineralization. The mineral in bone is located primarily within the fibril (16), and during mineralization the fibril is formed first and then water within the fibril is replaced with mineral (7, 8). The collagen fibril therefore provides the aqueous compartment in which mineral grows. We have recently shown that the physical structure of the collagen fibril plays an important additional role in mineralization, that of a gatekeeper allowing molecules smaller than a 6-kDa protein to freely access the water within the fibril while preventing molecules larger than a 40-kDa protein from entering the fibril (9).Molecules too large to enter the collagen fibril can have important effects on mineralization within the fibril. We have suggested that large inhibitors of apatite growth can paradoxically favor mineralization within the fibril by selectively preventing apatite growth in the solution outside of the fibril (9). We have also proposed that large nucleators of apatite formation may generate small crystals outside the collagen fibril and that some of these crystals can subsequently diffuse into the fibril and grow (9). Because the size exclusion characteristics of the fibril allow rapid penetration of molecules the size of a 6-kDa protein, apatite crystals up to 12 unit cells in size should in principle be able to freely access all of the water within the fibril (9).We subsequently tested these hypotheses for the role of large molecules in fibril mineralization by determining the impact of removing fetuin on the serum-driven calcification of collagen fibrils (10). Fetuin is the most abundant serum inhibitor of apatite crystal growth (11, 12), and with a molecular weight of 48 kDa fetuin is too large to penetrate the collagen fibril (9). Fetuin is also termed fetuin-A (to distinguish it from a recently discovered homologue, fetuin-B (13)) and is sometimes called α2-HS glycoprotein in humans. Our working hypothesis was that fetuin is required for the serum-driven calcification of a collagen fibril and that its role is to favor calcification within the collagen fibril by selectively preventing apatite crystal growth in the solution outside the fibril.The results of this study demonstrate that removing fetuin from serum eliminates the ability of serum to induce the calcification of a type I collagen matrix and that adding purified fetuin to fetuin-depleted serum restores this activity (14). This study further shows that a massive mineral precipitate forms during the incubation of fetuin-depleted serum but not during the incubation of serum containing fetuin (14). These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that a large serum nucleator generates apatite crystals in the solution outside of the collagen fibril, some of which penetrate into the aqueous interior of the fibril (14). Because fetuin can trap only those nuclei that it can access, the crystal nuclei that penetrate the fibril grow far more rapidly than those nuclei trapped by fetuin outside of the fibril, and the collagen fibril therefore selectively calcifies.The goal of the present experiments was to further understand the role of fetuin in the calcification of type I collagen fibrils. To accomplish this goal, we developed a system in which crystal formation is driven by homogeneous nucleation at high calcium phosphate concentrations and the only macromolecule in the solution is fetuin. This system allowed us to probe the impact of fetuin and only fetuin on the location and extent of collagen calcification. Because fetuin is the subject of this study, it is useful to review briefly its occurrence and calcification-inhibitory activity. Fetuin is a 48-kDa glycoprotein that is synthesized in the liver and is found at high concentrations in mammalian serum (15, 16) and bone (1722). The serum fetuin concentration in adult mammals ranges from 0.5 to 1.5 mg/ml, whereas the serum fetuin concentration in the fetus and neonate is typically far higher (16). Fetuin is also one of the most abundant noncollagenous proteins found in bone (1722), with a concentration of about 1 mg fetuin/g bone in rat (21), bovine (17), and human (19, 23) bone. Despite the abundance of fetuin in bone, however, it has not been possible to demonstrate the synthesis of fetuin in calcified tissues, and it is therefore presently thought that the fetuin found in bone arises from hepatic synthesis via serum (20, 22). This view is supported by the observation that fetuin binds strongly to apatite, the mineral phase of bone, and is selectively concentrated from serum onto apatite (18).In vitro studies have demonstrated that fetuin is an important inhibitor of apatite growth and precipitation in serum containing increased levels of calcium and phosphate (12) and that targeted deletion of the fetuin gene reduces the ability of serum to arrest apatite formation by over 70% (11). More recent studies have shown that a fetuin-mineral complex is formed in the course of the fetuin-mediated inhibition of apatite growth and precipitation in serum containing increased calcium and phosphate (24, 25). Purified fetuin also potently inhibits the growth of apatite crystals from supersaturated solutions of calcium phosphate (12, 24). In solutions in which a decline in calcium occurs within minutes because of the spontaneous formation of apatite crystals, the presence of added fetuin sustains elevated calcium levels for at least 24 h (24).  相似文献   

13.
