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Zahid U. Rehman Yajie Wang M. Fata Moradali Iain D. Hay Bernd H. A. Rehm 《Applied and environmental microbiology》2013,79(10):3264-3272
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogen of particular significance to cystic fibrosis patients. This bacterium produces the exopolysaccharide alginate, which is an indicator of poor prognosis for these patients. The proteins required for alginate polymerization and secretion are encoded by genes organized in a single operon; however, the existence of internal promoters has been reported. It has been proposed that these proteins form a multiprotein complex which extends from the inner to outer membrane. Here, experimental evidence supporting such a multiprotein complex was obtained via mutual stability analysis, pulldown assays, and coimmunoprecipitation. The impact of the absence of single proteins or subunits on this multiprotein complex, i.e., on the stability of potentially interacting proteins, as well as on alginate production was investigated. Deletion of algK in an alginate-overproducing strain, PDO300, interfered with the polymerization of alginate, suggesting that in the absence of AlgK, the polymerase and copolymerase subunits, Alg8 and Alg44, are destabilized. Based on mutual stability analysis, interactions between AlgE (outer membrane), AlgK (periplasm), AlgX (periplasm), Alg44 (inner membrane), Alg8 (inner membrane), and AlgG (periplasm) were proposed. Coimmunoprecipitation using a FLAG-tagged variant of AlgE further demonstrated its interaction with AlgK. Pulldown assays using histidine-tagged AlgK showed that AlgK interacts with AlgX, which in turn was also copurified with histidine-tagged Alg44. Detection of AlgG and AlgE in PAO1 supported the existence of internal promoters controlling expression of the respective genes. Overall experimental evidence was provided for the existence of a multiprotein complex required for alginate polymerization and secretion. 相似文献
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MucR, a Novel Membrane-Associated Regulator of Alginate Biosynthesis in Pseudomonas aeruginosa 下载免费PDF全文
Alginate biosynthesis by Pseudomonas aeruginosa was shown to be regulated by the intracellular second messenger bis-(3′-5′)-cyclic-dimeric-GMP (c-di-GMP), and binding of c-di-GMP to the membrane protein Alg44 was required for alginate production. In this study, PA1727, a c-di-GMP-synthesizing enzyme was functionally analyzed and identified to be involved in regulation of alginate production. Deletion of the PA1727 gene in the mucoid alginate-overproducing P. aeruginosa strain PDO300 resulted in a nonmucoid phenotype and an about 38-fold decrease in alginate production; thus, this gene is designated mucR. The mucoid alginate-overproducing phenotype was restored by introducing the mucR gene into the isogenic ΔmucR mutant. Moreover, transfer of the MucR-encoding plasmid into strain PDO300 led to an about sevenfold increase in alginate production, wrinkly colony morphology, increased pellicle formation, auto-aggregation, and the formation of highly structured biofilms as well as the inhibition of swarming motility. Outer membrane protein profile analysis showed that overproduction of MucR mediates a strong reduction in the copy number of FliC (flagellin), required for flagellum-mediated motility. Translational reporter enzyme fusions with LacZ and PhoA suggested that MucR is located in the cytoplasmic membrane with a cytosolic C terminus. Deletion of the proposed C-terminal GGDEF domain abolished MucR function. MucR was purified and identified using tryptic peptide fingerprinting and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry. Overall, experimental evidence was provided suggesting that MucR specifically regulates alginate biosynthesis by activation of alginate production through generation of a localized c-di-GMP pool in the vicinity of Alg44. 相似文献
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Deletion of algK in Mucoid Pseudomonas aeruginosa Blocks Alginate Polymer Formation and Results in Uronic Acid Secretion 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1 下载免费PDF全文
