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1.
Immense volumes of radioactive wastes, which were generated during nuclear weapons production, were disposed of directly in the ground during the Cold War, a period when national security priorities often surmounted concerns over the environment. The bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans is the most radiation-resistant organism known and is currently being engineered for remediation of the toxic metal and organic components of these environmental wastes. Understanding the biotic potential of D. radiodurans and its global physiological integrity in nutritionally restricted radioactive environments is important in development of this organism for in situ bioremediation. We have previously shown that D. radiodurans can grow on rich medium in the presence of continuous radiation (6,000 rads/h) without lethality. In this study we developed a chemically defined minimal medium that can be used to analyze growth of this organism in the presence and in the absence of continuous radiation; whereas cell growth was not affected in the absence of radiation, cells did not grow and were killed in the presence of continuous radiation. Under nutrient-limiting conditions, DNA repair was found to be limited by the metabolic capabilities of D. radiodurans and not by any nutritionally induced defect in genetic repair. The results of our growth studies and analysis of the complete D. radiodurans genomic sequence support the hypothesis that there are several defects in D. radiodurans global metabolic regulation that limit carbon, nitrogen, and DNA metabolism. We identified key nutritional constituents that restore growth of D. radiodurans in nutritionally limiting radioactive environments.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Organisms have developed different mechanisms to respond to stresses. However, the roles of small ORF–encoded peptides (SEPs) in these regulatory systems remain elusive, which is partially because of the lack of comprehensive knowledge regarding these biomolecules. We chose the extremophile Deinococcus radiodurans R1 as a model species and conducted large-scale profiling of the SEPs related to the stress response. The integrated workflow consisting of multiple omics approaches for SEP identification was streamlined, and an SEPome of D. radiodurans containing 109 novel and high-confidence SEPs was drafted. Forty-four percent of these SEPs were predicted to function as antimicrobial peptides. Quantitative peptidomics analysis indicated that the expression of SEP068184 was upregulated upon oxidative treatment and gamma irradiation of the bacteria. SEP068184 was conserved in Deinococcus and exhibited negative regulation of oxidative stress resistance in a comparative phenotypic assay of its mutants. Further quantitative and interactive proteomics analyses suggested that SEP068184 might function through metabolic pathways and interact with cytoplasmic proteins. Collectively, our findings demonstrate that SEPs are involved in the regulation of oxidative resistance, and the SEPome dataset provides a rich resource for research on the molecular mechanisms of the response to extreme stress in organisms.  相似文献   

4.
The bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans is a champion of extreme radiation resistance that is accounted for by a highly efficient protection against proteome, but not genome, damage. A well-protected functional proteome ensures cell recovery from extensive radiation damage to other cellular constituents by molecular repair and turnover processes, including an efficient repair of disintegrated DNA. Therefore, cell death correlates with radiation-induced protein damage, rather than DNA damage, in both robust and standard species. From the reviewed biology of resistance to radiation and other sources of oxidative damage, we conclude that the impact of protein damage on the maintenance of life has been largely underestimated in biology and medicine.Several recent reviews comprehensively present the extraordinary bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans, best known for its biological robustness involving an extremely efficient DNA repair system (Cox and Battista 2005; Blasius et al. 2008; Daly 2009; Slade and Radman 2011). The aim of this short review of the biology of D. radiodurans is to single out a general concept of the primacy of biological function (proteome) over information (genome) in the maintenance of life. A cell dies when its vital functions performed by the proteome cease, for example, because of the direct loss of proteome functionality or via the loss of membrane integrity, whereas genome integrity is required (in addition to an active proteome) for the perpetuation of cells that have survived. But survival itself depends primarily on the proteome rather than the genome. A cell that instantly loses its genome can function for some time, unlike one that loses its proteome. In other words, the proteome sustains and maintains life, whereas the genome ensures the perpetuation of life by renewing the proteome, a process contingent on a preexisting proteome that repairs, replicates, and expresses the genome. In addition to the functional integrity of the proteome, small metabolites and other cofactors for catalysis and protein interactions are equally important for proteome functionality. However, chemical damage to cofactors is not a likely primary bottleneck in survival because of their high molar concentrations, compared with proteins. And, finally, it is the proteome that synthesizes metabolites and imports vital metal cofactors and ions. Although obvious, the concept that the prime target in cell degeneracy and death is proteome activity—ensuring all vital functions including genome integrity—is conspicuously absent in biological and medical sciences. This overview of the biology of a prokaryotic cell that survives conditions lethal to other species is to define and elaborate a general concept of sustainability of life that applies to all living cells.  相似文献   