The structure of the membrane integral rotor ring of the proton translocating F1F0 ATP synthase from spinach chloroplasts was determined to 3.8 Å resolution by x-ray crystallography. The rotor ring consists of 14 identical protomers that are symmetrically arranged around a central pore. Comparisons with the c11 rotor ring of the sodium translocating ATPase from Ilyobacter tartaricus show that the conserved carboxylates involved in proton or sodium transport, respectively, are 10.6–10.8 Å apart in both c ring rotors. This finding suggests that both ATPases have the same gear distance despite their different stoichiometries. The putative proton-binding site at the conserved carboxylate Glu61 in the chloroplast ATP synthase differs from the sodium-binding site in Ilyobacter. Residues adjacent to the conserved carboxylate show increased hydrophobicity and reduced hydrogen bonding. The crystal structure reflects the protonated form of the chloroplast c ring rotor. We propose that upon deprotonation, the conformation of Glu61 is changed to another rotamer and becomes fully exposed to the periphery of the ring. Reprotonation of Glu61 by a conserved arginine in the adjacent a subunit returns the carboxylate to its initial conformation.ATP synthases found in the energy-transducing membranes of bacteria, mitochondria, and chloroplasts catalyze ATP synthesis and ATP hydrolysis coupled with transmembrane proton or sodium ion transport. The enzymes are multi-subunit complexes composed of an extra-membranous catalytic F1 domain and an interconnected integral membrane F0 domain. The hydrophilic F1 domain consists of five different polypeptides with a stoichiometry of α3β3γδϵ. Detailed structural information obtained with the mitochondrial enzyme (13) in combination with biochemical (4), biophysical (5), and single molecule studies (69) revealed that synthesis or hydrolysis of ATP in the F1 domain is accomplished via a rotary catalytic mechanism. In addition to information on the catalytic mechanism, structure analysis and single molecule studies of the mitochondrial or the chloroplast F1 complex have also unraveled the molecular mechanism of several F1-specific inhibitors (1014). Less detailed information is available on the integral membrane F0 domain, which consists of three different polypeptides (a, b, and c) and mediates the transfer of protons or sodium ions across the membrane. Subunits a and b were shown to reside at the periphery of a cylindrical complex formed by multiple copies of the c subunit (1518). The number of c subunits in the cylindrical subcomplex shows substantial variation in different organisms. Ten protomers are found in ATP synthases from yeast, Escherichia coli and Bacillus PS3 (1921), 11 in Ilyobacter tartaricus, Propionigenium modestum, and Clostridium paradoxum (2224), 13 in the thermoalkalophilic Bacillus TA2.TA1 (25), 14 in spinach chloroplasts (26), and 15 in the cyanobacterium Spirulina platensis (27). The structure of isolated subunits a, b, and c from E. coli has been studied by mutagenesis analysis and by NMR spectroscopy in a mixed solvent that was suggested to mimic the membrane environment (2832). These studies showed that subunit a folds with five membrane-spanning helices. The fourth of these helices directly interacts with subunit c and contains a conserved arginine (Arg210), which is thought to be involved in proton transfer (33). Subunit b, which is present in two copies in the intact F0, contains a single transmembrane helix. Cross-linking data support a direct interaction of the two copies of the b subunit (29). Subunit c was studied at two different pH values to obtain the protonated and deprotonated form of a conserved carboxylate (Asp61 in E. coli) that was shown to be essential for proton transport (34). NMR spectroscopy revealed that the isolated c subunit consists of two long hydrophobic membrane spanning segments connected by a short hydrophilic loop (30, 35). This loop is located close to the γ and ϵ subunit on the F1 side of the membrane (36, 37). Low resolution x-ray crystallography, cryo-electron microscopy, and atomic force microscopy showed that the membrane-spanning helices of the multiple copies of subunit c in the intact F0 complex are tightly packed in two concentric rings (19, 22, 26). Atomic resolution of the c ring was recently provided for the Na+-translocating F-type ATPase from I. tartaricus (38) and the related Na+-translocating V-type ATPase from Enterococcus hirae (39). Rotation of the c ring was demonstrated by cross-linking (18), fluorescence studies (40), and single molecule visualization (41, 42). Based on the structural and biochemical information on F1 and F0, different mechanical models have been proposed describing how the rotation of the c ring is coupled to the rotation of the F1 rotor subunits. This rotation in turn drives sequential conformational shifts at the three catalytic β subunits that result in ATP synthesis (4345). Vice versa hydrolysis of ATP in the F1 domain is thought to drive rotation of the γϵc10–15 subcomplex and transports protons or sodium ions across the membrane.Here we describe the crystal structure of the chloroplast c14 rotor, which is the first structure of an isolated c ring rotor from a proton driven ATPase. The structure was solved by molecular replacement using a tetradecameric search model that was generated from a monomer taken from the I. tartaricus c11 structure. The imposition of noncrystallographic symmetry restraints during refinement substantially improved electron density and structure determination.  相似文献   

14.
