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Generally, prokaryotes store carbon as polyhydroxyalkanoate, starch, or glycogen. The Gram-positive actinomycete Rhodococcus opacus strain PD630 is noteworthy in that it stores carbon in the form of triacylglycerol (TAG). Several studies have demonstrated that R. opacus PD630 can accumulate up to 76% of its cell dry weight as TAG when grown under nitrogen-limiting conditions. While this process is well studied, the underlying molecular and biochemical mechanisms leading to TAG biosynthesis and subsequent storage are poorly understood. We designed a high-throughput genetic screening to identify genes and their products required for TAG biosynthesis and storage in R. opacus PD630. We identified a gene predicted to encode a putative heparin-binding hemagglutinin homolog, which we have termed tadA (triacylglycerol accumulation deficient), as being important for TAG accumulation. Kinetic studies of TAG accumulation in both the wild-type (WT) and mutant strains demonstrated that the tadA mutant accumulates 30 to 40% less TAG than the parental strain (WT). We observed that lipid bodies formed by the mutant strain were of a different size and shape than those of the WT. Characterization of TadA demonstrated that the protein is capable of binding heparin and of agglutinating purified lipid bodies. Finally, we observed that the TadA protein localizes to lipid bodies in R. opacus PD630 both in vivo and in vitro. Based on these data, we hypothesize that the TadA protein acts to aggregate small lipid bodies, found in cells during early stages of lipid storage, into larger lipid bodies and thus plays a key role in lipid body maturation in R. opacus PD630.While the majority of eubacteria (24, 33), and indeed many archaea (22, 33), store carbon as polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA), a small subset of organisms, primarily actinomycetes, are capable of storing carbon in the form of triacylglycerol (TAG). TAG biosynthesis and storage has been observed in members of the genera Mycobacterium, Rhodococcus, Streptomyces, Nocardia, and others (4, 6, 11, 12, 19, 20, 36). Of these organisms, TAG biosynthesis and storage has been most extensively studied for the Gram-positive, non-spore-forming actinomycete Rhodococcus opacus, strain PD630 (1-6, 11, 12, 19, 20, 25, 36, 38-41).Several studies have demonstrated that R. opacus PD630 is capable of accumulating up to 76% of its cell dry weight (CDW) as TAG (summarized in reference 3). As is the case for PHA biosynthesis, TAG accumulation occurs during nitrogen starvation when carbon is in excess (1-3, 27, 41). Paralleling PHA biosynthesis further, TAG is stored in R. opacus PD630 in distinct inclusion bodies, termed lipid bodies (2, 3, 25, 38, 40). While several studies have sought to identify the underlying molecular and biochemical mechanisms behind TAG biosynthesis and storage in the form of lipid bodies, very little is known concerning these processes.We sought to identify genes and their products that are essential for lipid metabolism in R. opacus PD630. Utilizing a forward genetic approach, we identified a conserved hypothetical gene, termed herein tadA (triacylglycerol accumulation deficient), which is predicted to encode a protein with sequence similarity to the heparin-binding hemagglutinin (HbhA) family of proteins from the genus Mycobacterium. The tadA::Tn5 mutant accumulates 30 to 40% less TAG than the parental strain. We demonstrate that this deficiency is most likely the result of altered lipid body formation and morphology. Through biochemical studies, we further demonstrate that the predicted heparin-binding activity of this protein is essential for its activity both in vivo and in vitro. To our knowledge, this is the first protein shown to regulate lipid body assembly and maturation in prokaryotes.  相似文献   

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Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) has been widely used for structural characterization of bacterial endotoxins (lipid A). However, the mass spectrometric behavior of the lipid A molecule is highly dependent on the matrix. Furthermore, this dependence is strongly linked to phosphorylation patterns. Using lipid A from Escherichia coli O116 as a model system, we have investigated the effects of different matrices and comatrix compounds on the analysis of lipid A. In this paper, we report a highly sensitive matrix system for lipid A analysis, which consists of 5-chloro-2-mercaptobenzothiazole matrix and EDTA ammonium salt comatrix. This matrix system enhances the sensitivity of the analysis of diphosphorylated lipid A species by more than 100-fold and in addition provides tolerance to high concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and tolerance to sodium chloride and calcium chloride at 10 μM, 100 μM, and 10 μM concentrations. The method was further evaluated for analysis of lipid A species with different phosphorylation patterns and from different bacteria, including Helicobacter pylori, Salmonella enterica serovar Riogrande, and Francisella novicida.Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is a major component of the outer membranes of Gram-negative bacteria (21). Typically, LPS molecules consist of a hydrophilic carbohydrate portion and a hydrophobic lipid A (or endotoxin). The lipid A molecule consists of a fatty acyl substituted β-d-GlcN-(1-6)-α-GlcN disaccharide unit that usually carries phosphate groups. Diphosphorylated lipid A is generally presumed to be phosphorylated at C-1 and C-4′ positions (9); however, lipid A moieties containing pyrophosphate (PP) groups have also been reported (13). The presence of phosphate groups in lipid A greatly affects the endotoxic properties of LPS (22). Deletion of either of these groups reduces an endotoxic activity of the resulting monophosphorylated LPS by approximately 100-fold (18). For example, monophosphorylated lipid A has been used as an adjuvant in a hepatitis B vaccine in Europe (1, 12).Mass spectrometry (MS) has been widely used to gain information about the heterogeneity, i.e., the number of different species of lipid A families and a distribution of fatty acids on each glucosamine residue (2, 3, 9, 16, 20, 23, 28, 29, 30, 32, 35, 36). Detailed structural information, including the phosphorylation pattern of lipid A, can be obtained by tandem mass spectrometry. Several matrices have been used for the analysis of lipid A using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight MS (MALDI-TOF MS), including 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB), 2,4,6-trihydroxyacetophenone (THAP), and 6-aza-2-thiothymine (ATT) (8). Although DHB has been widely used for peptide analysis, it produces uneven crystals and leads to poor spot-to-spot reproducibility (3, 6, 11). Furthermore, the low solubility in the solvent compatible with lipid A and nonuniformity in a matrix layer (crystals) can lead to variations in the ionization yield across the sample resulting in formation of “hot” (or “sweet”) spots (14). On the other hand, 5-chloro-2-mercaptobenzothiazole (CMBT) was found to offer excellent spot-to-spot reproducibility because of the homogeneous crystallization of the analyte/matrix mixture over the sample spot (33). CMBT is soluble in methanol-chloroform-water (4:4:1, vol:vol:vol), a solvent compatible with lipid A molecules, especially hexaacylated species. Thus, it has been widely used for lipid A analysis (4, 9, 23, 35, 33). Interestingly, different preparation procedures for analysis of lipid A species dictate a selection of the preferred matrix system (10). For example, lipid A prepared using a TRI Reagent-based procedure with a CMBT matrix was preferable for the detection of phosphoethanolamine modifications (35). On the other hand, the analysis of lipid A prepared using an LPS extraction kit-based procedure with DHB was preferable for the detection of aminoarabinose modification (10). In addition, divalent cations, such as Ca2+ or Mg2+, can bridge the phosphorylated negatively charged groups between neighboring LPS molecules to form aggregates (24). Thus, there is a need for technologies capable of characterizing lipid A from biologically relevant samples in an accurate, rapid, and highly sensitive manner. Here we attempt to establish an optimized MALDI MS matrix system for the sensitive analysis of lipid A, especially its diphosphorylated forms, including both pyrophosphorylated and bisphosphorylated species. We also propose to incorporate a complex reagent (additive or comatrix) for reducing the interference of cations (5, 7, 15).  相似文献   

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Rotaviruses are a major cause of acute gastroenteritis in children worldwide. Early stages of rotavirus assembly in infected cells occur in viroplasms. Confocal microscopy demonstrated that viroplasms associate with lipids and proteins (perilipin A, ADRP) characteristic of lipid droplets (LDs). LD-associated proteins were also found to colocalize with viroplasms containing a rotaviral NSP5-enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) fusion protein and with viroplasm-like structures in uninfected cells coexpressing viral NSP2 and NSP5. Close spatial proximity of NSP5-EGFP and cellular perilipin A was confirmed by fluorescence resonance energy transfer. Viroplasms appear to recruit LD components during the time course of rotavirus infection. NSP5-specific siRNA blocked association of perilipin A with NSP5 in viroplasms. Viral double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), NSP5, and perilipin A cosedimented in low-density gradient fractions of rotavirus-infected cell extracts. Chemical compounds interfering with LD formation (isoproterenol plus isobutylmethylxanthine; triacsin C) decreased the number of viroplasms and inhibited dsRNA replication and the production of infectious progeny virus; this effect correlated with significant protection of cells from virus-associated cytopathicity. Rotaviruses represent a genus of another virus family utilizing LD components for replication, pointing at novel therapeutic targets for these pathogens.Rotaviruses are a major cause of acute gastroenteritis in infants and young children, producing a high burden of disease worldwide and over 600,000 deaths per annum, mainly in developing countries (43). Recently, two live attenuated rotavirus vaccines (49, 58) have been licensed in various countries, and their widespread use in universal mass vaccination programs is being implemented (55).Rotaviruses form a genus of the Reoviridae family. They contain a genome of 11 segments of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) encoding six structural proteins (VP1, VP2, VP3, VP4, VP6, and VP7) and six nonstructural proteins (NSP1 to NSP6). After entry into the host cell the outer layer of the triple-layered particles (TLPs; infectious virions) is removed in endocytic vesicles, and the resulting double-layered particles (DLPs) actively transcribe mRNAs from the 11 RNA segments and release them into the cytoplasm. The mRNAs are translated into proteins but also act as templates for dsRNA synthesis (RNA replication). The early stages of viral morphogenesis and viral RNA replication occur in cytoplasmic inclusion bodies termed “viroplasms.” Partially assembled DLPs are released from viroplasms and receive their outer layer in the rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER), forming TLPs (for details, see Estes and Kapikian [20]).The rotavirus nonstructural proteins NSP2 and NSP5 are major components of viroplasms (20, 47). These two proteins alone are sufficient to induce the formation of viroplasm-like structures (VLS) (21). Blocking of either NSP2 or NSP5 in rotavirus-infected cells significantly reduces viroplasm formation and the production of infectious viral progeny (11, 54, 57). Until now, host cell proteins involved in viroplasm formation have not been identified.Morphological similarities between