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1.
Dengue virus (DENV) is a member of the Flavivirus genus of positive-sense RNA viruses. DENV RNA replication requires cyclization of the viral genome mediated by two pairs of complementary sequences in the 5′ and 3′ ends, designated 5′ and 3′ cyclization sequences (5′-3′ CS) and the 5′ and 3′ upstream of AUG region (5′-3′ UAR). Here, we demonstrate that another stretch of six nucleotides in the 5′ end is involved in DENV replication and possibly genome cyclization. This new sequence is located downstream of the AUG, designated the 5′ downstream AUG region (5′ DAR); the motif predicted to be complementary in the 3′ end is termed the 3′ DAR. In addition to the UAR, CS and DAR motifs, two other RNA elements are located at the 5′ end of the viral RNA: the 5′ stem-loop A (5′ SLA) interacts with the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase and promotes RNA synthesis, and a stem-loop in the coding region named cHP is involved in translation start site selection as well as RNA replication. We analyzed the interplay of these 5′ RNA elements in relation to RNA replication, and our data indicate that two separate functional units are formed; one consists of the SLA, and the other includes the UAR, DAR, cHP, and CS elements. The SLA must be located at the 5′ end of the genome, whereas the position of the second unit is more flexible. We also show that the UAR, DAR, cHP, and CS must act in concert and therefore likely function together to form the tertiary RNA structure of the circularized DENV genome.Dengue virus (DENV), a member of the Flaviviridae family, is a human pathogen causing dengue fever, the most common mosquito-borne viral disease in humans. The virus has become a major international public health concern, with 3 billion people at risk for infection and an estimated 50 million dengue cases worldwide every year (28). Neither specific antiviral therapies nor licensed vaccines are available, and the biology of the virus is poorly understood.DENV is a small enveloped virus containing a positive-stranded RNA genome with a length of approximately 10.7 kb. The virus encodes one large polyprotein that is co- and posttranslationally cleaved into 10 viral proteins. The structural proteins C, prM/M, and E are located in the N terminus, followed by the nonstructural proteins NS1, NS2A, NS2B, NS3, NS4A, NS4B, and NS5 (6, 10). NS5, the largest of the viral proteins, functions as an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP) (29). The coding region is flanked at both ends by untranslated regions (UTR). The 5′ end has a type I cap structure (m7GpppAmp) mediating cap-dependent translation, but the virus can switch to a noncanonical translation mechanism under conditions in which translation factors are limiting (13). Cellular mRNAs are known to circularize via a protein-protein bridge between eIF4G and eIF4E (the cap binding complex) at the 5′ end and the poly(A) binding protein (PABP) at the 3′ end, enhancing translation efficiency. Despite the fact that the DENV 3′ UTR lacks a poly(A) tail, recent findings demonstrated binding of PABP to the 3′ UTR and an effect on RNA translation, suggesting a similar mechanism (12, 26).In addition to a presumed protein-mediated genome circularization regulating viral translation, an RNA-RNA-based 5′ and 3′ (5′-3′) end interaction, which can occur in the absence of proteins, leads to circularization of the viral genome (1, 3, 4, 18, 20, 30, 33, 34). This cyclization of the genome is necessary for viral RNA replication, and thus far, two complementary sequences at the 5′ and 3′ ends have been identified (3). The first are the cyclization sequences (CS) present in the capsid-coding region at the 5′ end (5′ CS) and upstream of the 3′ stem-loop (3′ SL) in the 3′ UTR (3′ CS) (2, 4, 18, 20, 30). A second sequence, known as the 5′ upstream AUG region (5′ UAR) element in the 5′ UTR, base pairs with its complementary 3′ UAR counterpart, which is located at the bottom part of 3′ SL (1, 4, 30). Recently, the structure of the 5′ end of the DENV genome hybridized to the 3′ end was determined in solution (25), confirming previous computer-predicted structures for genome cyclization (4, 20, 30). Besides the base pairing between 5′-3′ UAR and 5′-3′ CS sequences, a third stretch of nucleotides was identified to form a double-stranded (ds) region between the 5′ and 3′ ends.In addition to RNA sequences involved in 5′-3′-end interactions that are necessary for cyclization, the 5′ end of the viral genome harbors at least two more functional RNA elements, the stem-loop A (SLA) and capsid-coding region hairpin (cHP). The SLA consists of the first 70 nucleotides (nt) of the genome, forming a stable stem-loop structure. This structure has been confirmed in several studies and identified as a promoter element for RNA synthesis that recruits the viral RdRp NS5 (16, 22). Once NS5 is bound to the SLA at the 