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

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

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

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The present study tests the hypothesis that the structure of extracellular domain Loop 2 can markedly affect ethanol sensitivity in glycine receptors (GlyRs) and γ-aminobutyric acid type A receptors (GABAARs). To test this, we mutated Loop 2 in the α1 subunit of GlyRs and in the γ subunit of α1β2γ2GABAARs and measured the sensitivity of wild type and mutant receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes to agonist, ethanol, and other agents using two-electrode voltage clamp. Replacing Loop 2 of α1GlyR subunits with Loop 2 from the δGABAAR (δL2), but not the γGABAAR subunit, reduced ethanol threshold and increased the degree of ethanol potentiation without altering general receptor function. Similarly, replacing Loop 2 of the γ subunit of GABAARs with δL2 shifted the ethanol threshold from 50 mm in WT to 1 mm in the GABAA γ-δL2 mutant. These findings indicate that the structure of Loop 2 can profoundly affect ethanol sensitivity in GlyRs and GABAARs. The δL2 mutations did not affect GlyR or GABAAR sensitivity, respectively, to Zn2+ or diazepam, which suggests that these δL2-induced changes in ethanol sensitivity do not extend to all allosteric modulators and may be specific for ethanol or ethanol-like agents. To explore molecular mechanisms underlying these results, we threaded the WT and δL2 GlyR sequences onto the x-ray structure of the bacterial Gloeobacter violaceus pentameric ligand-gated ion channel homologue (GLIC). In addition to being the first GlyR model threaded on GLIC, the juxtaposition of the two structures led to a possible mechanistic explanation for the effects of ethanol on GlyR-based on changes in Loop 2 structure.Alcohol abuse and dependence are significant problems in our society, with ∼14 million people in the United States being affected (1, 2). Alcohol causes over 100,000 deaths in the United States, and alcohol-related issues are estimated to cost nearly 200 billion dollars annually (2). To address this, considerable attention has focused on the development of medications to prevent and treat alcohol-related problems (35). The development of such medications would be aided by a clear understanding of the molecular structures on which ethanol acts and how these structures influence receptor sensitivity to ethanol.Ligand-gated ion channels (LGICs)2 have received substantial attention as putative sites of ethanol action that cause its behavioral effects (612). Research in this area has focused on investigating the effects of ethanol on two large superfamilies of LGICs: 1) the Cys-loop superfamily of LGICs (13, 14), whose members include nicotinic acetylcholine, 5-hydroxytryptamine3, γ-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA), γ-aminobutyric acid type C, and glycine receptors (GlyRs) (10, 11, 1520) and 2) the glutamate superfamily, including N-methyl d-aspartate, α-amino-3-hydroxyisoxazolepropionic acid, and kainate receptors (21, 22). Recent studies have also begun investigating ethanol action in the ATP-gated P2X superfamily of LGICs (2325).A series of studies that employed chimeric and mutagenic strategies combined with sulfhydryl-specific labeling identified key regions within Cys-loop receptors that appear to be initial targets for ethanol action that also can determine the sensitivity of the receptors to ethanol (712, 18, 19, 2630). This work provides several lines of evidence that position 267 and possibly other sites in the transmembrane (TM) domain of GlyRs and homologous sites in GABAARs are targets for ethanol action and that mutations at these sites can influence ethanol sensitivity (8, 9, 26, 31).Growing evidence from GlyRs indicates that ethanol also acts on the extracellular domain. The initial findings came from studies demonstrating that α1GlyRs are more sensitive to ethanol than are α2GlyRs despite the high (∼78%) sequence homology between α1GlyRs and α2GlyRs (32). Further work found that an alanine to serine exchange at position 52 (A52S) in Loop 2 can eliminate the difference in ethanol sensitivity between α1GlyRs and α2GlyRs (18, 20, 33). These studies also demonstrated that mutations at position 52 in α1GlyRS and the homologous position 59 