5.
Gene expression in Deinococcus radiodurans.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
We previously reported that the Escherichia coli drug-resistance determinants aphA (kanamycin-resistance) and cat (chloramphenicol-resistance) could be introduced to Deinococcus radiodurans by transformation methods that produce duplication insertion. However, both determinants appeared to require dramatic chromosomal amplification for expression of resistance. Additional studies described here, confirming this requirement for extensive amplification, led us to the use of promoter-probe plasmids in which the E. coli promoter has been deleted, leaving only coding sequences for the marker gene. We find that the insertion of D. radiodurans sequences immediately upstream from the promoterless drug-resistance determinant produces drug-resistant transformants without significant chromosomal amplification. Furthermore, a series of stable E. coli-D. radiodurans shuttle plasmids was devised by inserting fragments of D. radiodurans plasmid pUE10 in an E. coli plasmid directly upstream from a promoterless cat gene. These constructions replicated in D. radiodurans by virtue of the pUE10 replicon and expressed the cat determinant because of D. radiodurans promoter sequences in the pUE10 fragment. Of three such constructions, none expressed the cat gene in E. coli. Similar results were obtained using a promoterless tet gene. Translational fusions were made between D. radiodurans genes and E. coli 5'-truncated lacZ. Three fusions that produced high levels of beta Gal in D. radiodurans were introduced into E. coli, but beta Gal was produced in only one. The results demonstrate that the E. coli genes cat, tet and lacZ can be efficiently expressed in D. radiodurans if a D. radiodurans promoter is provided, and that D. radiodurans promoters often do not function as promoters in E. coli.  相似文献   