5′ end, it is believed to be delivered to the initiation site of minus-strand RNA synthesis at the 3′ end via 5′-3′ RNA-RNA circularization. In addition, a short poly(U) tract located immediately downstream of SLA has been shown to be necessary for RNA synthesis, although it is not involved in genome circularization (22). Finally, the cHP element resides within the capsid-coding region; it directs start codon selection and is essential for RNA replication (8, 9). The cHP structure is more important than its primary sequence. For start codon selection, it is believed that the cHP stalls the scanning initiation complex over the first AUG, favoring its recognition (9). In the case of RNA replication, the cHP likely stabilizes the overall 5′-3′ panhandle structure or participates in recruitment of factors associated with the replicase machinery (8).In this study, we demonstrate that in addition to the 5′ CS and 5′ UAR sequences, a third stretch of nucleotides in the 5′ end is required for RNA replication and appears to be involved in genome circularization. This new motif is located downstream of the AUG and was therefore designated the downstream AUG region (5′ DAR) element, with the predicted counterpart in the 3′ end designated the 3′ DAR. Our results indicate that the 5′ DAR modulates RNA-RNA interaction and RNA replication, and restoring complementarity between the 5′ DAR and 3′ DAR rescues detrimental effects caused by mutations in the 5′ DAR on genome circularization and RNA replication. Although the role of the predicted 3′ DAR counterpart is less conclusive, it may serve to make other structures and sequences in the 3′ end available for 5′-3′ RNA-RNA interaction to facilitate the replication-competent conformation of the DENV genome.Furthermore, we analyzed the functional interplay of RNA elements in the viral 5′ end, showing that two separate units are formed during replication. The first consists of the SLA, and it must be located at the very 5′ end of the genome. The second unit includes UAR, DAR, cHP, and CS elements, and the positional requirements are more flexible within the DENV RNA 5′ terminus. However, all four elements in the second unit must act in concert, forming a functional tertiary RNA structure of the circularized viral genome.  相似文献   

2.
RNA structures present throughout RNA virus genomes serve as scaffolds to organize multiple factors involved in the initiation of RNA synthesis. Several of these RNA elements play multiple roles in the RNA replication pathway. An RNA structure formed around the 5′- end of the poliovirus genomic RNA has been implicated in the initiation of both negative- and positive-strand RNA synthesis. Dissecting the roles of these multifunctional elements is usually hindered by the interdependent nature of the viral replication processes and often pleiotropic effects of mutations. Here, we describe a novel approach to examine RNA elements with multiple roles. Our approach relies on the duplication of the RNA structure so that one copy is dedicated to the initiation of negative-strand RNA synthesis, while the other mediates positive-strand synthesis. This allows us to study the function of the element in promoting positive-strand RNA synthesis, independently of its function in negative-strand initiation. Using this approach, we demonstrate that the entire 5′-end RNA structure that forms on the positive-strand is required for initiation of new positive-strand RNAs. Also required to initiate positive-strand RNA synthesis are the binding sites for the viral polymerase precursor, 3CD, and the host factor, PCBP. Furthermore, we identify specific nucleotide sequences within “stem a” that are essential for the initiation of positive-strand RNA synthesis. These findings provide direct evidence for a trans-initiation model, in which binding of proteins to internal sequences of a pre-existing positive-strand RNA affects the synthesis of subsequent copies of that RNA, most likely by organizing replication factors around the initiation site.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The production of reactive aldehydes including 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (4-HNE) is a key component of the pathogenesis in a spectrum of chronic inflammatory hepatic diseases including alcoholic liver disease (ALD). One consequence of ALD is increased oxidative stress and altered β-oxidation in hepatocytes. A major regulator of β-oxidation is 5′ AMP protein kinase (AMPK). In an in vitro cellular model, we identified AMPK as a direct target of 4-HNE adduction resulting in inhibition of both H2O2 and 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxyamide ribonucleoside (AICAR)-induced downstream signaling. By employing biotin hydrazide capture, it was confirmed that 4-HNE treatment of cells resulted in carbonylation of AMPKα/β, which was not observed in untreated cells. Using a murine model of alcoholic liver disease, treatment