in α2GlyRs controlled the sensitivity of these receptors to a novel mechanistic ethanol antagonist (20). Collectively, these studies suggest that there are multiple sites of ethanol action in α1GlyRs, with one site located in the TM domain (e.g. position 267) and another in the extracellular domain (e.g. position 52).Subsequent studies revealed that the polarity of the residue at position 52 plays a key role in determining the sensitivity of GlyRs to ethanol (20). The findings with polarity in the extracellular domain contrast with the findings at position 267 in the TM domain, where molecular volume, but not polarity, significantly affected ethanol sensitivity (9). Taken together, these findings indicate that the physical-chemical parameters of residues at positions in the extracellular and TM domains that modulate ethanol effects and/or initiate ethanol action in GlyRs are not uniform. Thus, knowledge regarding the physical-chemical properties that control agonist and ethanol sensitivity is key for understanding the relationship between the structure and the actions of ethanol in LGICs (19, 31, 3440).GlyRs and GABAARs, which differ significantly in their sensitivities to ethanol, offer a potential method for identifying the structures that control ethanol sensitivity. For example, α1GlyRs do not reliably respond to ethanol concentrations less than 10 mm (32, 33, 41). Similarly, γ subunit-containing GABAARs (e.g. α1β2γ2), the most predominantly expressed GABAARs in the central nervous system, are insensitive to ethanol concentrations less than 50 mm (42, 43). In contrast, δ subunit-containing GABAARs (e.g. α4β3δ) have been shown to be sensitive to ethanol concentrations as low as 1–3 mm (4451). Sequence alignment of α1GlyR, γGABAAR, and δGABAAR revealed differences between the Loop 2 regions of these receptor subunits. Since prior studies found that mutations of Loop 2 residues can affect ethanol sensitivity (19, 20, 39), the non-conserved residues in Loop 2 of GlyR and GABAAR subunits could provide the physical-chemical and structural bases underlying the differences in ethanol sensitivity between these receptors.The present study tested the hypothesis that the structure of Loop 2 can markedly affect the ethanol sensitivity of GlyRs and GABAARs. To accomplish this, we performed multiple mutations that replaced the Loop 2 region of the α1 subunit in α1GlyRs and the Loop 2 region of the γ subunit of α1β2γ2 GABAARs with corresponding non-conserved residues from the δ subunit of GABAAR and tested the sensitivity of these receptors to ethanol. As predicted, replacing Loop 2 of WT α1GlyRs with the homologous residues from the δGABAAR subunit (δL2), but not the γGABAAR subunit (γL2), markedly increased the sensitivity of the receptor to ethanol. Similarly, replacing the non-conserved residues of the γ subunit of α1β2γ2 GABAARs with δL2 also markedly increased ethanol sensitivity of GABAARs. These findings support the hypothesis and suggest that Loop 2 may play a role in controlling ethanol sensitivity across the Cys-loop superfamily of receptors. The findings also provide the basis for suggesting structure-function relationships in a new molecular model of the GlyR based on the bacterial Gloeobacter violaceus pentameric LGIC homologue (GLIC).  相似文献   

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

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Glycoprotein structure determination and quantification by MS requires efficient isolation of glycopeptides from a proteolytic digest of complex protein mixtures. Here we describe that the use of acids as ion-pairing reagents in normal-phase chromatography (IP-NPLC) considerably increases the hydrophobicity differences between non-glycopeptides and glycopeptides, thereby resulting in the reproducible isolation of N-linked high mannose type and sialylated glycopeptides from the tryptic digest of a ribonuclease B and fetuin mixture. The elution order of non-glycopeptides relative to glycopeptides in IP-NPLC is predictable by their hydrophobicity values calculated using the Wimley-White water/octanol hydrophobicity scale. O-linked glycopeptides can be efficiently isolated from fetuin tryptic digests using IP-NPLC when N-glycans are first removed with PNGase. IP-NPLC recovers close to 100% of bacterial N-linked glycopeptides modified with non-sialylated heptasaccharides from