viroplasms and lipid droplets (LDs) prompted us to investigate their relationship. Both structures have phosphoproteins (NSP5 and perilipin A, respectively) inserted on their surface in ringlike shapes (16, 34). LDs are intracellular organelles involved in lipid and carbohydrate metabolism. They consist of a neutral lipid core surrounded by a phospholipid monolayer containing LD-associated proteins; those include proteins of the PAT family consisting of perilipin, adipophilin (adipose differentiation-related protein [ADRP]), and TIP-47 (9, 37). Lipolysis from LDs is regulated by hormones such as catecholamines, which trigger the phosphorylation of hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) and perilipin A and induce LD fragmentation. Incubating adipocytes with the β-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol and the phosphodiesterase inhibitor isobutylmethylxanthine (IBMX) activates this pathway (27, 34). LD formation can also be blocked by triacsin C, a specific inhibitor of long chain acyl coenzyme A synthetases (30, 39).We demonstrate here that rotavirus viroplasms colocalize with the LD-associated proteins perilipin A and ADRP and also with the lipids of LDs. These interactions appear to be required for the formation of functional viroplasms and the production of infectious viral progeny, since compounds dispersing LDs or blocking LD formation significantly decrease the number and size of viroplasms and the amount of infectious progeny. Taken together, these findings strongly suggest a critical role of LDs in rotavirus replication.  相似文献   

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Immunogold localization revealed that OmcS, a cytochrome that is required for Fe(III) oxide reduction by Geobacter sulfurreducens, was localized along the pili. The apparent spacing between OmcS molecules suggests that OmcS facilitates electron transfer from pili to Fe(III) oxides rather than promoting electron conduction along the length of the pili.There are multiple competing/complementary models for extracellular electron transfer in Fe(III)- and electrode-reducing microorganisms (8, 18, 20, 44). Which mechanisms prevail in different microorganisms or environmental conditions may greatly influence which microorganisms compete most successfully in sedimentary environments or on the surfaces of electrodes and can impact practical decisions on the best strategies to promote Fe(III) reduction for bioremediation applications (18, 19) or to enhance the power output of microbial fuel cells (18, 21).The three most commonly considered mechanisms for electron transfer to extracellular electron acceptors are (i) direct contact between redox-active proteins on the outer surfaces of the cells and the electron acceptor, (ii) electron transfer via soluble electron shuttling molecules, and (iii) the conduction of electrons along pili or other filamentous structures. Evidence for the first mechanism includes the necessity for direct cell-Fe(III) oxide contact in Geobacter species (34) and the finding that intensively studied Fe(III)- and electrode-reducing microorganisms, such as Geobacter sulfurreducens and Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, display redox-active proteins on their outer cell surfaces that could have access to extracellular electron acceptors (1, 2, 12, 15, 27, 28, 31-33). Deletion of the genes for these proteins often inhibits Fe(III) reduction (1, 4, 7, 15, 17, 28, 40) and electron transfer to electrodes (5, 7, 11, 33). In some instances, these proteins have been purified and shown to have the capacity to reduce Fe(III) and other potential electron acceptors in vitro (10, 13, 29, 38, 42, 43, 48, 49).Evidence for the second mechanism includes the ability of some microorganisms to reduce Fe(III) that they cannot directly contact, which can be associated with the accumulation of soluble substances that can promote electron shuttling (17, 22, 26, 35, 36, 47). In microbial fuel cell studies, an abundance of planktonic cells and/or the loss of current-producing capacity when the medium is replaced is consistent with the presence of an electron shuttle (3, 14, 26). Furthermore, a soluble electron shuttle is the most likely explanation for the electrochemical signatures of some microorganisms growing on an electrode surface (26, 46).Evidence for the third mechanism is more circumstantial (19). Filaments that have conductive properties have been identified in Shewanella (7) and Geobacter (41) species. To date, conductance has been measured only across the diameter of the filaments, not along the length. The evidence that the conductive filaments were involved in extracellular electron transfer in Shewanella was the finding that deletion of the genes for the c-type cytochromes OmcA and MtrC, which are necessary for extracellular electron transfer, resulted in nonconductive filaments, suggesting that the cytochromes were associated with the filaments (7). However, subsequent studies specifically designed to localize these cytochromes revealed that, although the cytochromes were extracellular, they were attached to the cells or in the exopolymeric matrix and not aligned along the pili (24, 25, 30, 40, 43). Subsequent reviews of electron transfer to Fe(III) in Shewanella oneidensis (44, 45) appear to have dropped the nanowire concept and focused on the first and second mechanisms.Geobacter sulfurreducens has a number of c-type cytochromes (15, 28) and multicopper proteins (12, 27) that have been demonstrated or proposed to be on the outer cell surface and are essential for extracellular electron transfer. Immunolocalization and proteolysis studies demonstrated that the cytochrome OmcB, which is essential for optimal Fe(III) reduction (15) and highly expressed during growth on electrodes (33), is embedded in the outer membrane (39), whereas the multicopper protein OmpB, which is also required for Fe(III) oxide reduction (27), is exposed on the outer cell surface (39).OmcS is one of the most abundant cytochromes that can readily be sheared from the outer surfaces of G. sulfurreducens cells (28). It is essential for the reduction of Fe(III) oxide (28) and for electron transfer to electrodes under some conditions (11). Therefore, the localization of this important protein was further investigated.  相似文献   