with high concentrations of ethanol resulted in an increase in phosphorylated as well as carbonylated AMPKα. Despite increased AMPK phosphorylation, there was no significant change in phosphorylation of acetyl CoA carboxylase. Mass spectrometry identified Michael addition adducts of 4-HNE on Cys130, Cys174, Cys227, and Cys304 on recombinant AMPKα and Cys225 on recombinant AMPKβ. Molecular modeling analysis of identified 4-HNE adducts on AMPKα suggest that inhibition of AMPK occurs by steric hindrance of the active site pocket and by inhibition of hydrogen peroxide induced oxidation. The observed inhibition of AMPK by 4-HNE provides a novel mechanism for altered β-oxidation in ALD, and these data demonstrate for the first time that AMPK is subject to regulation by reactive aldehydes in vivo.  相似文献   

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A critical feature of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of human tuberculosis (TB), is its ability to survive and multiply within macrophages, making these host cells an ideal niche for persisting microbes. Killing the intracellular tubercle bacilli is a key requirement for efficient tuberculosis treatment, yet identifying potent inhibitors has been hampered by labor-intensive techniques and lack of validated targets. Here, we present the development of a phenotypic cell-based assay that uses automated confocal fluorescence microscopy for high throughput screening of chemicals that interfere with the replication of M. tuberculosis within macrophages. Screening a library of 57,000 small molecules led to the identification of 135 active compounds with potent intracellular anti-mycobacterial efficacy and no host cell toxicity. Among these, the dinitrobenzamide derivatives (DNB) showed high activity against M. tuberculosis, including extensively drug resistant (XDR) strains. More importantly, we demonstrate that incubation of M. tuberculosis with DNB inhibited the formation of both lipoarabinomannan and arabinogalactan, attributable to the inhibition of decaprenyl-phospho-arabinose synthesis catalyzed by the decaprenyl-phosphoribose 2′ epimerase DprE1/DprE2. Inhibition of this new target will likely contribute to new therapeutic solutions against emerging XDR-TB. Beyond validating the high throughput/content screening approach, our results open new avenues for finding the next generation of antimicrobials.  相似文献   

7.
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Aerobic microorganisms have evolved different strategies to withstand environmental oxidative stresses generated by various reactive oxygen species (ROS). For the facultative anaerobic human oral pathogen Streptococcus mutans, the mechanisms used to protect against ROS are not fully understood, since it does not possess catalase, an enzyme that degrades hydrogen peroxide. In order to elucidate the genes that are essential for superoxide stress response, methyl viologen (MV)-sensitive mutants of S. mutans were generated via ISS1 mutagenesis. Screening of approximately 2,500 mutants revealed six MV-sensitive mutants, each containing an insertion in one of five genes, including a highly conserved hypothetical gene, SMU.1297. Sequence analysis suggests that SMU.1297 encodes a hypothetical protein with a high degree of homology to the Bacillus subtilis YtqI protein, which possesses an oligoribonuclease activity that cleaves nano-RNAs and a phosphatase activity that degrades 3′-phosphoadenosine-5′-phosphate (pAp) and 3′-phosphoadenosine-5′-phosphosulfate (pApS) to produce AMP; the latter activity is similar to the activity of the Escherichia coli CysQ protein, which is required for sulfur assimilation. SMU.1297 was deleted using a markerless Cre-loxP-based strategy; the SMU.1297 deletion mutant was just as sensitive to MV as the ISS1 insertion mutant. Complementation of the deletion mutant with wild-type SMU.1297, in trans, restored the parental phenotype. Biochemical analyses with purified SMU.1297 protein demonstrated that it has pAp phosphatase activity similar to that of YtqI but apparently lacks an oligoribonuclease activity. The ability of SMU.1297 to dephosphorylate pApS in vivo was confirmed by complementation of an E. coli cysQ mutant with SMU.1297 in trans. Thus, our results suggest that SMU.1297 is involved in superoxide stress tolerance in S. mutans. Furthermore, the distribution of homologs of SMU.1297 in streptococci indicates that this protein is essential for superoxide stress tolerance in these organisms.Streptococcus mutans, a gram-positive bacterium with a low G+C content, is widely considered the primary etiological agent of dental caries, a common human infectious disease (16, 23). S. mutans is also an important agent of infective endocarditis, as a large number of cases of viridans streptococcus-induced endocarditis are caused by S. mutans (18). During colonization of the oral cavity, S. mutans encounters various environmental