6.
This paper describes the cloning, purification, and characterization of thioredoxin (Trx) and thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) and the structure determination of TrxR from the ionizing radiation-tolerant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans strain R1. The genes from D. radiodurans encoding Trx and TrxR were amplified by PCR, inserted into a pET expression vector, and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. The overexpressed proteins were purified by metal affinity chromatography, and their activity was demonstrated using well-established assays of insulin precipitation (for Trx), 5,5′-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) reduction, and insulin reduction (for TrxR). In addition, the crystal structure of oxidized TrxR was determined at 1.9-Å resolution. The overall structure was found to be very similar to that of E. coli TrxR and homodimeric with both NADPH- and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)-binding domains containing variants of the canonical nucleotide binding fold, the Rossmann fold. The Km (5.7 μM) of D. radiodurans TrxR for D. radiodurans Trx was determined and is about twofold higher than that of the E. coli thioredoxin system. However, D. radiodurans TrxR has a much lower affinity for E. coli Trx (Km, 44.4 μM). Subtle differences in the surface charge and shape of the Trx binding site on TrxR may account for the differences in recognition. Because it has been suggested that TrxR from D. radiodurans may have dual cofactor specificity (can utilize both NADH and NADPH), D. radiodurans TrxR was tested for its ability to utilize NADH as well. Our results show that D. radiodurans TrxR can utilize only NADPH for activity.Deinococcus radiodurans is a gram-positive bacterium capable of withstanding exposure to extreme gamma ray and UV radiation, oxidants, and desiccation (6, 10, 26). The mechanism behind the ability of D. radiodurans to survive exposure to extreme conditions has been a subject of intense research (10, 43). Its ability to survive exposure to extreme conditions has been attributed a number of factors, as follows: a high number of genome copies (8), ring-like nucleoid organization (22), high manganese content (8), and a higher ability to scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS) (43). However, the mechanism responsible for its extremophilic nature is not clearly understood (25).Efforts to understand the mechanism behind the capability of D. radiodurans to tolerate extreme conditions have focused on understanding its ability to prevent or repair genomic damage, because if unrepaired, genomic damage is lethal to the cell (7). The ability of D. radiodurans to repair genomic damage is likely due to its ability to prevent proteome damage, i.e., its ability to maintain sufficient enzymatic activity for genome repair after irradiation. Therefore, genome repair probably plays a bigger role than prevention of genome damage in making D. radiodurans radiation tolerant (7, 8). Indeed, some experimental evidence suggests that efficient DNA repair is solely responsible for the ability of D. radiodurans to withstand ionizing radiation. D. radiodurans DNA sustains the same amount of genome damage at high radiation doses as other bacteria, but unlike other bacteria, its damage is mended within hours (25). However, some recent evidence suggests that it is likely that prevention of DNA damage (reactive oxygen species [ROS] scavenging) supplements DNA repair to make D. radiodurans ionizing radiation tolerant. It is worth noting that only about 20% of radiation-induced damage to the genome is due to the direct effect of irradiation (the rest is due to radiation-induced ROS) and that cellular extracts of D. radiodurans are more effective in scavenging ROS than Escherichia coli extracts when subjected to oxidative stress (43). Moreover, D. radiodurans has higher basal levels of some antioxidant enzymatic systems (catalase and superoxide dismutase), and disruption of superoxide dismutase (sodA) and catalase (katA) genes results in increased sensitivity of D. radiodurans to ionizing radiation. In addition D. radiodurans catalase is more resistant to inhibition by substrate H2O2 than bovine or Aspergillus niger catalase (17). Taken together, these experimental results suggest a significant contribution of antioxidant systems to the ability of D. radiodurans to withstand extreme ionizing radiation.While the contribution of some antioxidant enzymatic systems to the extremophilic nature of D. radiodurans has been extensively studied, the role of the thioredoxin system has not been investigated (40, 43). The thioredoxin system is composed of thioredoxin reductase (TrxR), thioredoxin (Trx), and various cellular targets. The system is found in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, and homologues of both TrxR and Trx have been isolated from many species. Trx proteins are low-molecular-mass proteins (12 kDa) that possess a highly conserved active site motif, WCGPC (27, 41). TrxR is a homodimeric enzyme and is a member of the family of pyridine nucleotide-disulfide oxidoreductase flavoenzymes. Each monomer possesses a flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) prosthetic group, a NADPH-binding site, and an active site comprising a redox-active disulfide. There are two distinct forms of this enzyme, as follows: low-molecular-mass TrxR (35 kDa), found in prokaryotes and some eukaryotes, and high-molecular-mass TrxR (55 kDa), found in eukaryotes (41). The two types of TrxR proteins have some differences in structure and mechanism. However, in both cases, reducing equivalents are transferred from NADPH to TrxR, from TrxR to Trx, and finally, from Trx to various cellular proteins (29, 41). Trx targets include proteins which take part in the scavenging of ROS-like thioredoxin-dependent thiol peroxidase (29). The thioredoxin system is thus an important antioxidant enzymatic system.In this study we report the expression, purification, and biochemical characterization of the main components of the D. radiodurans thioredoxin system. In addition, the structural characterization of D. radiodurans TrxR is reported.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Analysis of the complete genome indicates that insertion sequences (ISs) are abundant in the radio-resistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans. By developing a forward mutagenesis assay to detect any inactivation events in D. radiodurans, we found that in the presence of an active mismatch repair system 75% of the mutations to trimethoprim-resistance (Tmp(R)) resulted from an IS insertion into the thyA coding region. Analysis of their distribution among the spontaneous Tmp(R) mutants indicated that five different ISs were transpositionally active. A type II Miniature Inverted-repeat Transposable Element (MITE), related to one of the deinococcal ISs, was also discovered as an insertion into thyA. Seven additional genomic copies of this MITE element were identified by BLASTN. Gamma-ray irradiation of D. radiodurans led to an increase of up to 10-fold in the frequency of Tmp(R) mutants. Analysis of the induced mutations in cells exposed to 10 kGy indicated that gamma-irradiation induced transposition of ISDra2 approximately 100-fold. A 50-fold induction of ISDra2 transposition was also observed in cells exposed to 600 J m(-2) UV-irradiation. Point mutations to rifampicin resistance (Rif(R)) were also induced by gamma-irradiation to reach a plateau at 2 kGy. The plateau value represented a 16-fold increase in the mutant frequency over the background. Although error-free repair strategies predominate in D. radiodurans, an upregulation of transposition, as well as induction of point mutations in cells recovering from DNA damage, provide a genetic variability that may have long-term evolutionary consequences on the fitness of this organism in its habitat.  相似文献   