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Analysis of Lyme borreliosis (LB) spirochetes, using a novel multilocus sequence analysis scheme, revealed that OspA serotype 4 strains (a rodent-associated ecotype) of Borrelia garinii were sufficiently genetically distinct from bird-associated B. garinii strains to deserve species status. We suggest that OspA serotype 4 strains be raised to species status and named Borrelia bavariensis sp. nov. The rooted phylogenetic trees provide novel insights into the evolutionary history of LB spirochetes.Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) have been shown to be powerful and pragmatic molecular methods for typing large numbers of microbial strains for population genetics studies, delineation of species, and assignment of strains to defined bacterial species (4, 13, 27, 40, 44). To date, MLST/MLSA schemes have been applied only to a few vector-borne microbial populations (1, 6, 30, 37, 40, 41, 47).Lyme borreliosis (LB) spirochetes comprise a diverse group of zoonotic bacteria which are transmitted among vertebrate hosts by ixodid (hard) ticks. The most common agents of human LB are Borrelia burgdorferi (sensu stricto), Borrelia afzelii, Borrelia garinii, Borrelia lusitaniae, and Borrelia spielmanii (7, 8, 12, 35). To date, 15 species have been named within the group of LB spirochetes (6, 31, 32, 37, 38, 41). While several of these LB species have been delineated using whole DNA-DNA hybridization (3, 20, 33), most ecological or epidemiological studies have been using single loci (5, 9-11, 29, 34, 36, 38, 42, 51, 53). Although some of these loci have been convenient for species assignment of strains or to address particular epidemiological questions, they may be unsuitable to resolve evolutionary relationships among LB species, because it is not possible to define any outgroup. For example, both the 5S-23S intergenic spacer (5S-23S IGS) and the gene encoding the outer surface protein A (ospA) are present only in LB spirochete genomes (36, 43). The advantage of using appropriate housekeeping genes of LB group spirochetes is that phylogenetic trees can be rooted with sequences of relapsing fever spirochetes. This renders the data amenable to detailed evolutionary studies of LB spirochetes.LB group spirochetes differ remarkably in their patterns and levels of host association, which are likely to affect their population structures (22, 24, 46, 48). Of the three main Eurasian Borrelia species, B. afzelii is adapted to rodents, whereas B. valaisiana and most strains of B. garinii are maintained by birds (12, 15, 16, 23, 26, 45). However, B. garinii OspA serotype 4 strains in Europe have been shown to be transmitted by rodents (17, 18) and, therefore, constitute a distinct ecotype within B. garinii. These strains have also been associated with high pathogenicity in humans, and their finer-scale geographical distribution seems highly focal (10, 34, 52, 53).In this study, we analyzed the intra- and interspecific phylogenetic relationships of B. burgdorferi, B. afzelii, B. garinii, B. valaisiana, B. lusitaniae, B. bissettii, and B. spielmanii by means of a novel MLSA scheme based on chromosomal housekeeping genes (30, 48).  相似文献   

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Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) UL37 proteins traffic sequentially from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the mitochondria. In transiently transfected cells, UL37 proteins traffic into the mitochondrion-associated membranes (MAM), the site of contact between the ER and mitochondria. In HCMV-infected cells, the predominant UL37 exon 1 protein, pUL37x1, trafficked into the ER, the MAM, and the mitochondria. Surprisingly, a component of the MAM calcium signaling junction complex, cytosolic Grp75, was increasingly enriched in heavy MAM from HCMV-infected cells. These studies show the first documented case of a herpesvirus protein, HCMV pUL37x1, trafficking into the MAM during permissive infection and HCMV-induced alteration of the MAM protein composition.The human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) UL37 immediate early (IE) locus expresses multiple products, including the predominant UL37 exon 1 protein, pUL37x1, also known as viral mitochondrion-localized inhibitor of apoptosis (vMIA), during lytic infection (16, 22, 24, 39, 44). The UL37 glycoprotein (gpUL37) shares UL37x1 sequences and is internally cleaved, generating pUL37NH2 and gpUL37COOH (2, 22, 25, 26). pUL37x1 is essential for the growth of HCMV in humans (17) and for the growth of primary HCMV strains (20) and strain AD169 (14, 35, 39, 49) but not strain TownevarATCC in permissive human fibroblasts (HFFs) (27).pUL37x1 induces calcium (Ca2+) efflux from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (39), regulates viral early gene expression (5, 10), disrupts F-actin (34, 39), recruits and inactivates Bax at the mitochondrial outer membrane (MOM) (4, 31-33), and inhibits mitochondrial serine protease at late times of infection (28).Intriguingly, HCMV UL37 proteins localize dually in the ER and in the mitochondria (2, 9, 16, 17, 24-26). In contrast to other characterized, similarly localized proteins (3, 6, 11, 23, 30, 38), dual-trafficking UL37 proteins are noncompetitive and sequential, as an uncleaved gpUL37 mutant protein is ER translocated, N-glycosylated, and then imported into the mitochondria (24, 26).Ninety-nine percent of ∼1,000 mitochondrial proteins are synthesized in the cytosol and directly imported into the mitochondria (13). However, the mitochondrial import of ER-synthesized proteins is poorly understood. One potential pathway is the use of the mitochondrion-associated