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The P2 operon of the staphylococcal accessory gene regulator (agr) encodes four genes (agrA, -B, -C, and -D) whose products compose a quorum sensing system: AgrA and AgrC resemble a two-component signal transduction system of which AgrC is a sensor kinase and AgrA is a response regulator; AgrD, a polypeptide that is integrated into the cytoplasmic membrane via an amphipathic alpha-helical motif in its N-terminal region, is the propeptide for an autoinducing peptide that is the ligand for AgrC; and AgrB is a novel membrane protein that involves in the processing of AgrD propeptide and possibly the secretion of the mature autoinducing peptide. In this study, we demonstrated that AgrB had endopeptidase activity, and identified 2 amino acid residues in AgrB (cysteine 84 and histidine 77) that might form a putative cysteine endopeptidase catalytic center in the proteolytic cleavage of AgrD at its C-terminal processing site. Computer analysis revealed that the cysteine and histidine residues were conserved among the potential AgrB homologous proteins, suggesting that the Agr quorum sensing system homologues might also exist in other Gram-positive bacteria.  相似文献   

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Quorum-sensing pheromones are signal molecules that are secreted from Gram-positive bacteria and utilized by these bacteria to communicate among individual cells to regulate their activities as a group through a cell density-sensing mechanism. Typically, these pheromones are processed from precursor polypeptides. The mechanisms of trafficking, processing, and modification of the precursor to generate a mature pheromone are unclear. In Staphylococcus aureus, AgrD is the propeptide for an autoinducing peptide (AIP) pheromone that triggers the Agr cell density-sensing system upon reaching a threshold and subsequently regulates expression of virulence factor genes. The transmembrane protein AgrB, encoded in the agr locus, is necessary for the processing of AgrD to produce mature AIP; however, it is not clear how AgrD interacts with AgrB and how this interaction results in the generation of mature AIP. In this study, we found that the AgrD propeptide was integrated into the cytoplasmic membrane by a conserved alpha-helical amphipathic motif in its N-terminal region. We demonstrated that membrane targeting of AgrD by this motif was required for the stabilization of AgrD and the production of mature AIP, although this region was not specifically involved in the interaction with AgrB. An artificial amphipathic peptide replacing the N-terminal amphipathic motif of AgrD directed the protein to the cytoplasmic membrane and enabled the production of AIP. Analysis of Bacillus ComX precursor protein sequences suggested that the amphipathic membrane-targeting motif might also exist in pheromone precursors of other Gram-positive bacteria.  相似文献   

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The Staphylococcus aureus Agr quorum-sensing system modulates the expression of extracellular virulence factors. The Agr system is controlled by an autoinducing peptide (AIP) molecule that is secreted during growth. In the AIP biosynthetic pathway, two proteolytic events are required to remove the leader and tail segments of AgrD, the peptide precursor of AIP. The only protein known to be involved in this pathway is AgrB, a membrane endopeptidase that removes the AgrD carboxy-tail. We designed a synthetic peptide substrate and developed an assay to detect peptidases that can remove the N-terminal leader of AIP. Several peptidase activities were detected in S. aureus extracts and these activities were present in both wild-type and agr mutant strains. Only one of these peptidases cleaved in the correct position and all properties of this enzyme were consistent with type I signal peptidase. Subsequent cloning and purification of the two known S. aureus signal peptidases, SpsA and SpsB, demonstrated that only SpsB catalysed this activity in vitro. To investigate the role of SpsB in AIP biosynthesis, SpsB peptide inhibitors were designed and characterized. The most effective inhibitor blocked SpsB activity in vitro and showed antibacterial activity against S. aureus. Importantly, the inhibitor reduced expression of an Agr-dependent reporter and inhibited AIP production in S. aureus, indicating a role for SpsB in quorum sensing.  相似文献   