tryptic digests of periplasmic protein extracts from Campylobacter jejuni 11168 and its pglD mutant. Label-free nano-flow reversed-phase LC-MS is used for quantification of differentially expressed glycopeptides from the C. jejuni wild-type and pglD mutant followed by identification of these glycoproteins using multiple stage tandem MS. This method further confirms the acetyltransferase activity of PglD and demonstrates for the first time that heptasaccharides containing monoacetylated bacillosamine are transferred to proteins in both the wild-type and mutant strains. We believe that IP-NPLC will be a useful tool for quantitative glycoproteomics.Protein glycosylation is a biologically significant and complex post-translational modification, involved in cell-cell and receptor-ligand interactions (14). In fact, clinical biomarkers and therapeutic targets are often glycoproteins (59). Comprehensive glycoprotein characterization, involving glycosylation site identification, glycan structure determination, site occupancy, and glycan isoform distribution, is a technical challenge particularly for quantitative profiling of complex protein mixtures (1013). Both N- and O-glycans are structurally heterogeneous (i.e. a single site may have different glycans attached or be only partially occupied). Therefore, the MS1 signals from glycopeptides originating from a glycoprotein are often weaker than from non-glycopeptides. In addition, the ionization efficiency of glycopeptides is low compared with that of non-glycopeptides and is often suppressed in the presence of non-glycopeptides (1113). When the MS signals of glycopeptides are relatively high in simple protein digests then diagnostic sugar oxonium ion fragments produced by, for example, front-end collisional activation can be used to detect them. However, when peptides and glycopeptides co-elute, parent ion scanning is required to selectively detect the glycopeptides (14). This can be problematic in terms of sensitivity, especially for detecting glycopeptides in digests of complex protein extracts.Isolation of glycopeptides from proteolytic digests of complex protein mixtures can greatly enhance the MS signals of glycopeptides using reversed-phase LC-ESI-MS (RPLC-ESI-MS) or MALDI-MS (1524). Hydrazide chemistry is used to isolate, identify, and quantify N-linked glycopeptides effectively, but this method involves lengthy chemical procedures and does not preserve the glycan moieties thereby losing valuable information on glycan structure and site occupancy (1517). Capturing glycopeptides with lectins has been widely used, but restricted specificities and unspecific binding are major drawbacks of this method (1821). Under reversed-phase LC conditions, glycopeptides from tryptic digests of gel-separated glycoproteins have been enriched using graphite powder medium (22). In this case, however, a second digestion with proteinase K is required for trimming down the peptide moieties of tryptic glycopeptides so that the glycopeptides (typically <5 amino acid residues) essentially resemble the glycans with respect to hydrophilicity for subsequent separation. Moreover, the short peptide sequences of the proteinase K digest are often inadequate for de novo sequencing of the glycopeptides.Glycopeptide enrichment under normal-phase LC (NPLC) conditions has been demonstrated using various hydrophilic media and different capture and elution conditions (2328). NPLC allows either direct enrichment of peptides modified by various N-linked glycan structures using a ZIC®-HILIC column (2327) or targeting sialylated glycopeptides using a titanium dioxide micro-column (28). However, NPLC is neither effective for enriching less hydrophilic glycopeptides, e.g. the five high mannose type glycopeptides modified by 7–11 monosaccharide units from a tryptic digest of ribonuclease b (RNase B), nor for enriching O-linked glycopeptides of bovine fetuin using a ZIC-HILIC column (23). The use of Sepharose medium for enriching glycopeptides yielded only modest recovery of glycopeptides (28). In addition, binding of hydrophilic non-glycopeptides with these hydrophilic media contaminates the enriched glycopeptides (23, 28).We have recently developed an ion-pairing normal-phase LC (IP-NPLC) method to enrich glycopeptides from complex tryptic digests using Sepharose medium and salts or bases as ion-pairing reagents (29). Though reasonably effective the technique still left room for significant improvement. For example, the method demonstrated relatively modest glycopeptide selectivity, providing only 16% recovery for high mannose type glycopeptides (29). Here we report on a new IP-NPLC method using acids as ion-pairing reagents and polyhydroxyethyl aspartamide (A) as the stationary phase for the effective isolation of tryptic glycopeptides. The method was developed and evaluated using a tryptic digest of RNase B and fetuin mixture. In addition, we demonstrate that O-linked glycopeptides can be effectively isolated from a fetuin tryptic digest by IP-NPLC after removal of the N-linked glycans by PNGase F.The new IP-NPLC method was used to enrich N-linked glycopeptides from the tryptic digests of protein extracts of wild-type (wt) and PglD mutant strains of Campylobacter jejuni NCTC 11168. C. jejuni has a unique N-glycosylation system that glycosylates periplasmic and inner membrane proteins containing the extended N-linked sequon, D/E-X-N-X-S/T, where X is any amino acid other than proline (3032). The N-linked glycan of C. jejuni has been previously determined to be GalNAc-α1,4-GalNAc-α1,4-[Glcβ1,3]-GalNAc-α1,4-GalNAc-α1,4-GalNAc-α1,3-Bac-β1 (BacGalNAc5Glc residue mass: 1406 Da), where Bac is 2,4-diacetamido-2,4,6-trideoxyglucopyranose (30). In addition, the glycan structure of C. jejuni is conserved, unlike in eukaryotic systems (3032). IP-NPLC recovered close to 100% of the bacterial N-linked glycopeptides with virtually no contamination of non-glycopeptides. Furthermore, we demonstrate for the first time that acetylation of bacillosamine is incomplete in the wt using IP-NPLC and label-free MS.  相似文献   

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

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Encapsulated Klebsiella pneumoniae is the predominant causative agent of pyogenic liver abscess, an emerging infectious disease that often complicates metastatic meningitis or endophthalmitis. The capsular polysaccharide on K. pneumoniae surface was determined as the key to virulence. Although the regulation of capsular polysaccharide biosynthesis is largely unclear, it was found that protein-tyrosine kinases and phosphatases are involved. Therefore, the identification and characterization of such kinases, phosphatases, and their substrates would advance our knowledge of the underlying mechanism in capsule formation and could contribute to the development of new therapeutic strategies. Here, we analyzed the phosphoproteome of K. pneumoniae NTUH-K2044 with a shotgun approach and identified 117 unique phosphopeptides along with 93 in vivo phosphorylated sites corresponding to 81 proteins. Interestingly, three of the identified tyrosine phosphorylated proteins, namely protein-tyrosine kinase (Wzc), phosphomannomutase (ManB), and undecaprenyl-phosphate glycosyltransferase (WcaJ), were found to be distributed in the cps locus and thus were speculated to be involved in the converging signal transduction of capsule biosynthesis. Consequently, we decided to focus on the lesser studied ManB and WcaJ for mutation analysis. The capsular polysaccharides of WcaJ mutant (WcaJY5F) were dramatically reduced quantitatively, and the LD50 increased by 200-fold in a mouse peritonitis model compared with the wild-type strain. However, the capsular polysaccharides of ManB mutant (ManBY26F) showed no difference in quantity, and the LD50 increased by merely 6-fold in mice test. Our study provided a clear trend that WcaJ tyrosine phosphorylation can regulate the biosynthesis of capsular polysaccharides and result in the pathogenicity of K. pneumoniae NTUH-K2044.Protein phosphorylation is one of the most biologically relevant and ubiquitous post-translational modifications in both eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms. It is best known that protein phosphorylation is a reversible enzyme-catalyzed process that is controlled by various kinases and phosphatases. The aberrant functions often result in irregular protein phosphorylation and ultimately lead to serious disease states such as malignant transformation, immune disorders, and pathogenic infections in mammals (1, 2). Recently, accumulating evidences suggest that Ser/Thr/Tyr phosphorylations also contribute to regulate a diverse range of cellular responses and physiological processes