stresses, including nutritional limitation, temperature fluctuation, osmotic shock, low pH conditions, radiation, toxins, and variations in oxygen tension (21). Despite these harsh conditions, S. mutans has developed multiple mechanisms for successful survival in the human host by forming diverse and densely populated biofilms on the tooth surface (4). The extraordinary ability of S. mutans to adapt and flourish in the diverse and adverse environment of the oral cavity emphasizes the fundamental importance of the need for detailed analyses of the molecular mechanisms of stress tolerance response in this organism.S. mutans is a facultative anaerobic organism, but it can tolerate aerobic conditions for colonization and survival. Like other streptococci, it does not possess cytochromes and therefore cannot carry out energy-conserving oxidative phosphorylation (2). However, irrespective of the growth conditions, S. mutans derives the energy for growth through fermentation of glucose and other sugars (26). This can lead to unwanted consequences, especially when the organism is exposed to aerobic conditions in the oral cavity. If the molecular oxygen is not fully reduced by the four-electron reduction step to water, it can undergo one- or two-electron reductions to form reactive superoxide radicals, hydroxyl radicals, and hydrogen peroxide, collectively known as reactive oxygen species (ROS) (19). These radicals, when accumulated in large amounts, can trigger oxidation of lipid, protein, and nucleic acid inside the cell, ultimately leading to cellular death (19, 20).Aerobic bacteria have developed multiple strategies to adapt and protect against ROS insults (19). These strategies include (i) enzymes that scavenge ROS, such as superoxide dismutases (SOD), catalases, and peroxidases; (ii) protein repair systems, such as thioredoxin; (iii) DNA damage repair enzymes such as RecA; and (iv) proteins that regulate intracellular iron level to ameliorate the generation of ROS. Although streptococci contain SOD, NADH oxidase, glutathione reductase, and other proteins to counter ROS threats, they do not contain catalase, a key protective enzyme against oxidative radicals. Therefore, the defense strategy against damage by ROS is significantly different in streptococci than in other bacteria. For example, the growth of S. mutans in planktonic or biofilm mode can influence the respiratory rates as well as the activities of the protective enzymes, such as SOD and NADH oxidase (31).Apart from studies related to the physiology of oxidative stress in S. mutans, very little information is available on the oxidative-stress response and its regulation in this organism. Many key regulatory genes, including members of the OxyR and SoxR families, which are involved in sensing and responding to ROS attacks, are not encoded in the genome of S. mutans (2). Instead, S. mutans has a PerR homolog, which has been shown to be involved in hydrogen peroxide stress response in this organism (21). The luxS gene of S. mutans, which encodes an enzyme that synthesizes the intercellular signaling molecule AI-2, is also involved in the oxidative-stress response (52). However, the exact mechanism by which LuxS participates in the oxidative-stress response is currently unknown. Furthermore, a recent investigation suggests that a two-component signal transduction system, ScnRK, is necessary for counteracting ROS in S. mutans (11).The major focus of this study was to identify the genes that are involved in the defense against superoxide stress of S. mutans strain UA159. Toward this end, a library of mutants was generated by insertion mutagenesis, and the mutants were screened for their sensitivity to methyl viologen (MV), a superoxide-generating compound. This study enabled the identification of five loci that are potentially involved in superoxide tolerance. One of the identified loci is SMU.1297, which encodes a protein homologous to YtqI of Bacillus subtilis. The biochemical characterization of SMU.1297 and its role in superoxide stress tolerance response are presented.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Four mutants of the virulent Mahoney strain of poliovirus were generated by introducing mutations in nucleotides (nt) 128 to 134 of the genome, a region that contains a part of the stem-loop II (SLII) structure located within the internal ribosomal entry site (IRES; nt 120 to 590) (K. Shiroki, T. Ishii, T. Aoki, Y. Ota, W.-X. Yang, T. Komatsu, Y. Ami, M. Arita, S. Abe, S. Hashizume, and A. Nomoto, J. Virol. 