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The Staphylococcus aureus accessory gene regulator (agr) is a peptide signalling system that regulates the production of secreted virulence factors required to cause infections. The signal controlling agr function is a 7‐9 residue thiolactone‐containing peptide called an autoinducing peptide (AIP) that is biosynthesized from the AgrD precursor by the membrane peptidase AgrB. To gain insight into AgrB and AgrD function, the agrBD genes were mutagenized and screened for deficiencies in AIP production. In total, single‐site mutations at 14 different residues in AgrD were identified and another 20 within AgrB. In AgrD, novel mutations were characterized in the N‐terminal leader and throughout the central region encoding the AIP signal. In AgrB, most mutations blocked peptidase activity, but mutations in the K129–K131 residues were defective in a later step in AIP biosynthesis, separating the peptidase function from thiolactone ring formation and AIP transport. With the identification of residues in AgrB essential for AgrD processing, we reevaluated the membrane topology and the new model predicts four transmembrane helices and a potential re‐entrant loop on the cytoplasmic face. Finally, co‐immunoprecipitation studies indicate that AgrB forms oligomeric structures within the membrane. These studies provide further insight into the unique structural and functional properties of AgrB.  相似文献   

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CodY is a global regulatory protein that was first discovered in Bacillus subtilis, where it couples gene expression to changes in the pools of critical metabolites through its activation by GTP and branched-chain amino acids. Homologs of CodY can be found encoded in the genomes of nearly all low-G+C gram-positive bacteria, including Staphylococcus aureus. The introduction of a codY-null mutation into two S. aureus clinical isolates, SA564 and UAMS-1, through allelic replacement, resulted in the overexpression of several virulence genes. The mutant strains had higher levels of hemolytic activity toward rabbit erythrocytes in their culture fluid, produced more polysaccharide intercellular adhesin (PIA), and formed more robust biofilms than did their isogenic parent strains. These phenotypes were associated with derepressed levels of RNA for the hemolytic alpha-toxin (hla), the accessory gene regulator (agr) (RNAII and RNAIII/hld), and the operon responsible for the production of PIA (icaADBC). These data suggest that CodY represses, either directly or indirectly, the synthesis of a number of virulence factors of S. aureus.  相似文献   

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The agr P2 operon in Staphylococcus aureus codes for the elements of a density-sensing cassette made up of a typical two-component signalling system and its corresponding inducer. It is postulated that the autoinducer, a post-translationally modified octapeptide generated from the AgrD peptide, interacts with a receptor protein, coded by agrC , to transmit a signal via AgrA regulating expression of staphylococcal virulence genes through expression of agr RNA III. We show by analysis of PhoA fusions that AgrC is a transmembrane protein, and confirm using Western blotting that a 46 kDa protein corresponding to AgrC is present in the bacterial membrane. This protein is autophosphorylated on a histidine residue only in response to supernatants from an agr+ strain, and can also respond to the purified native octapeptide. A recombinant fusion protein where most of the N-terminal region of AgrC is replaced by the Escherichia coli maltose-binding protein is also autophosphorylated in response to stimulation by agr+ supernatants or purified octapeptide. We conclude that AgrC is the sensor molecule of a typical two-component signal system in S. aureus , and that the ligand-binding site of AgrC is probably located in the third extracellular loop of the protein.  相似文献   

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The staphylococcal virulon is activated by the density-sensing agr system, which is autoinduced by a short peptide (autoinducing peptide [AIP]) processed from a propeptide encoded by agrD. A central segment of the agr locus, consisting of the C-terminal two-thirds of AgrB (the putative processing enzyme), AgrD, and the N-terminal half of AgrC (the receptor), shows striking interstrain variation. This finding has led to the division of Staphylococcus aureus isolates into three different agr specificity groups and to the division of non-aureus staphylococci into a number of others. The AIPs cross-inhibit the agr responses between groups. We have previously shown that most menstrual toxic shock strains belong to agr specificity group III but that no strong clinical identity has been associated with strains of the other two groups. In the present report, we demonstrate a fourth agr specificity group among S. aureus strains and show that most exfoliatin-producing strains belong to this group. A striking common feature of group IV strains is activation of the agr response early in exponential phase, at least 2 h earlier than in strains of the other groups. This finding raises the question of the biological significance of the agr autoinduction threshold.  相似文献   