Leptospira spp., the causative agents of leptospirosis, adhere to components of the extracellular matrix, a pivotal role for colonization of host tissues during infection. Previously, we and others have shown that Leptospira immunoglobulin-like proteins (Lig) of Leptospira spp. bind to fibronectin, laminin, collagen, and fibrinogen. In this study, we report that Leptospira can be immobilized by human tropoelastin (HTE) or elastin from different tissues, including lung, skin, and blood vessels, and that Lig proteins can bind to HTE or elastin. Moreover, both elastin and HTE bind to the same LigB immunoglobulin-like domains, including LigBCon4, LigBCen7′–8, LigBCen9, and LigBCen12 as demonstrated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and competition ELISAs. The LigB immunoglobulin-like domain binds to the 17th to 27th exons of HTE (17–27HTE) as determined by ELISA (LigBCon4, KD = 0.50 μm; LigBCen7′–8, KD = 0.82 μm; LigBCen9, KD = 1.54 μm; and LigBCen12, KD = 0.73 μm). The interaction of LigBCon4 and 17–27HTE was further confirmed by steady state fluorescence spectroscopy (KD = 0.49 μm) and ITC (KD = 0.54 μm). Furthermore, the binding was enthalpy-driven and affected by environmental pH, indicating it is a charge-charge interaction. The binding affinity of LigBCon4D341N to 17–27HTE was 4.6-fold less than that of wild type LigBCon4. In summary, we show that Lig proteins of Leptospira spp. interact with elastin and HTE, and we conclude this interaction may contribute to Leptospira adhesion to host tissues during infection.Pathogenic Leptospira spp. are spirochetes that cause leptospirosis, a serious infectious disease of people and animals (1, 2). Weil syndrome, the severe form of leptospiral infection, leads to multiorgan damage, including liver failure (jaundice), renal failure (nephritis), pulmonary hemorrhage, meningitis, abortion, and uveitis (3, 4). Furthermore, this disease is not only prevalent in many developing countries, it is reemerging in the United States (3). Although leptospirosis is a serious worldwide zoonotic disease, the pathogenic mechanisms of Leptospira infection remain enigmatic. Recent breakthroughs in applying genetic tools to Leptospira may facilitate studies on the molecular pathogenesis of leptospirosis (58).The attachment of pathogenic Leptospira spp. to host tissues is critical in the early phase of Leptospira infection. Leptospira spp. adhere to host tissues to overcome mechanical defense systems at tissue surfaces and to initiate colonization of specific tissues, such as the lung, kidney, and liver. Leptospira invade hosts tissues through mucous membranes or injured epidermis, coming in contact with subepithelial tissues. Here, certain bacterial outer surface proteins serve as microbial surface components recognizing adhesive matrix molecules (MSCRAMMs)2 to mediate the binding of bacteria to different extracellular matrices (ECMs) of host cells (9). Several leptospiral MSCRAMMs have been identified (1018), and we speculate that more will be identified in the near future.Lig proteins are distributed on the outer surface of pathogenic Leptospira, and the expression of Lig protein is only found in low passage strains (14, 16, 17), probably induced by environmental cues such as osmotic or temperature changes (19). Lig proteins can bind to fibrinogen and a variety of ECMs, including fibronectin (Fn), laminin, and collagen, thereby mediating adhesion to host cells (2023). Lig proteins also constitute good vaccine candidates (2426).Elastin is a component of ECM critical to tissue elasticity and resilience and is abundant in skin, lung, blood vessels, placenta, uterus, and other tissues (2729). Tropoelastin is the soluble precursor of elastin (28). During the major phase of elastogenesis, multiple tropoelastin molecules associate through coacervation (3032). Because of the abundance of elastin or tropoelastin on the surface of host cells, several bacterial MSCRAMMs use elastin and/or tropoelastin to mediate adhesion during the infection process (3335).Because leptospiral infection is known to cause severe pulmonary hemorrhage (36, 37) and abortion (38), we hypothesize that some leptospiral MSCRAMMs may interact with elastin and/or tropoelastin in these elastin-rich tissues. This is the first report that Lig proteins of Leptospira interact with elastin and tropoelastin, and the interactions are mediated by several specific immunoglobulin-like domains of Lig proteins, including LigBCon4, LigBCen7′–8, LigBCen9, and LigBCen12, which bind to the 17th to 27th exons of human tropoelastin (HTE).  相似文献   