71:1–8, 1997). These mutants (SLII mutants) replicated well in human HeLa cells but not in mouse TgSVA cells that had been established from the kidney of a poliovirus-sensitive transgenic mouse. Their neurovirulence in mice was also greatly attenuated compared to that of the parental virus. The poor replication activity of the SLII mutants in TgSVA cells appeared to be attributable to reduced activity of the IRES. Two and three naturally occurring revertants that replicated well in TgSVA cells were isolated from mutants SLII-1 and SLII-5, respectively. The revertants recovered IRES activity in a cell-free translation system from TgSVA cells and returned to a neurovirulent phenotype like that of the Mahoney strain in mice. Two of the revertant sites that affected the phenotype were identified as being at nt 107 and within a region from nt 120 to 161. A mutation at nt 107, specifically a change from uridine to adenine, was observed in all the revertant genomes and exerted a significant effect on the revertant phenotype. Exhibition of the full revertant phenotype required mutations in both regions. These results suggested that nt 107 of poliovirus RNA is involved in structures required for the IRES activity in mouse cells.The single-stranded genome of poliovirus has mRNA polarity, is approximately 7,500 nucleotides (nt) in length, is polyadenylylated (45), and is linked covalently at its 5′ end to a small protein called VPg (30, 41). The RNA itself is infectious; cells transfected with the RNA produce progeny virions that are infectious. Poliovirus RNA harbors a long 5′ noncoding region of approximately 740 nt that is important for viral RNA and protein syntheses. A possible cloverleaf-like structure formed by the 5′-proximal end of the RNA (approximately 90 nt) is a probable cis element that regulates the synthesis of the plus-strand RNA (1). nt 120 to 590 of the poliovirus RNA make up the internal ribosomal entry site (IRES) (32), which directs the viral translation initiation step in a 5′-end- and cap-independent manner (17, 25, 29, 44). The IRES is assumed to carry a number of secondary structures (10, 40), and multiple host cellular factors are required for its functions.Translation of poliovirus does not occur in a cell-free wheat germ translation system, and it occurs only inefficiently and usually incorrectly in rabbit reticulocyte lysates (RRL) (9). The poor translation in RRL, however, is markedly improved by the addition of factors from HeLa cells (5, 9, 33). Other IRESs, such as the IRESs of encephalomyocarditis virus RNA (18) and hepatitis C virus RNA (43), are highly functional in the RRL system. These observations indicate that individual IRESs with different structures may require quantitatively and/or qualitatively different sets of host factors for their activities.Determinants for strain-specific neurovirulence (replication ability) of poliovirus type 1 in the central nervous system (CNS) have been mapped in the IRES region, particularly at nt 480 of the genome, by using monkey neurovirulence tests on recombinant viruses between the virulent Mahoney and attenuated Sabin 1 strains (19, 24). Similar results were obtained when the recombinants were tested for their relative neurovirulence levels by using transgenic (Tg) mice carrying the human gene for the poliovirus receptor (15, 20, 34). Thus, the IRES seems to be an important regulatory element for strain-specific expression of poliovirus neurovirulence. These two animal models show no difference in the development of the disease, even though replication of the virus in vivo must involve a number of biological interactions between viral and host factors. These results suggest that host factors of monkeys and mice, including IRES-related factors, support the expression of poliovirus neurovirulence (replication) in much the same way. However, it is possible that species differences between the IRES-related host factors of monkeys and mice exist.Several mutants with alterations in the stem-loop II (SLII) region were constructed from an infectious cDNA clone of the virulent Mahoney strain of poliovirus type 1 (39). The mutants replicated well in primate cells and in the CNS of monkeys but did poorly in mouse cells expressing human poliovirus receptor and in the CNS of the Tg mice carrying the human PVR gene (39). The replication of the mutant strains in mouse cells was blocked at the IRES-dependent translation initiation step, indicating that the function of the SLII as a part of the IRES is deficient in mouse cells but still active in primate cells. These differences in how the SLII mutants acted in the two animal models point to an interaction between the SLII and SLII-related host factors that could be a determinant for host-specific replication of poliovirus.To gain a deeper insight into the molecular basis of the function of the SLII region within the IRES, revertants that acquired the ability to replicate in mouse cells were isolated from the SLII mutants. Genetic analysis of mutation sites in the revertant genomes revealed that nt 107 within the 5′ noncoding region of poliovirus RNA influenced the efficiency of the IRES-dependent translation initiation process and that the remaining mutation sites (nt 120 to 161), in addition to nt 107, were required for the expression of the full revertant phenotype.  相似文献   

11.