membrane (MAM) as a transfer waypoint. The MAM is a specialized ER subdomain enriched in lipid-synthetic enzymes, lipid-associated proteins, such as sigma-1 receptor, and chaperones (18, 45). The MAM, the site of contact between the ER and the mitochondria, permits the translocation of membrane-bound lipids, including ceramide, between the two organelles (40). The MAM also provides enriched Ca2+ microdomains for mitochondrial signaling (15, 36, 37, 43, 48). One macromolecular MAM complex involved in efficient ER-to-mitochondrion Ca2+ transfer is comprised of ER-bound inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor 3 (IP3R3), cytosolic Grp75, and a MOM-localized voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) (42). Another MAM-stabilizing protein complex utilizes mitofusin 2 (Mfn2) to tether ER and mitochondrial organelles together (12).HCMV UL37 proteins traffic into the MAM of transiently transfected HFFs and HeLa cells, directed by their NH2-terminal leaders (8, 47). To determine whether the MAM is targeted by UL37 proteins during infection, we fractionated HCMV-infected cells and examined pUL37x1 trafficking in microsomes, mitochondria, and the MAM throughout all temporal phases of infection. Because MAM domains physically bridge two organelles, multiple markers were employed to verify the purity and identity of the fractions (7, 8, 19, 46, 47).(These studies were performed in part by Chad Williamson in partial fulfillment of his doctoral studies in the Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics Program at George Washington Institute of Biomedical Sciences.)HFFs and life-extended (LE)-HFFs were grown and not infected or infected with HCMV (strain AD169) at a multiplicity of 3 PFU/cell as previously described (8, 26, 47). Heavy (6,300 × g) and light (100,000 × g) MAM fractions, mitochondria, and microsomes were isolated at various times of infection and quantified as described previously (7, 8, 47). Ten- or 20-μg amounts of total lysate or of subcellular fractions were resolved by SDS-PAGE in 4 to 12% Bis-Tris NuPage gels (Invitrogen) and examined by Western analyses (7, 8, 26). Twenty-microgram amounts of the fractions were not treated or treated with proteinase K (3 μg) for 20 min on ice, resolved by SDS-PAGE, and probed by Western analysis. The blots were probed with rabbit anti-UL37x1 antiserum (DC35), goat anti-dolichyl phosphate mannose synthase 1 (DPM1), goat anti-COX2 (both from Santa Cruz Biotechnology), mouse anti-Grp75 (StressGen Biotechnologies), and the corresponding horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies (8, 47). Reactive proteins were detected by enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) reagents (Pierce), and images were digitized as described previously (26, 47).  相似文献   

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Ubiquitous among eukaryotes, lipid droplets are organelles that function to coordinate intracellular lipid homeostasis. Their morphology and abundance is affected by numerous genes, many of which are involved in lipid metabolism. In this report we identify a Trypanosoma brucei protein kinase, LDK, and demonstrate its localization to the periphery of lipid droplets. Association with lipid droplets was abrogated when the hydrophobic domain of LDK was deleted, supporting a model in which the hydrophobic domain is associated with or inserted into the membrane monolayer of the organelle. RNA interference knockdown of LDK modestly affected the growth of mammalian bloodstream-stage parasites but did not affect the growth of insect (procyclic)-stage parasites. However, the abundance of lipid droplets dramatically decreased in both cases. This loss was dominant over treatment with myriocin or growth in delipidated serum, both of which induce lipid body biogenesis. Growth in delipidated serum also increased LDK autophosphorylation activity. Thus, LDK is required for the biogenesis or maintenance of lipid droplets and is one of the few protein kinases specifically and predominantly associated with an intracellular organelle.Trypanosoma brucei is a single-celled eukaryotic pathogen responsible for human African trypanosomiasis (also known as African sleeping sickness) and nagana in domestic animals. More than 50,000 cases of human disease occur yearly, with over 70 million people at risk. No vaccine exists, and chemotherapy is difficult to administer and prone to pathogen resistance. As T. brucei transits between the mammalian bloodstream and the tsetse fly vector during its life cycle, the organism encounters and adapts to profoundly different environmental conditions. The parasite undergoes dramatic changes in both energy (7, 51) and lipid biosynthesis and metabolism (39, 47, 49) as it shifts between these environments.Protein kinases function in numerous regulatory aspects of the cell, including control of the cell cycle and morphology, responses to stress, and transmission of signals from the extracellular environment or between compartments of the cell. As is the case in other eukaryotes, protein kinases, particularly those associated with membranes, are expected to play pivotal roles in the cell''s ability to sense and appropriately respond to its environment. Trypanosoma brucei possesses over 170 protein kinases (16, 44). Most of these can be assigned to the standard groups of protein kinases based on sequence similarity within the kinase domain. However, sequence similarities with kinases from more well-studied organisms are rarely strong enough to allow one-to-one orthologous relationships to be determined (44), and even those which appear orthologous by sequence have sometimes shown functional divergence (46). Hence, an understanding of the roles of specific protein kinases of trypanosomatids requires an individualized assessment. The initial genome analysis of the trypanosomatids (16) showed a lack of receptor tyrosine kinases, but nine T. brucei predicted serine/threonine kinases were annotated as possessing transmembrane