in prokaryotes (1). Among them, tyrosine phosphorylation in encapsulated bacteria has been discovered to play key roles in capsular polysaccharide (CPS1; K antigen) biosynthesis, which leads to virulence (3, 4). This thick layer of exopolysaccharide on many pathogenic bacteria can act as a physical boundary to evade phagocytosis and complement-mediated killing and further inhibit complement activation of the host (1, 5, 6).In 1996, Acinetobacter johnsonii protein-tyrosine kinase (Ptk) was first discovered and categorized under the bacterial protein-tyrosine kinase (BY-kinase) family (1, 7, 8). Shortly after, its function in bacterial exopolysaccharide production and transport was characterized (1, 7, 8). From then on, many more bacterial tyrosine kinases such as Wzc of Escherichia coli (1, 9) and EpsB of Pseudomonas solanacearum (10, 11) were found to possess this conserved property; deletion of such tyrosine kinases will result in the loss of exopolysaccharide production (12). Therefore, several experiments were conducted to investigate the role of the downstream substrates of the tyrosine kinases in different strains of bacteria, and some targeted proteins were found to participate in the exopolysaccharide anabolism (13, 14). These findings demonstrated a direct relationship between bacterial tyrosine phosphorylation and exopolysaccharide biosynthesis that was directly reflected in the strain virulence.In the past, the functional roles of the critical components involved in protein phosphorylation were defined by basic biochemical and genetic approaches (1). However, there exists a salient gap between the growing number of identified protein-tyrosine kinases/phosphatases and the relative paucity of protein substrates characterized to date. Genomic sequence analyses and advanced high resolution/high accuracy MS systems with vastly improved phosphopeptide enrichment strategies are among the two key enabling technologies that allow a high efficiency identification of the scarcely detectable site-specific phosphorylations in bacterial systems (15). Mann et al. (16) were the first to initiate a systematic study of the phosphoproteome of B. subtilis in 2007 followed by similar site-specific phosphoproteomics analyses of E. coli (17), Lactococcus lactis (18), and Halobacterium salinarum (19). These pioneering works have since set the foundation in bacterial phosphoproteomics but have not been specifically carried out to address a particular biological issue of causal relevance to virulence or pathogenesis.Klebsiella pneumoniae is a Gram-negative, non-motile, facultative anaerobic, and rod-shaped bacterium. It is commonly found in water and soil (20) as well as on plants (21) and mucosal surfaces of mammals, such as human, horse, and swine (22, 23). It was demonstrated that CPS on the surface of K. pneumoniae is the prime factor of virulence and toxicity in causing pyogenic liver abscess (PLA), a common intra-abdominal infection with a high 10–30% mortality rate worldwide (2429). There are also variations in virulence in regard to different capsular serotypes; K1 and K2 were found to be especially pathogenic in causing PLA in a mouse model (30) compared with other serotypes, which show little or no effect (3134). The K. pneumoniae NTUH-K2044 (K2044) strain, encapsulated with K1 antigen (35), was isolated from clinical K. pneumoniae liver abscess patients. It has become an important emerging pathogen (36) because it usually complicates metastatic septic endophthalmitis and irreversible central nervous system infections independent of host underlying diseases (30, 34). The transmission rate is high (37), and it often rapidly leads to outbreaks of community-acquired infections, such as bacteremia, nosocomial pneumonia, and sepsis, common in immunocompromised individuals (38).In this study, we wanted to prove that the biosynthesis of CPS is mediated through tyrosine phosphorylation of a subset of proteins. An MS-based systematic phosphoproteomics analysis was conducted on K2044 to identify tyrosine phosphorylated proteins that are also associated with CPS biosynthesis. We further validated the relationship between tyrosine phosphorylation on those proteins and virulence of K2044 by site-directed mutagenesis, CPS quantification, serum killing, and mouse lethality assay.  相似文献   

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