New fluorescent excimer-forming 5′-bispyrene molecular beacons for the detection of RNA were designed. The probes are 2′-O-methyl RNAs containing 5′-bispyrenylmethylphosphorodiamidate group (bispyrene group) at the 5′-end and a fluorescence quencher (BHQ1) at the 3′-end. A comparative study of the fluorescent properties of the probes having different distance between 5′-bispyrene group and target RNA upon the formation of hybridization complex was performed. The probes with bispyrene group located in the close proximity to the duplex exhibit the greatest excimer fluorescence upon binding to a complementary the 43-nt target RNA, in contrast to the probes with 5′-bispyrene group at dangling end. The feasibility of the new probes for visualization of intracellular RNA was demonstrated using 28S rRNA as a target. The results obtained confirm that the probes proposed in the study can be used as selective tools for RNA detection.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The finding that ribozymes can catalyze RNA chain elongation has led to the proposal that an early self-replicating system could have consisted of RNA alone. In such a chain elongation reaction, theTetrahymena ribozyme was found to select 3′, 5′-linked substrates from a pool that contained a large molar excess of 2′, 5′-linked dinucleotides. The enzyme neither reacted with nor was inhibited by 2′, 5′ phosphodiester linkages. The ability to exclude incorrectly linked substrates would have conferred an important selective advantage to a primordial RNA molecule with RNA replicase activity.  相似文献   

13.
Esterase 6 (Est-6/EST6) is the major β-carboxylesterase inD. melanogaster and its siblingsD. simulans andD. mauritiana. It is expressed in several tissues but its major site of expression is the sperm ejaculatory duct of the adult male. Although EST6 activity affects reproductive fitness, there are high levels of electrophoretic and activity polymorphism, at least withinD. melanogaster andD. simulans. Here we present the nucleotide sequences of anEst-6 allele and its flanking regions from each ofD. simulans andD. mauritiana and compare them with the publishedD. melanogaster sequences. As might be expected, replacement sites are significantly less divergent than exon silent sites in all comparisons, suggesting that selection is acting to maintain EST6 structure and function among the three species. Nevertheless, the ratio of the levels of replacement to silent site divergence is still much higher forEst-6 than for seven of ten other genes (including both isozyme-coding loci) for which comparable data have been published for these species. This is consistent with the high levels of EST6 electrophoretic polymorphism withinD. melanogaster andD. simulans and implies that selective constraints against amino acid change are relatively weak for EST6. By contrast, comparisons involving promotor sequences show that the level of divergence in the first 350bp 5′ of the gene is significantly lower than those for four of the six other loci for which comparable data have been published for these species. In particular, there are two perfectly conserved stretches (−1 to −158bp and −219 to −334bp) each over 100bp long included in this 350bp region. Thus the data suggest a relatively low level of selective constraint on the amino acid sequence of EST6 but a relatively high level of constraint on sequences affecting aspects of its expression.  相似文献   

14.
15.
《Molecular cell》2014,53(6):1020-1030
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16.