domains. One of these was recently shown to be strategically located at a key interface between the host and parasite: the flagellar pocket (38). This eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2α (eIF2α) family kinase was postulated to play a sensory role in monitoring protein transport.Only a very small number of protein kinases of various organisms have been observed to localize to the membranes of intracellular organelles, most of them to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (14, 27, 50). Lipid droplets (also known as lipid bodies, adiposomes, or oil bodies in plants) are thought to arise from the ER, although the routes of protein localization to them are not well understood. They are increasingly recognized as legitimate organelles due to their dynamic roles in energy metabolism (40), lipid trafficking (41), and protection against toxic effects of nonesterified lipids and sterols (18). Studies also suggest that they function as potential protein storage depots (12) and in antigen presentation (10). Although recent efforts to expand the lipid droplet proteome have resulted in a vastly increased and in many cases surprising catalogue of potentially associated proteins (3, 5, 11, 12, 23, 37), relatively little is known as to how these structures form and are regulated within the cell.We examine here a novel T. brucei protein kinase with a predicted transmembrane domain. Surprisingly, this protein is localized intracellularly in association with lipid droplets. RNAi-mediated knockdown of this newly identified kinase, dubbed LDK (for lipid droplet kinase), reveals a role in the formation or maintenance of lipid droplets in both mammalian bloodstream-form (BF) and insect procyclic-form (PF) stages of the parasite life cycle.  相似文献   

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Lipid A deacylase PagL, which detoxifies endotoxin, is latent in Salmonella enterica. This study determined the biological significance of this latency. PagL latency was beneficial for bacteria in producing a robust permeation barrier through lipid A modifications under host-mimetic conditions that induced the modification enzymes, including PagL.The outer layer of the outer membrane in enteric Gram-negative bacteria is exclusively occupied by lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which contains lipid A as the membrane anchor, while the inner layer contains phospholipids. This asymmetric lipid bilayer serves as a permeation barrier to a large number of noxious compounds. The strength of this barrier is due to the strong lateral interactions between LPS molecules and the low fluidity of the saturated fatty acid portion of lipid A in the outer membrane (reviewed in reference 20). Large hydrophilic compounds are excluded by narrow porin channels, and lipophilic compounds cross the asymmetric bilayer very slowly.The prototype lipid A structure synthesized in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) is shown in Fig. Fig.11 A. In S. Typhimurium, lipid A is further modified by enzymes that are induced upon activation of the two-component regulatory system PhoP-PhoQ (Fig. (Fig.1B)1B) (9). PhoP-PhoQ is essential for Salmonella virulence (3, 6, 18), and PhoP-PhoQ-regulated lipid A modifications are involved in many aspects of virulence. PhoQ is a sensor histidine kinase that responds to environmental conditions, including those within mammalian tissues. The host environment is experimentally mimicked by magnesium limitation and/or mild acid pH in the culture medium (3, 4, 6, 18, 21). In response to specific environmental signals, PhoQ phosphorylates PhoP, leading to the activation of pagL and pagP, which encode outer membrane lipid A 3-O-deacylase and outer membrane lipid A palmitoyltransferase, respectively (2, 22). Lipid A 3-O-deacylation by PagL and palmitoylation by PagP reduce the ability of lipid A to activate host Toll-like receptor 4, indicating that PhoP-PhoQ-dependent lipid A modifications help pathogens evade innate immune recognition (12). The regulation of lpxO, which encodes lipid A hydroxylase, is also mediated, at least in part, by PhoP-PhoQ (5, 9). Activation of PhoP-PhoQ leads to the activation of a second two-component regulatory system, PmrA-PmrB (8, 10). PmrA-PmrB promotes the attachment of aminoarabinose and phosphoethanolamine to phosphate groups on lipid A, which are involved in bacterial resistance to cationic antimicrobial peptides (7, 15). Furthermore, PhoP-PhoQ activation produces a more robust permeation barrier in the outer membrane, and lipid A modifications are involved in the generation of this enhanced barrier (19). Mg2+ ions decreased membrane permeability strongly in a phoP-null strain but only modestly in a PhoP-constitutive strain (19), implying a biological relevance of lipid A modifications by magnesium limitation.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Structures of the prototype lipid A (A) and modified lipid A (B) of S. Typhimurium.Previous studies did not detect PagL-dependent lipid A deacylation when S. Typhimurium was grown under PhoP-PhoQ-activating conditions that induce PagL expression (11, 13, 22). In contrast, PagL-dependent lipid A deacylation was observed in pmrA-null and pmrE-null strains, both of which lacked aminoarabinose modification of lipid A (11, 13). These findings cannot be simply ascribed to the substrate specificity of PagL, since many lipid A species that are not modified with aminoarabinose exist in S. Typhimurium grown under PhoP-PhoQ-activating conditions (13). Therefore, it is thought that PagL is latent under these conditions and that aminoarabinose modification of lipid A is involved in the regulation of latency (13). PagL latency is consistent with an emerging paradigm of outer membrane enzyme regulation (1). It should be noted that PagL-dependent lipid A deacylation, which is beneficial for invading bacteria by allowing them to avoid Toll-like receptor 4 responses, would occur under some specific conditions such