9.
Salt-mediated multicell formation in Deinococcus radiodurans.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The highly radiation-resistant tetracoccal bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans exhibited a reversible multi-cell-form transition which depended on the NaCl concentration in the medium. In response to 0.8% NaCl addition into the medium, the pair/tetrad (designated 2/4) cells in a young culture grew and divided but did not separate and became 8-, 16-, and 32-cell units successively. In exponential growth phase, the cells divided in a 16/32 pattern. Potassium ions were equally effective as Na+ in mediating this multicell-formation effect; Mg2+, Li+, and Ca2+ also worked but produced less multiplicity. This effect appears to be species specific. This-section micrographs revealed that in a 16/32-cell unit, eight 2/4 cells were encased in an orderly manner within a large peripheral wall, showing five cycles of septation. Our results suggest the presence of a salt-sensitive mechanism for controlling cell separation in D. radiodurans.  相似文献   

10.
The regular surface layers (S-layers) of two Deinococcus radiodurans strains R1 and Sark, undergo limited proteolysis during preparation. This is due to cellular proteases that create strain-specific polypeptide patterns in SDS-PAGE. Proteolytic activity was detected in both vesicles of the outer membrane, as well as in the culture supernatant from both strains. The protease of the strain R1 was purified to homogeneity and characterized; it has been classified as a serine protease. The enzyme of strain Sark proved to be almost identical to the R1-protease with respect to both the molecular and the catalytic properties. Treatment of the regular surface layer proteins from both strains with the purified R1-protease revealed the strain-specific SDS-polypeptide patterns, indicating differences in the primary structure of the two proteins.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Deinococcus radiodurans - the consummate survivor   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Relatively little is known about the biochemical basis of the capacity of Deinococcus radiodurans to endure the genetic insult that results from exposure to ionizing radiation and can include hundreds of DNA double-strand breaks. However, recent reports indicate that this species compensates for extensive DNA damage through adaptations that allow cells to avoid the potentially detrimental effects of DNA strand breaks. It seems that D. radiodurans uses mechanisms that limit DNA degradation and that restrict the diffusion of DNA fragments that are produced following irradiation, to preserve genetic integrity. These mechanisms also increase the efficiency of the DNA-repair proteins.  相似文献   