The cell envelope of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis in humans, contains lipids with unusual structures. These lipids play a key role in both virulence and resistance to the various hostile environments encountered by the bacteria during infection. They are synthesized by complex enzymatic systems, including type-I polyketide synthases and type-I and -II fatty acid synthases, which require a post-translational modification to become active. This modification consists of the covalent attachment of the 4′-phosphopantetheine moiety of Coenzyme A catalyzed by phosphopantetheinyl transferases (PPTases). PptT, one of the two PPTases produced by mycobacteria, is involved in post-translational modification of various type-I polyketide synthases required for the formation of both mycolic acids and lipid virulence factors in mycobacteria. Here we identify PptT as a new target for anti-tuberculosis drugs; we address all the critical issues of target validation to demonstrate that PptT can be used to search for new drugs. We confirm that PptT is essential for the growth of M. bovis BCG in vitro and show that it is required for persistence of M. bovis BCG in both infected macrophages and immunodeficient mice. We generated a conditional expression mutant of M. tuberculosis, in which the expression of the pptT gene is tightly regulated by tetracycline derivatives. We used this construct to demonstrate that PptT is required for the replication and survival of the tubercle bacillus during the acute and chronic phases of infection in mice. Finally, we developed a robust and miniaturized assay based on scintillation proximity assay technology to search for inhibitors of PPTases, and especially of PptT, by high-throughput screening. Our various findings indicate that PptT meets the key criteria for being a therapeutic target for the treatment of mycobacterial infections.  相似文献   

17.
We previously used in vitro selection to identify Mg2+-dependent deoxyribozymes that mediate the ligation reaction of an RNA 5′-hydroxyl group with a 2′,3′-cyclic phosphate. In these efforts, all of the deoxyribozymes were identified via a common in vitro selection strategy, and all of the newly formed RNA linkages were non-native 2′–5′ phosphodiester bonds rather than native 3′–5′ linkages. Here we performed several new selections in which the relative arrangements of RNA and DNA were different as compared with the earlier studies. In all cases, we again find deoxyribozymes that create only 2′–5′ linkages. This includes deoxyribozymes with an arrangement that favors 3′–5′ linkages for a different chemical reaction, that of a 2′,3′-diol plus 5′-triphosphate. These data indicate a strong and context-independent chemical preference for creating 2′–5′ RNA linkages upon opening of a 2′,3′-cyclic phosphate with a 5′-hydroxyl group. Preliminary assays show that some of the newly identified deoxyribozymes have promise for ligating RNA in a sequence-general fashion. Because 2′,3′-cyclic phosphates are the products of uncatalyzed RNA backbone cleavage, their ligation reactions may be of direct relevance to the RNA World hypothesis.[Reviewing Editor: Niles Lehman]  相似文献   

18.
Programmed cell death (PCD) is a crucial process both for plant development and responses to biotic and abiotic stress. There is accumulating evidence that chloroplasts may play a central role during plant PCD as for mitochondria in animal cells, but it is still unclear whether they participate in PCD onset, execution, or both. To tackle this question, we have analyzed the contribution of chloroplast function to the cell death phenotype of the myoinositol phosphate synthase1 (mips1) mutant that forms spontaneous lesions in a light-dependent manner. We show that photosynthetically active chloroplasts are required for PCD to occur in mips1, but this process is independent of the redox state of the chloroplast. Systematic genetic analyses with retrograde signaling mutants reveal that 3′-phosphoadenosine 5′-phosphate, a chloroplast retrograde signal that modulates nuclear gene expression in response to stress, can inhibit cell death and compromises plant innate immunity via inhibition of the RNA-processing 5′-3′ exoribonucleases. Our results provide evidence for the role of chloroplast-derived signal and RNA metabolism in the control of cell death and biotic stress response.Programmed cell death (PCD) is a universal process in multicellular organisms, contributing to the controlled and active degradation of the cell. In plants, PCD is required for processes as diverse as development, self-incompatibility, and stress response. One well-documented example is the induction of PCD upon pathogen attack, allowing the confinement of the infection, and resistance of the plant. The signaling events leading to the onset of PCD have been extensively studied: pathogen recognition triggers activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase cascades, as