as those which activate PhoP-PhoQ without induction of lipid A aminoarabinose modification. Furthermore, we have identified several amino acid residues in the extracellular loops of PagL that are essential for latency but not for deacylase activity (17). The amino acid residues essential for latency were also necessary for PagL to associate with LPS (16). However, the biological significance of latency remains unknown.The influx rate of a lipophilic agent, ethidium bromide, is increased by a pmrA-null mutation in an S. Typhimurium strain with a PhoP-constitutive phenotype (19). The rate-limiting step of this influx is crossing of the asymmetric bilayer in the outer membrane. Therefore, these observations suggest that pmrA-dependent lipid A modifications, such as aminoarabinose and phosphoethanolamine attachment, help generate a more robust permeation barrier through PhoP-PhoQ activation. On the other hand, lipid A is deacylated by PagL in a pmrA strain under PhoP-PhoQ-activating conditions (13). These observations led us to examine whether PagL-dependent lipid A deacylation increases the membrane permeability of the pmrA mutant strain.  相似文献   

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Adhesive pili on the surface of the serotype M1 Streptococcus pyogenes strain SF370 are composed of a major backbone subunit (Spy0128) and two minor subunits (Spy0125 and Spy0130), joined covalently by a pilin polymerase (Spy0129). Previous studies using recombinant proteins showed that both minor subunits bind to human pharyngeal (Detroit) cells (A. G. Manetti et al., Mol. Microbiol. 64:968-983, 2007), suggesting both may act as pilus-presented adhesins. While confirming these binding properties, studies described here indicate that Spy0125 is the pilus-presented adhesin and that Spy0130 has a distinct role as a wall linker. Pili were localized predominantly to cell wall fractions of the wild-type S. pyogenes parent strain and a spy0125 deletion mutant. In contrast, they were found almost exclusively in culture supernatants in both spy0130 and srtA deletion mutants, indicating that the housekeeping sortase (SrtA) attaches pili to the cell wall by using Spy0130 as a linker protein. Adhesion assays with antisera specific for individual subunits showed that only anti-rSpy0125 serum inhibited adhesion of wild-type S. pyogenes to human keratinocytes and tonsil epithelium to a significant extent. Spy0125 was localized to the tip of pili, based on a combination of mutant analysis and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analysis of purified pili. Assays comparing parent and mutant strains confirmed its role as the adhesin. Unexpectedly, apparent spontaneous cleavage of a labile, proline-rich (8 of 14 residues) sequence separating the N-terminal ∼1/3 and C-terminal ∼2/3 of Spy0125 leads to loss of the N-terminal region, but analysis of internal spy0125 deletion mutants confirmed that this has no significant effect on adhesion.The group A Streptococcus (S. pyogenes) is an exclusively human pathogen that commonly colonizes either the pharynx or skin, where local spread can give rise to various inflammatory conditions such as pharyngitis, tonsillitis, sinusitis, or erysipelas. Although often mild and self-limiting, GAS infections are occasionally very severe and sometimes lead to life-threatening diseases, such as necrotizing fasciitis or streptococcal toxic shock syndrome. A wide variety of cell surface components and extracellular products have been shown or suggested to play important roles in S. pyogenes virulence, including cell surface pili (1, 6, 32). Pili expressed by the serotype M1 S. pyogenes strain SF370 mediate specific adhesion to intact human tonsil epithelia and to primary human keratinocytes, as well as cultured keratinocyte-derived HaCaT cells, but not to Hep-2 or A549 cells (1). They also contribute to adhesion to a human pharyngeal cell line (Detroit cells) and to biofilm formation (29).Over the past 5 years, pili have been discovered on an increasing number of important Gram-positive bacterial pathogens, including Bacillus cereus (4), Bacillus anthracis (4, 5), Corynebacterium diphtheriae (13, 14, 19, 26, 27, 44, 46, 47), Streptococcus agalactiae (7, 23, 38), and Streptococcus pneumoniae (2, 3, 24, 25, 34), as well as S. pyogenes (1, 29, 32). All these species produce pili that are composed of a single major subunit plus either one or two minor subunits. During assembly, the individual subunits are covalently linked to each other via intermolecular isopeptide bonds, catalyzed by specialized membrane-associated transpeptidases that may be described as pilin polymerases (4, 7, 25, 41, 44, 46). These are related to the classical housekeeping sortase (usually, but not always, designated SrtA) that is responsible for anchoring many proteins to Gram-positive bacterial cell walls (30, 31, 33). The C-terminal ends of sortase target proteins include a cell wall sorting (CWS) motif consisting, in most cases, of Leu-Pro-X-Thr-Gly (LPXTG, where X can be any amino acid) (11, 40). Sortases cleave this substrate between the Thr and Gly residues and produce an intermolecular isopeptide bond linking the Thr to a free amino group provided by a specific target. In attaching proteins to the cell wall, the target amino group is provided by the lipid II peptidoglycan precursor (30, 36, 40). In joining pilus subunits, the target is the ɛ-amino group in the side chain of a specific Lys residue in the second subunit (14, 18, 19). Current models of pilus biogenesis envisage repeated transpeptidation reactions adding additional subunits to the base of the growing pilus, until the terminal subunit is eventually linked covalently via an intermolecular isopeptide bond to the cell wall (28, 41, 45).The major subunit (sometimes called the backbone or shaft subunit) extends along the length of the pilus and appears to play a structural role, while minor subunits have been detected either at the tip, the base, and/or at occasional intervals