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This special issue of Molecular Microbiology marks the 25th anniversary of the discovery of the extracytoplasmic function (ECF) σ factors, proteins that subsequently emerged as the largest group of alternative σ factors and one of the three major pillars of signal transduction in bacteria, alongside one‐ and two‐component systems. A single bacterial genome can encode > 100 ECF σ factors, and combined with their cognate anti‐σ factors, they represent a modular design that primarily functions in transmembrane signal transduction. Here, we first describe the immediate events that led to the 1994 publication in the Proceeding of the National Academy of Sciences USA, and then set them in the broader context of key events in the history of σ biology research.  相似文献   

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Extracytoplasmic function (ECF) σ factors are critical players in signal transduction networks involved in bacterial response to environmental changes. The Myxococcus xanthus genome reveals ~45 putative ECF‐σ factors, but for the overwhelming majority, the specific signals or mechanisms for selective activation and regulation remain unknown. One well‐studied ECF‐σ, CarQ, binds to its anti‐σ, CarR, and is inactive in the dark but drives its own expression from promoter PQRS on illumination. This requires the CarD/CarG complex, the integration host factor (IHF) and a specific CarD‐binding site upstream of PQRS. Here, we show that DdvS, a previously uncharacterized ECF‐σ, activates its own expression in a CarD/CarG‐dependent manner but is inhibited when specifically bound to the N‐terminal zinc‐binding anti‐σ domain of its cognate anti‐σ, DdvA. Interestingly, we find that the autoregulatory action of 11 other ECF‐σ factors studied here depends totally or partially on CarD/CarG but not IHF. In silico analysis revealed possible CarD‐binding sites that may be involved in direct regulation by CarD/CarG of target promoter activity. CarD/CarG‐linked ECF‐σ regulation likely recurs in other myxobacteria with CarD/CarG orthologous pairs and could underlie, at least in part, the global regulatory effect of the complex on M. xanthus gene expression.  相似文献   

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In Bacillus subtilis, the extracytoplasmic function (ECF) σ factors σM, σW and σX all contribute to resistance against lantibiotics. Nisin, a model lantibiotic, has a dual mode of action: it inhibits cell wall synthesis by binding lipid II, and this complex also forms pores in the cytoplasmic membrane. These activities can be separated in a nisin hinge‐region variant (N20P M21P) that binds lipid II, but no longer permeabilizes membranes. The major contribution of σM to nisin resistance is expression of ltaSa, encoding a stress‐activated lipoteichoic acid synthase, and σX functions primarily by activation of the dlt operon controlling d ‐alanylation of teichoic acids. Together, σM and σX regulate cell envelope structure to decrease access of nisin to its lipid II target. In contrast, σW is principally involved in protection against membrane permeabilization as it provides little protection against the nisin hinge region variant. σW contributes to nisin resistance by regulation of a signal peptide peptidase (SppA), phage shock proteins (PspA and YvlC, a PspC homologue) and tellurite resistance related proteins (YceGHI). These defensive mechanisms are also effective against other lantibiotics such as mersacidin, gallidermin and subtilin and comprise an important subset of the intrinsic antibiotic resistome of B. subtilis.  相似文献   

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This year marks the 50th anniversary of the discovery of σ70 as a protein factor that was needed for bacterial RNA polymerase to accurately transcribe a promoter in vitro. It was 25 years later that the Group IV alternative σs were described as a distinct family of proteins related to σ70. In the intervening time, there has been an ever‐growing list of Group IV σs, numbers of genes they transcribe, insight into the diverse suite of processes they control, and appreciation for their impact on bacterial lifestyles. This work summarizes knowledge of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides σE‐ChrR pair, a member of the ECF11 subfamily of Group IV alternative σs, in protecting cells from the reactive oxygen species, singlet oxygen. It describes lessons learned from analyzing ChrR, a zinc‐dependent anti‐σ factor, that are generally applicable to Group IV σs and relevant to the response to single oxygen. This MicroReview also illustrates insights into stress responses in this and other bacteria that have been acquired by analyzing or modeling the activity of the σE‐ChrR across the bacterial phylogeny.  相似文献   

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The multiphosphorylated tryptic peptide αs1‐casein(59–79) has been shown to be antigenic with anti‐casein antibodies. In an approach to determine the amino acyl residues critical for antibody binding we undertook an epitope analysis of the peptide using overlapping synthetic peptides. With αs1‐casein(59–79) as the adsorbed antigen in a competitive ELISA only two of five overlapping synthetic peptides at 1 mM significantly inhibited binding of the anti‐casein antibodies. Peptides Glu‐Ser(P)‐Ile‐Ser(P)‐Ser(P)‐Ser(P)‐Glu‐Glu and Ile‐Val‐Pro‐Asn‐Ser(P)‐Val‐Glu‐Glu inhibited antibody binding by 20.0±3.6% and 60.3±7.9%, respectively. The epitope of Glu63‐Ser(P)‐Ile‐Ser(P)‐Ser(P)‐Ser(P)‐Glu‐Glu70 was further localised to the phosphoseryl cluster as the peptide Ser(P)‐Ser(P)‐Ser(P) significantly inhibited binding of the anti‐casein antibodies to αs1‐casein(59–79) by 29.5±7.4%. Substitution of Ser(P)75 with Ser75 in the second inhibitory peptide Ile‐Val‐Pro‐Asn‐Ser(P)75‐Val‐Glu‐Glu also abolished inhibition of antibody binding to αs1‐casein (59–79) demonstrating that Ser(P)75 is also a critical residue for recognition by the antibodies. These data show that the phosphorylated residues in the cluster sequence ‐Ser(P)66‐Ser(P)‐Ser(P)68 and in the sequence ‐Pro73‐Asn‐Ser(P)‐Val‐Glu77‐ are critical for antibody binding to αs1‐casein(59–79) and further demonstrate that a highly phosphorylated segment of a protein can be antigenic. Copyright © 1999 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

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Plant cells contain numerous subcompartments with clearly delineated metabolic functions. Mitochondria represent a very small fraction of the total cell volume and yet are the site of respiration and thus crucial for cells throughout all developmental stages of a plant's life. As such, their isolation from the rest of the cellular components is a basic requirement for numerous biochemical and physiological experiments. Although procedures exist to isolate plant mitochondria from different organs (i.e. leaves, roots, tubers, etc.), they are often tedious and do not provide resolution at the tissue level (i.e. phloem, mesophyll or pollen). Here, we present a novel method called IMTACT (isolation of mitochondria tagged in specific cell types), developed in Arabidopsis thaliana (Arabidopsis) that involves biotinylation of mitochondria in a tissue‐specific manner using transgenic lines expressing a synthetic version of the OM64 (Outer Membrane 64) gene combined with BLRP and the BirA biotin ligase gene. Tissue specificity is achieved with cell‐specific promoters (e.g. CAB3 and SUC2). Labeled mitochondria from crude extracts are retained by magnetic beads, allowing the simple and rapid isolation of highly pure and intact organelles from organs or specific tissues. For example, we could show that the mitochondrial population from mesophyll cells was significantly larger in size than the mitochondrial population isolated from leaf companion cells. To facilitate the applicability of this method in both wild‐type and mutant Arabidopsis plants we generated a set of OM64–BLRP one‐shot constructs with different selection markers and tissue‐specific promoters.  相似文献   

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