15.
The Friend spleen focus-forming virus (SFFV) env gene encodes a glycoprotein with apparent Mr of 55,000 that binds to erythropoietin receptors (EpoR) to stimulate erythroblastosis. A retroviral vector that does not encode any Env glycoprotein was packaged into retroviral particles and was coinjected into mice in the presence of a nonpathogenic helper virus. Although most mice remained healthy, one mouse developed splenomegaly and polycythemia at 67 days; the virus from this mouse reproducibly caused the same symptoms in secondary recipients by 2 to 3 weeks postinfection. This disease, which was characterized by extramedullary erythropoietin-independent erythropoiesis in the spleens and livers, was also reproduced in long-term bone marrow cultures. Viruses from the diseased primary mouse and from secondary recipients converted an erythropoietin-dependent cell line (BaF3/EpoR) into factor-independent derivatives but had no effect on the interleukin-3-dependent parental BaF3 cells. Most of these factor-independent cell clones contained a major Env-related glycoprotein with an Mr of 60,000. During further in vivo passaging, a virus that encodes an Mr-55,000 glycoprotein became predominant. Sequence analysis indicated that the ultimate virus is a new SFFV that encodes a glycoprotein of 410 amino acids with the hallmark features of classical gp55s. Our results suggest that SFFV-related viruses can form in mice by recombination of retroviruses with genomic and helper virus sequences and that these novel viruses then evolve to become increasingly pathogenic.The independently isolated Friend and Rauscher erythroleukemia viruses (18, 48) are complexes of a replication competent murine leukemia virus (MuLV) and a replication-defective spleen focus-forming virus (SFFV) (39, 42, 47). The SFFVs encode Env glycoproteins (gp55) that are inefficiently processed to form larger cell surface derivatives (gp55p) (19). The gp55 binds to erythropoietin receptors (EpoR) to cause erythroblast proliferation and splenomegaly in susceptible mice. Evidence has suggested that the critical mitogenic interaction occurs exclusively on cell surfaces (7, 16).SFFVs are structurally closely related to mink cell focus-inducing viruses (MCFs) (2, 5, 10, 50), a class of replication-competent murine retroviruses that has a broad host range termed polytropic (15, 21). Although MCFs are not inherited as replication-competent intact proviruses, the mouse genome contains numerous dispersed polytropic env gene sequences (8, 17, 27). MCFs apparently readily form de novo by recombination when ecotropic host range MuLVs replicate in mice (14, 15, 26, 43). MCF env genes typically are hybrid recombinants that contain a 5′ polytropic-specific region and a 3′ ecotropic-specific portion (26). They encode a gPr90 Env glycoprotein that is cleaved by partial proteolysis to form the products gp70 surface (SU) glycoprotein plus p15E transmembrane (TM) protein (32, 39, 47). In addition, MCFs often differ from ecotropic MuLVs in their long terminal repeat (LTR) sequences (8, 20, 26, 28, 29, 45).Based on their sequences, SFFVs could have derived from MCFs by a 585-base deletion and by a single-base addition in the ecotropic-specific portion of the env gene (10). Evidence suggests that both the 585-bp deletion and the frameshift mutation probably contribute to SFFV pathogenesis (3, 49). Several pathogenic differences among SFFV strains have also been ascribed to amino acid sequence differences in the ecotropic-specific portion of the Env glycoproteins (9, 41).This report describes the origin and rapid stepwise evolution of a new SFFV. This new pathogenic virus initially formed in a mouse that had been injected with an ecotropic strain of MuLV in the presence of a retroviral vector that does not encode any Env glycoprotein. The mouse developed erythroleukemia, splenomegaly, and polycythemia after a long lag phase. At that time the spleen contained viruses with env genes that were able to activate EpoR. Serial passage of this initial virus isolate resulted in selection of a novel SFFV that encodes a gp55 glycoprotein of 410 amino acids. This experimental system provides a method for isolating new SFFVs and for mapping the stages in their genesis.  相似文献   

16.