well as production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and salicylic acid (SA), which lead to a hypersensitive response (Coll et al., 2011).From a cellular point of view, several classes of plant PCD have been described and compared with the ones found in animal cells (van Doorn, 2011). PCD is thought to have evolved independently in plants and animals, and genes underlying these mechanisms are therefore poorly conserved between the two kingdoms. However, most cellular features are conserved between plant and animal PCD that are both characterized by cell shrinkage, chromatin condensation, DNA laddering, mitochondria permeabilization, and depolarization (Dickman and Fluhr, 2013). In animal cells, mitochondria play a central role in the regulation of apoptosis (Czabotar et al., 2014; Mariño et al., 2014), and this role is likely shared between the two kingdoms (Lord and Gunawardena, 2012). That said, additional mitochondria-independent PCD pathways have clearly evolved in plants.Genetic approaches have greatly contributed to our understanding of cellular pathways governing PCD in plants. For example, the isolation of lesion mimic mutants (LMMs), in which cell death occurs spontaneously, has allowed the identification of several negative regulators of cell death (for review, see Bruggeman et al., 2015b). Interestingly, lesion formation is light dependent in several of these mutants, which include one of the best characterized LMMs—lesions simulating disease1 (lsd1; Dietrich et al., 1994). The LSD1 protein is required for plant acclimation to excess excitation energy (Mateo et al., 2004): when plants are exposed to excessive amounts of light, the redox status of the plastoquinone pool in the chloroplastic electron transfer chain is thought to influence LSD1-dependent signaling to modulate cell death (Mühlenbock et al., 2008). Additionally, we have previously identified the myoinositol phosphate synthase1 (mips1) mutant as a LMM, in which lesion formation is also light dependent (Meng et al., 2009). This mutant is deficient in the myoinositol (MI) phosphate synthase that catalyzes the first committed step of MI biosynthesis and displays pleiotropic defects such as reduced root growth, abnormal vein development, and spontaneous cell death on leaves, together with severe growth reduction after lesions begin to develop (Meng et al., 2009; Donahue et al., 2010). The light-dependent PCD in the mips1 mutant, as observed for lsd1, suggests that chloroplasts may play a role in the MI-dependent cell death regulation. Accumulating evidence suggests that chloroplasts may play a central role in PCD regulation like mitochondria in animal cells (Wang and Bayles, 2013). First, as described in the case of lsd1, excess light energy received by the chloroplast can function as a trigger for PCD. Furthermore, singlet oxygen (1O2), a ROS, can activate the EXECUTER1 (EX1) and EX2 proteins in the chloroplasts to initiate PCD (Lee et al., 2007). Likewise, ROS generated by chloroplasts play a major role for PCD onset during nonhost interaction between tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) and Xanthomonas campestris (Zurbriggen et al., 2009). Finally, functional chloroplasts have also been shown to be required for PCD in cell suspensions (Gutierrez et al., 2014) and in a number of LMMs (Mateo et al., 2004; Meng et al., 2009; Bruggeman et al., 2015b). Thus, chloroplasts are now recognized as important components of plant defense response against pathogens (Stael et al., 2015) and are proposed to function with mitochondria in the execution of PCD (Van Aken and Van Breusegem, 2015). However, the exact signaling and metabolic contribution of chloroplasts to PCD remain to be elucidated. Furthermore, cross talk between chloroplasts and mitochondria does occur, such as during photorespiration (Sunil et al., 2013), but whether such communication functions sequentially or in parallel in the control of PCD remains to be determined (Van Aken and Van Breusegem, 2015).To further investigate how chloroplasts contribute to the regulation of cell death, we performed both forward and reverse genetics on the mips1 mutant. An extragenic secondary mutation in divinyl protochlorophyllide 8-vinyl reductase involved in chlorophyll biosynthesis leads to chlorophyll deficiency that abolishes the mips1 cell death phenotype, as do changes in CO2 availability. These findings provide evidence for a link between photosynthetic activity and PCD induction in mips1. Additionally, we investigated the contribution of several retrograde signaling pathways (Chan et al., 2015) to the control of PCD in mips1. This process was independent of GENOMES UNCOUPLED (GUN) and EX signaling pathways, but we found that the SAL1-PAP_XRN retrograde signaling pathway inhibits cell death as well as basal defense reactions in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana).  相似文献   

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