13.
Expression of recA in Deinococcus radiodurans.   总被引:4,自引:2,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Deinococcus (formerly Micrococcus) radiodurans is remarkable for its extraordinary resistance to ionizing and UV irradiation and many other agents that damage DNA. This organism can repair > 100 double-strand breaks per chromosome induced by ionizing radiation without lethality or mutagenesis. We have previously observed that expression of D. radiodurans recA in Escherichia coli appears lethal. We now find that the RecA protein of D. radiodurans is ot detectable in D. radiodurans except in the setting of DNA damage and that termination of its synthesis is associated with the onset of deinococcal growth. The synthesis of Shigella flexneri RecA (protein sequence identical to that of E. coli RecA) in recA-defective D. radiodurans is described. Despite a large accumulation of the S. flexneri RecA in D. radiodurans, there is no complementation of any D. radiodurans recA phenotype, including DNA damage sensitivity, inhibition of natural transformation, or inability to support a plasmid that requires RecA for replication. To ensure that the cloned S. flexneri recA gene was not inactivated, it was rescued from D. radiodurans and was shown to function normally in E. coli. We conclude that neither D. radiodurans nor S. flexneri RecA is functional in the other species, nor are the kinetics of induction and suppression similar to each other, indicating a difference between these two proteins in their modes of action.  相似文献   

14.
The extremely radiation resistant bacterium, Deinococcus radiodurans, contains a spectrum of genes that encode for multiple activities that repair DNA damage. We have cloned and expressed the product of three predicted uracil-DNA glycosylases to determine their biochemical function. DR0689 is a homologue of the Escherichia coli uracil-DNA glycosylase, the product of the ung gene; this activity is able to remove uracil from a U : G and U : A base pair in double-stranded DNA and uracil from single-stranded DNA and is inhibited by the Ugi peptide. DR1751 is a member of the class 4 family of uracil-DNA glycosylases such as those found in the thermophiles Thermotoga maritima and Archaeoglobus fulgidus. DR1751 is also able to remove uracil from a U : G and U : A base pair; however, it is considerably more active on single-stranded DNA. Unlike its thermophilic relatives, the enzyme is not heat stable. Another putative enzyme, DR0022, did not demonstrate any appreciable uracil-DNA glycosylase activity. DR0689 appears to be the major activity in the organism based on inhibition studies with D. radiodurans crude cell extracts utilizing the Ugi peptide. The implications for D. radiodurans having multiple uracil-DNA glycosylase activities and other possible roles for these enzymes are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Although DNA repair pathways have been the focus of much attention, there is an emerging appreciation that distinct pathways exist to maintain or manipulate RNA structure in response to breakage events. Here we identify an RNA ligase (DraRnl) from the radiation-resistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans. DraRnl seals 3'-OH/5'-PO4 RNA nicks in either a duplex RNA or an RNA: DNA hybrid, but it cannot seal 3'-OH/5'-PO4 DNA nicks. The specificity of DraRnl arises from a requirement for RNA on the 3'-OH side of the nick. DraRnl is a 342-amino acid monomeric protein with a distinctive structure composed of a C-terminal adenylyltransferase domain linked to an N-terminal module that resembles the OB-fold of phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetases. RNA sealing activity was abolished by mutation of the predicted lysine adenylylation site (Lys-165) in the C-terminal domain and was reduced by an order of magnitude by deletion of the N-terminal OB module. Our findings highlight the existence of an RNA repair capacity in bacteria and support the hypothesis that contemporary DNA ligases, RNA ligases, and RNA capping enzymes evolved by the fusion of ancillary effector domains to an ancestral catalytic module involved in RNA repair.  相似文献   

16.
The Nudix hydrolases of Deinococcus radiodurans   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
All 21 of the Nudix hydrolase genes from the radiation-resistant organism Deinococcus radiodurans have been cloned into vectors under the control of T7 promoters and expressed as soluble proteins in Escherichia coli. Their sizes range from 9.8 kDa (91 amino acids) to 59 kDa (548 amino acids). Two novel proteins were identified, each with two Nudix boxes in its primary structure, unique among all other known Nudix hydrolases. Extracts of each of the expressed proteins were assayed by a generalized procedure that measures the hydrolysis of nucleoside diphosphate derivatives, and several enzymatic activities were tentatively identified. In addition to representatives of known Nudix hydrolase subfamilies active on ADP-ribose, NADH, dinucleoside polyphosphates or (deoxy)nucleoside triphosphates, two new enzymes, a UDP-glucose pyrophosphatase and a CoA pyrophosphatase, were identified.  相似文献   