17.
18.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the causative agent of human tuberculosis, remains one of the most prevalent human pathogens and a major cause of mortality worldwide. Metabolic network is a central mediator and defining feature of the pathogenicity of Mtb. Increasing evidence suggests that lysine succinylation dynamically regulates enzymes in carbon metabolism in both bacteria and human cells; however, its extent and function in Mtb remain unexplored. Here, we performed a global succinylome analysis of the virulent Mtb strain H37Rv by using high accuracy nano-LC-MS/MS in combination with the enrichment of succinylated peptides from digested cell lysates and subsequent peptide identification. In total, 1545 lysine succinylation sites on 626 proteins were identified in this pathogen. The identified succinylated proteins are involved in various biological processes and a large proportion of the succinylation sites are present on proteins in the central metabolism pathway. Site-specific mutations showed that succinylation is a negative regulatory modification on the enzymatic activity of acetyl-CoA synthetase. Molecular dynamics simulations demonstrated that succinylation affects the conformational stability of acetyl-CoA synthetase, which is critical for its enzymatic activity. Further functional studies showed that CobB, a sirtuin-like deacetylase in Mtb, functions as a desuccinylase of acetyl-CoA synthetase in in vitro assays. Together, our findings reveal widespread roles for lysine succinylation in regulating metabolism and diverse processes in Mtb. Our data provide a rich resource for functional analyses of lysine succinylation and facilitate the dissection of metabolic networks in this life-threatening pathogen.Post-translational modifications (PTMs)1 are complex and fundamental mechanisms modulating diverse protein properties and functions, and have been associated with almost all known cellular pathways and disease processes (1, 2). Among the hundreds of different PTMs, acylations at lysine residues, such as acetylation (36), malonylation (7, 8), crotonylation (9, 10), propionylation (1113), butyrylation (11, 13), and succinylation (7, 1416) are crucial for functional regulations of many prokaryotic and eukaryotic proteins. Because these lysine PTMs depend on the acyl-CoA metabolic intermediates, such as acetyl-CoA (Ac-CoA), succinyl-CoA, and malonyl-CoA, lysine acylation could provide a mechanism to respond to changes in the energy status of the cell and regulate energy metabolism and the key metabolic pathways in diverse organisms (17, 18).Among these lysine PTMs, lysine succinylation is a highly dynamic and regulated PTM defined as transfer of a succinyl group (-CO-CH2-CH2-CO-) to a lysine residue of a protein molecule (8). It was recently identified and comprehensively validated in both bacterial and mammalian cells (8, 14, 16). It was also identified in core histones, suggesting that lysine succinylation may regulate the functions of histones and affect chromatin structure and gene expression (7). Accumulating evidence suggests that lysine succinylation is a widespread and important PTM in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes and regulates diverse cellular processes (16). The system-wide studies involving lysine-succinylated peptide immunoprecipitation and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) have been employed to analyze the bacteria (E. coli) (14, 16), yeast (S. cerevisiae), human (HeLa) cells, and mouse embryonic fibroblasts and liver cells (16, 19). These succinylome studies have generated large data sets of lysine-succinylated proteins in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes and demonstrated the diverse cellular functions of this PTM. Notably, lysine succinylation is widespread among diverse mitochondrial metabolic enzymes that are involved in fatty acid metabolism, amino acid degradation, and the tricarboxylic acid cycle (19, 20). Thus, lysine succinylation is reported as a functional PTM with the potential to impact mitochondrial metabolism and coordinate different metabolic pathways in human cells and bacteria (14, 1922).Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the causative agent of tuberculosis (TB), is a major cause of mortality worldwide and claims more human lives annually than any other bacterial pathogen (23). About one third of the world''s population is infected with Mtb, which leads to nearly 1.3 million deaths and 8.6 million new cases of TB in 2012 worldwide (24). Mtb remains a major threat to global health, especially in the developing countries. Emergence of multidrug resistant (MDR) and extensively drug-resistant (XDR) Mtb, and also the emergence of co-infection between TB and HIV have further worsened the situation (2527). Among bacterial pathogens, Mtb has a distinctive life cycle spanning different environments and developmental stages (28). Especially, Mtb can exist in dormant or active states in the host, leading to asymptomatic latent TB infection or active TB disease (29). To achieve these different physiologic states, Mtb developed a mechanism to sense diverse signals from the host and to coordinately regulate multiple cellular processes and pathways (30, 31). Mtb has evolved its metabolic network to both maintain and propagate its survival as a species within humans (3235). It is well accepted that metabolic network is a central mediator and defining feature of the pathogenicity of Mtb (23, 3638). Knowledge of the regulation of metabolic pathways used by Mtb during infection is therefore important for understanding its pathogenicity, and can also guide the development of novel drug therapies (39). On the other hand, increasing evidence suggests that lysine succinylation dynamically regulates enzymes in carbon metabolism in both bacteria and human cells (14, 1922). It is tempting to speculate that lysine succinylation may play an important regulatory role in metabolic processes in Mtb. However, to the best of our knowledge, no succinylated protein in Mtb has been identified, presenting a major obstacle to understand the regulatory roles of lysine succinylation in this life-threatening pathogen.In order to fill this gap in our knowledge, we have initiated a systematic study of the identities and functional roles of the succinylated protein in Mtb. Because Mtb H37Rv is the first sequenced Mtb strain (40) and has been extensively used for studies in dissecting the roles of individual genes in pathogenesis (41), it was selected as a test case. We analyzed the succinylome of Mtb H37Rv by using high accuracy nano-LC-MS/MS in combination with the enrichment of succinylated peptides from digested cell lysates and subsequent peptide identification. In total, 1545 lysine succinylation sites on 626 proteins were identified in this pathogen. The identified succinylated proteins are involved in various biological processes and render particular enrichment to metabolic process. A large proportion of the succinylation sites are present on proteins in the central metabolism pathway. We further dissected the regulatory role of succinylation on acetyl-CoA synthetase (Acs) via site-specific mutagenesis analysis and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations showed that reversible lysine succinylation could inhibit the activity of Acs. Further functional studies showed that CobB, a sirtuin-like deacetylase in Mtb, functions as a deacetylase and as a desuccinylase of Acs in in vitro assays. Together, our findings provide significant insights into the range of functions regulated by lysine succinylation in Mtb.  相似文献   

19.
A decoding algorithm is tested that mechanistically models the progressive alignments that arise as the mRNA moves past the rRNA tail during translation elongation. Each of these alignments provides an opportunity for hybridization between the single-stranded, -terminal nucleotides of the 16S rRNA and the spatially accessible window of mRNA sequence, from which a free energy value can be calculated. Using this algorithm we show that a periodic, energetic pattern of frequency 1/3 is revealed. This periodic signal exists in the majority of coding regions of eubacterial genes, but not in the non-coding regions encoding the 16S and 23S rRNAs. Signal analysis reveals that the population of coding regions of each bacterial species has a mean phase that is correlated in a statistically significant way with species () content. These results suggest that the periodic signal could function as a synchronization signal for the maintenance of reading frame and that codon usage provides a mechanism for manipulation of signal phase.[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32]  相似文献   

20.