Chronic pulmonary infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a common and serious problem in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). The P. aeruginosa isolates from these patients typically have a mucoid colony morphology due to overproduction of the exopolysaccharide alginate, which contributes to the persistence of the organisms in the CF lung. Most of the alginate biosynthetic genes are clustered in the algD operon, located at 34 min on the chromosome. Alginate biosynthesis begins with the formation of an activated monomer, GDP-mannuronate, which is known to occur via the products of the algA, algC, and algD genes. Polymannuronate forms in the periplasm, but the gene products involved in mannuronate translocation across the inner membrane and its polymerization are not known. One locus of the operon which remained uncharacterized was a new gene called algK between alg44 and algE. We sequenced algK from the mucoid CF isolate FRD1 and expressed it in Escherichia coli, which revealed a polypeptide of the predicted size (52 kDa). The sequence of AlgK showed an apparent signal peptide characteristic of a lipoprotein. AlgK-PhoA fusion proteins were constructed and shown to be active, indicating that AlgK has a periplasmic subcellular localization. To test the phenotype of an AlgK− mutant, the algK coding sequence was replaced with a nonpolar gentamicin resistance cassette to avoid polar effects on genes downstream of algK that are essential for polymer formation. The algKΔ mutant was nonmucoid, demonstrating that AlgK was required for alginate production. Also, AlgK− mutants demonstrated a small-colony phenotype on L agar, suggesting that the loss of AlgK also caused a growth defect. The mutant phenotypes were complemented by a plasmid expressing algK in trans. When the algKΔ mutation was placed in an algJ::Tn501 background, where algA was not expressed due to polar transposon effects, the growth defect was not observed. AlgK− mutants appeared to accumulate a toxic extracellular product, and we hypothesized that this could be an unpolymerized alginate precursor. High levels of low-molecular-weight uronic acid were produced by the AlgK− mutant. When AlgK− culture supernatants were subjected to dialysis, high levels of uronic acids diffused out of the dialysis sac, and no uronic acids were detectable after extensive dialysis. In contrast, the mucoid wild-type strain produced only polymerized uronic acids (i.e., alginate), whereas the algKΔ algJ::Tn501 mutant produced no uronic acids. Thus, the alginate pathway in an AlgK− mutant was blocked after transport but at a step before polymerization, suggesting that AlgK plays an important role in the polymerization of mannuronate to alginate. 相似文献
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Robert G. Doggett 《Applied microbiology》1969,18(5):936-937
The high frequency of pulmonary infection by mucoid strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in patients with cystic fibrosis can be interpreted to represent an apparent mutation resulting from environmental factors within the host. 相似文献
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Lin Xiao Feng Han Zhao Yang Xin-zhi Lu Wen-gong Yu 《World journal of microbiology & biotechnology》2006,22(1):81-88
Summary To exploit alginate lyase which could degrade bacterial alginates, degenerate PCR and long range-inverse PCR (LR-IPCR) were
used to isolate alginate lyase genes from soil bacteria. Gene algL, an alginate lyase-encoding gene from Pseudomonas sp. QD03 was cloned, and it was composed of a 1122 bp open reading frame (ORF) encoding 373 amino acid residues with the
calculated molecular mass of 42.2 kDa. The deduced protein had a potential N-terminal signal peptide of 20 amino acid residues
that was consistent with its proposed periplasmic location. Gene algL was expressed in pET24a (+)/E. coli BL21 (DE3) system. The recombinant AlgL was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity using affinity chromatography. The molecular
weight of AlgL was estimated to be 42.8 kDa by SDS-PAGE. AlgL exhibited maximal activity at pH 7.5 and 37 °C. Na+, K+, Ca2+ and Ba2+ significantly enhanced the activity of AlgL. AlgL could degrade alginate and mannuronate blocks, but hardly degrade guluronate
blocks. In particular, AlgL could degrade acetylated alginate of Pseudomonas aeruginosa FRD1 (approximately 0.54 mol of O-acetyl group per mol of alginate). It might be possible to use alginate lyase AlgL as an adjuvant therapeutic medicine for
the treatment of disease associated with P. aeruginosa infection. 相似文献