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Yang G  Cheng H  Liu C  Xue Y  Gao Y  Liu N  Gao B  Wang D  Li S  Shen B  Shao N 《Peptides》2003,24(11):1823-1828
Staphylococcus aureus cause many diseases by producing toxins, whose synthesis is regulated by quorum-sensing mechanisms. S. aureus secretes a protein termed RNAIII activating protein (RAP) which autoinduces toxin production via the phosphorylation of is target protein TRAP. Mice vaccinated with RAP were protected from S. aureus infection, suggesting that RAP is an useful target for selecting potential therapeutic molecules to inhibit S. aureus pathogenesis. We show here that RAP (native and recombinant) was used to select RAP-binding peptides (RBPs) from a random 12-mer phage-displayed peptide library. Two RBPs were shown to inhibit RNAIII production in vitro (used a marker for pathogenesis). The peptide WPFAHWPWQYPR, which had the strongest inhibitory activity, was chemically synthesized and also expressed in Escherichia coli as a GST-fusion. Both synthetic peptide and GST-fusion peptide decreased RNAIII levels in a dose-dependent manner. The GST-fusion peptide was also shown to protect mice from a S. aureus infection in vivo (tested in a murine cutaneous S. aureus infection model). Our results suggest the potential use of RAP-binding proteins in treating clinical S. aureus infections.  相似文献   

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Staphylococcus aureus can cause disease through the production of toxins. Toxin production is autoinduced by the protein RNAIII-activating protein (RAP) and by the autoinducing peptide (AIP), and is inhibited by RNAIII-inhibiting peptide (RIP) and by inhibitory AIPs. RAP has been shown to be a useful vaccine target site, and RIP and inhibitory AIPs as therapeutic molecules to prevent and suppress S. aureus infections. Development of therapeutic strategies based on these molecules has been hindered by a lack of knowledge of the molecular mechanisms by which they activate or inhibit virulence. Here, we show that RAP specifically induces the phosphorylation of a novel 21-kDa protein, whereas RIP inhibits its phosphorylation. This protein was termed target of RAP (TRAP). The synthesis of the virulence regulatory molecule, RNAIII, is not activated by RAP in the trap mutant strain, suggesting that RAP activates RNAIII synthesis via TRAP. Phosphoamino acid analysis shows that TRAP is histidine-phosphorylated, suggesting that TRAP may be a sensor of RAP. AIPs up-regulate the synthesis of RNAIII also in trap mutant strains, suggesting that TRAP and AIPs activate RNAIII synthesis via distinct signal transduction pathways. Furthermore, TRAP phosphorylation is down-regulated in the presence of AIP, suggesting that a network of signal transduction pathways regulate S. aureus pathogenesis.  相似文献   

16.
Structure and expression of the Bacillus subtilis sin operon.   总被引:21,自引:14,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
N K Gaur  K Cabane    I Smith 《Journal of bacteriology》1988,170(3):1046-1053
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RNAIII, a 514-nt RNA molecule, regulates the expression of many Staphylococcus aureus genes encoding exoproteins and cell-wall-associated proteins. We have studied the structure of RNAIII in solution, using a combination of chemical and enzymatic probes. A model of the secondary structure was derived from experimental data with the help of computer simulation of RNA folding. The model contains 14 hairpin structures connected by unpaired nucleotides. The data also point to three helices formed by distant nucleotides that close off structural domains. This model was generally compatible with the results of in vivo probing experiments with dimethylsulfate in late exponential-phase cultures. Toe-printing experiments revealed that the ribosome binding site of hld, which is encoded by RNAIII, was accessible to the Escherichia coli 30S ribosomal subunit, suggesting that the in vitro structure represented a translatable form of RNAIII. We also found that, within the 3' end of RNAIII, the conserved hairpin 13 and the terminator form an intrinsic structural domain that exerts specific regulatory activity on protein A gene expression.  相似文献   

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Studies of the accessory gene regulator (agr) of Staphylococcus aureus often focus on the associated RNA regulator RNAIII. Recently, Queck et al. (2008) reported on RNAIII-independent gene regulation in highly virulent, community-associated S. aureus and proposed that two independent regulatory systems were integrated during the pathogenic evolution of S. aureus.  相似文献   

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