along the shaft, depending on the species (4, 23, 24, 32, 47). In S. pneumoniae and S. agalactiae one of the minor subunits acts as an adhesin, while the second appears to act as a linker between the base of the assembled pilus and the cell wall (7, 15, 22, 34, 35). It was originally suggested that both minor subunits of C. diphtheriae pili could act as adhesins (27). However, recent data showed one of these has a wall linker role (26, 44) and may therefore not function as an adhesin.S. pyogenes strain SF370 pili are composed of a major (backbone) subunit, termed Spy0128, plus two minor subunits, called Spy0125 and Spy0130 (1, 32). All three are required for efficient adhesion to target cells (1). Studies employing purified recombinant proteins have shown that both of the minor subunits, but not the major subunit, bind to Detroit cells (29), suggesting both might act as pilus-presented adhesins. Here we report studies employing a combination of recombinant proteins, specific antisera, and allelic replacement mutants which show that only Spy0125 is the pilus-presented adhesin and that Spy0130 has a distinct role in linking pili to the cell wall.  相似文献   

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Anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacteria have the unique ability to synthesize fatty acids containing linearly concatenated cyclobutane rings, termed “ladderane lipids.” In this study we investigated the effect of temperature on the ladderane lipid composition and distribution in anammox enrichment cultures, marine particulate organic matter, and surface sediments. Under controlled laboratory conditions we observed an increase in the amount of C20 [5]-ladderane fatty acids compared with the amount of C18 [5]-ladderane fatty acids with increasing temperature and also an increase in the amount of C18 [5]-ladderane fatty acids compared with the amount of C20 [5]-ladderane fatty acids with decreasing temperature. Combining these data with results from the natural environment showed a significant (R2 = 0.85, P = <0.0001, n = 121) positive sigmoidal relationship between the amounts of C18 and C20 [5]-ladderane fatty acids and the in situ temperature; i.e., there is an increase in the relative abundance of C18 [5]-ladderane fatty acids at lower temperatures and vice versa, particularly at temperatures between 12°C and 20°C. Novel shorter (C16) and longer (C22 to C24) ladderane fatty acids were also identified, but their relative amounts were small and did not change with temperature. The adaptation of ladderane fatty acid chain length to temperature changes is similar to the regulation of common fatty acid composition in other bacteria and may be the result of maintaining constant membrane fluidity under different temperature regimens (homeoviscous adaptation). Our results can potentially be used to discriminate between the origins of ladderane lipids in marine sediments, i.e., to determine if ladderanes are produced in situ in relatively cold surface sediments or if they are fossil remnants originating from the warmer upper water column.Anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacteria possess the unique ability to oxidize NH4+ with NO2 to N2 under anoxic conditions (42). Since the discovery of the anammox process in a wastewater treatment plant in the Netherlands (21), studies have indicated that anammox bacteria are omnipresent in low-oxygen environments around the world. Anammox therefore forms an important link in both the oceanic (4, 7, 17, 18, 31) and freshwater (14, 33) nitrogen cycles. Unlike other Planctomycetes, anammox bacteria contain a unique “organelle” called the anammoxosome (19, 37, 44-46). The membrane of this compartment contains unusual “ladderane” lipids (37). The core ladderane lipids consist of C18 and C20 fatty acids containing either 3 or 5 linearly concatenated cyclobutane rings, which are ester bound to a glycerol backbone or ether bound as alkyl chains (35). In addition, the intact polar lipids containing the core lipid structures may have different types of polar head groups, including phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), or phosphatidylglycerol (PG) (1, 22). In silico density simulation modeling experiments with a ladderane lipid-containing membrane (glycerol-bound mixed ether-ester containing both ladderane moieties) have indicated that ladderane lipids could provide a denser cell membrane than conventional membrane lipids (37). Since the anammoxosome appears to be impenetrable to fluorophores, the ladderane membrane could function in cell energy conservation (37, 44).Experimental evidence has shown that anammox bacteria isolated from wastewater treatment reactors grow over a wide range of temperatures (20 to 43°C) and have an optimum temperature of about 35°C (39). In the natural environment the anammox process has been reported to occur at temperatures as low as −2.5°C in sea ice (5, 26) and as high as 70°C in hot springs and hydrothermal vent areas (3, 12). Furthermore, “Candidatus Scalindua spp.” has been successfully enriched from marine sediment (Gullmarsfjord, Sweden) in sequencing batch reactors at temperatures of 15 and 20°C (43). In other bacteria containing common fatty acids temperature adaptation can be achieved by (among other things) modifying the composition of the membrane bilayers to deal with alterations in membrane viscosity due to changes in temperature. This process has been well documented and is termed “homeoviscous adaptation”; i.e., the fatty acid composition is changed to maintain membrane fluidity (23, 27, 34, 40). Currently, it is not known how anammox bacteria, with their highly unusual ladderane lipids, react to temperature. To investigate this, we analyzed the ladderane lipid composition of anammox bacteria grown at different temperatures in sequencing batch reactors and in samples from different natural environments covering a wide range of temperatures.  相似文献   

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