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The pathway of pyrimidine biosynthesis in Pseudomonas aeruginosa has been shown to be the same as in other bacteria. Twenty-seven mutants requiring uracil for growth were isolated and the mutant lesions were identified. Mutants lacking either dihydroorotic acid dehydrogenase, orotidine monophosphate pyrophosphorylase, orotidine monophosphate decarboxylase, or aspartic transcarbamylase were isolated; none lacking dihydroorotase were found. By using transduction and conjugation, four genes affecting pyrimidine biosynthetic enzymes have been identified and shown to be unlinked to each other. The linkage of pyrB to met-28 and ilv-2 was shown by contransduction. Repression by uracil alone or by broth could not be demonstrated for any enzymes of this pathway, in contrast to the situation in Escherichia coli and Serratia marcescens. In addition, derepression of these enzymes could not be demonstrated. A low level of feedback inhibition of aspartic transcarbamylase was found to occur. It is suggested that the control of such constitutive biosynthetic enzymes in P. aeruginosa may be related to the comprehensive metabolic activities of this organism. 相似文献
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Susan Maleki Eivind Almaas Sergey Zotchev Svein Valla Helga Ertesv?g 《Applied and environmental microbiology》2016,82(4):1227-1236
Pseudomonas fluorescens is able to produce the medically and industrially important exopolysaccharide alginate. The proteins involved in alginate biosynthesis and secretion form a multiprotein complex spanning the inner and outer membranes. In the present study, we developed a method by which the porin AlgE was detected by immunogold labeling and transmission electron microscopy. Localization of the AlgE protein was found to depend on the presence of other proteins in the multiprotein complex. No correlation was found between the number of alginate factories and the alginate production level, nor were the numbers of these factories affected in an algC mutant that is unable to produce the precursor needed for alginate biosynthesis. Precursor availability and growth phase thus seem to be the main determinants for the alginate production rate in our strain. Clustering analysis demonstrated that the alginate multiprotein complexes were not distributed randomly over the entire outer cell membrane surface. 相似文献
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Alginate overproduction affects Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilm structure and function 总被引:24,自引:0,他引:24 下载免费PDF全文
Hentzer M Teitzel GM Balzer GJ Heydorn A Molin S Givskov M Parsek MR 《Journal of bacteriology》2001,183(18):5395-5401
During the course of chronic cystic fibrosis (CF) infections, Pseudomonas aeruginosa undergoes a conversion to a mucoid phenotype, which is characterized by overproduction of the exopolysaccharide alginate. Chronic P. aeruginosa infections involve surface-attached, highly antibiotic-resistant communities of microorganisms organized in biofilms. Although biofilm formation and the conversion to mucoidy are both important aspects of CF pathogenesis, the relationship between them is at the present unclear. In this study, we report that the overproduction of alginate affects biofilm development on an abiotic surface. Biofilms formed by an alginate-overproducing strain exhibit a highly structured architecture and are significantly more resistant to the antibiotic tobramycin than a biofilm formed by an isogenic nonmucoid strain. These results suggest that an important consequence of the conversion to mucoidy is an altered biofilm architecture that shows increasing resistance to antimicrobial treatments. 相似文献
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Pseudomonas aeruginosa alginate was purified and characterized in terms of uronic acid, carbohydrate and protein content, as well as by infra-red spectroscopy and gel electrophoresis. Added exogenous bacterial alginate inhibited the uptake and degradation of both viable and non-viable radiolabelled non-mucoid P. aeruginosa by resident mouse peritoneal macrophages. Alginic acid (from seaweed) inhibited the same parameters to almost the same degree. Bacterial alginate also inhibited the uptake of fluorescent-labelled zymosan and latex particles. Starch, at equivalent viscosity to the alginate, inhibited the uptake and degradation of radiolabelled nonviable P. aeruginosa to a greater extent, but Dextran T500 had no effect. This suggests that the viscous nature of alginate exerts a non-specific inhibitory effect on the uptake and subsequent degradation of phagocytosible particles. 相似文献