The accumulation of bioenergy carriers was assessed in two starchless mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (the sta6 [ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase] and sta7-10 [isoamylase] mutants), a control strain (CC124), and two complemented strains of the sta7-10 mutant. The results indicate that the genetic blockage of starch synthesis in the sta6 and sta7-10 mutants increases the accumulation of lipids on a cellular basis during nitrogen deprivation relative to that in the CC124 control as determined by conversion to fatty acid methyl esters. However, this increased level of lipid accumulation is energetically insufficient to completely offset the loss of cellular starch that is synthesized by CC124 during nitrogen deprivation. We therefore investigated acetate utilization and O2 evolution to obtain further insights into the physiological adjustments utilized by the two starchless mutants in the absence of starch synthesis. The results demonstrate that both starchless mutants metabolize less acetate and have more severely attenuated levels of photosynthetic O2 evolution than CC124, indicating that a decrease in overall anabolic processes is a significant physiological response in the starchless mutants during nitrogen deprivation. Interestingly, two independent sta7-10:STA7 complemented strains exhibited significantly greater quantities of cellular starch and lipid than CC124 during acclimation to nitrogen deprivation. Moreover, the complemented strains synthesized significant quantities of starch even when cultured in nutrient-replete medium.Microalgae are able to efficiently convert sunlight, water, and CO2 into a variety of products suitable for renewable energy applications, including H2, carbohydrates, and lipids (11, 12, 16, 21, 38, 41, 44). The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has emerged as a model organism for studying algal physiology, photosynthesis, metabolism, nutrient stress, and the synthesis of bioenergy carriers (12, 15, 19, 24, 32). During acclimation to nitrogen deprivation, C. reinhardtii cells accumulate significant quantities of starch and form lipid bodies (4, 5, 8, 26, 28, 30, 34, 43, 46, 48). Despite the significance of these products in algal physiology and in biofuels applications, the metabolic, enzymatic, and regulatory mechanisms controlling the partitioning of metabolites into these distinct carbon stores in algae are poorly understood. Several C. reinhardtii starch mutants with various phenotypic changes in starch content and structure have been isolated (2,4). Two of these, the sta6 and sta7 mutants, contain single-gene disruptions that result in “starchless” phenotypes with severely attenuated levels of starch granule accumulation (2, 4, 34, 39, 40, 48).The disrupted loci in the two isolated starchless mutants are distinct and each mutant has a unique phenotype (7, 40). In the sta6 mutant, the small, catalytic subunit of ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase-SS) is disrupted (2, 4, 48), and this mutant accumulates less than 1% of the starch observed in wild-type (WT) cells under conditions of nitrogen deprivation. The sta7 mutant contains a disrupted isoamylase gene (7, 8, 10, 39, 40) and also has severely attenuated levels of starch, but it accumulates a soluble glycogen-like product (4, 9). In this study, we conducted an examination of the unique physiological acclimations that are utilized by these mutants to adapt to the loss of starch synthesis. As the genetic lesions in these two mutants are distinct and block starch synthesis via two very different mechanisms, we investigated the physiological consequences of starch inhibition in both of these mutants from a holistic bioenergy perspective, which included photosynthetic parameters and the overall yields of lipids and carbohydrates, the two primary bioenergy carriers in C. reinhardtii. Specifically, we examined whether the inability to synthesize starch would result in the accumulation of additional lipid, alter cellular growth or cell size, affect acetate utilization, and/or influence photosynthetic O2 evolution. Our data indicate that both the sta6 (BAFJ5) and sta7 (sta7-10) mutants accumulate more lipid than the CC124 control during nitrogen deprivation. However, the additional lipid does not completely offset the loss of starch synthesis from a complete energetic perspective. Increased lipid accumulation during nitrogen stress has also been reported for a variety of starch mutants in recent papers (26, 27, 46). A significant feature in both of the starchless mutants studied here is that O2 evolution and acetate utilization are diminished during nitrogen stress, which is undesirable from an overall bioenergy perspective. Remarkably, complementation of sta7-10 with genomic DNA encoding the wild-type isoamylase gene resulted in cells that were larger than those of the sta6, sta7-10, and CC124 strains, exhibited the highest total lipid levels during nitrogen deprivation, and overaccumulated starch even in nutrient-replete medium.  相似文献   

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