17.
On the basis of acquired thermotolerance and cryotolerance, the optimal heat shock and cold shock temperatures have been determined for Deinococcus radiodurans. A heat shock at 42°C maximized survival at the lethal temperature of 52°C and a cold shock at 20°C maximized survival after repeated freeze-thawing. Enhanced survival from heat shock was found to be strongly dependent on growth stage, with its greatest effect shortly after phase. Increased synthesis of a total of 67 proteins during heat shock and 42 proteins during cold shock were observed by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D PAGE) and autoradiography. Eight of the most highly induced heat shock proteins shown by 2D PAGE were identified by MALDI-MS as Hsp20, GroEL, DnaK, SodA, Csp, Protease I and two proteins of unknown function.  相似文献   

18.
A hypothetical protein (DR2310) from the radiation resistant organism Deinococcus radiodurans harbors highly conserved Zn(+2)-binding (HEXXH) domain and Met-turn (SVMSY), characteristic of the serralysin family of secreted metalloproteases from Gram negative bacteria. Deletion mutagenesis of DR2310 confirmed that the ORF is expressed in Deinococcus radiodurans as a secreted protease of 85 kDa. Biochemical analysis revealed DR2310 to be a Ca(+2) and Zn(+2)-requiring metalloprotease. Unique features such as a long N-terminus, replacement of the highly conserved C-terminal glycine rich Ca(+2)-binding repeats with a single N-terminal aspartate rich eukaryotic thrombospondin type-3 Ca(+2)-binding repeat and absence of C-terminal secretion signals make it a novel member of serralysin family. This is the first report of a functional serralysin family metalloprotease from a Gram positive organism.  相似文献   

19.
Physiologic determinants of radiation resistance in Deinococcus radiodurans   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Immense volumes of radioactive wastes, which were generated during nuclear weapons production, were disposed of directly in the ground during the Cold War, a period when national security priorities often surmounted concerns over the environment. The bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans is the most radiation-resistant organism known and is currently being engineered for remediation of the toxic metal and organic components of these environmental wastes. Understanding the biotic potential of D. radiodurans and its global physiological integrity in nutritionally restricted radioactive environments is important in development of this organism for in situ bioremediation. We have previously shown that D. radiodurans can grow on rich medium in the presence of continuous radiation (6,000 rads/h) without lethality. In this study we developed a chemically defined minimal medium that can be used to analyze growth of this organism in the presence and in the absence of continuous radiation; whereas cell growth was not affected in the absence of radiation, cells did not grow and were killed in the presence of continuous radiation. Under nutrient-limiting conditions, DNA repair was found to be limited by the metabolic capabilities of D. radiodurans and not by any nutritionally induced defect in genetic repair. The results of our growth studies and analysis of the complete D. radiodurans genomic sequence support the hypothesis that there are several defects in D. radiodurans global metabolic regulation that limit carbon, nitrogen, and DNA metabolism. We identified key nutritional constituents that restore growth of D. radiodurans in nutritionally limiting radioactive environments.  相似文献   

20.
The structures of two lipids from the radiation-resistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans are reported here: 1,2-diacyl-3-alpha-glucopyranosyl-glycerol and 3-O-[6'-O-(1",2"-diacyl- 3"-phosphoglycerol)-alpha-glucopyranosyl]-1,2-diacylglycerol. These lipids are strikingly different from previously characterized polar lipids from this organism, in that they are not unique to the genus Deinococcus and indeed have counterparts in both gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria. Moreover, as examples of glucose-containing lipids, they further illustrate the diversity of carbohydrate-containing lipids in D. radiodurans, from which lipids containing galactose and N-acetylglucosamine have already been structurally characterized.  相似文献   

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