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1.
Deamidation of one specific asparagine residue in an alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble spore protein (SASP) of Bacillus subtilis took place readily in vitro (time for 50% deamidation [t(1/2)], approximately 1 h at 70 degrees C), and the deamidated SASP no longer bound to DNA effectively. However, DNA binding protected against this deamidation in vitro. A mutant alpha/beta-type SASP in which the reactive asparagine was changed to aspartate also failed to bind to DNA in vitro, and this protein did not restore UV radiation and heat resistance to spores lacking the majority of their alpha/beta-type SASP. When expressed in Escherichia coli, where it is bound to DNA, the alpha/beta-type SASP deamidated with a t(1/2) of 2 to 3 h at 95 degrees C. However, the alpha/beta-type SASP was extremely resistant to deamidation within spores (t(1/2), >50 h at 95 degrees C). A gamma-type SASP of B. subtilis also deamidated readily in vitro (t(1/2) for one net deamidation, approximately 1 h at 70 degrees C), but this protein (which is not associated with DNA) deamidated fairly readily in spores (t(1/2), approximately 1 h at 95 degrees C). Total spore core protein also deamidated in vivo, although the rate was two- to threefold slower than that of deamidation of total protein in heated vegetative cells. These data indicate that protein deamidation is slowed significantly in spores, presumably due to the spore's environment. However, alpha/beta-type SASP are even more strongly protected against deamidation in vivo, presumably by their binding to spore DNA. Thus, not only do alpha/beta-type SASP protect spore DNA from damage; DNA also protects alpha/beta-type SASP.  相似文献   

2.
HBsu, the Bacillus subtilis homolog of the Escherichia coli HU proteins and the major chromosomal protein in vegetative cells of B. subtilis, is present at similar levels in vegetative cells and spores ( approximately 5 x 10(4) monomers/genome). The level of HBsu in spores was unaffected by the presence or absence of the alpha/beta-type, small acid-soluble proteins (SASP), which are the major chromosomal proteins in spores. In developing forespores, HBsu colocalized with alpha/beta-type SASP on the nucleoid, suggesting that HBsu could modulate alpha/beta-type SASP-mediated properties of spore DNA. Indeed, in vitro studies showed that HBsu altered alpha/beta-type SASP protection of pUC19 from DNase digestion, induced negative DNA supercoiling opposing alpha/beta-type SASP-mediated positive supercoiling, and greatly ameliorated the alpha/beta-type SASP-mediated increase in DNA persistence length. However, HBsu did not significantly interfere with the alpha/beta-type SASP-mediated changes in the UV photochemistry of DNA that explain the heightened resistance of spores to UV radiation. These data strongly support a role for HBsu in modulating the effects of alpha/beta-type SASP on the properties of DNA in the developing and dormant spore.  相似文献   

3.
B Setlow  P Setlow 《Applied microbiology》1993,59(10):3418-3423
Dormant spores of Bacillus subtilis which lack the majority of the alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble proteins (SASP) (termed alpha- beta- spores) that coat the DNA in wild-type spores are significantly more sensitive to hydrogen peroxide than are wild-type spores. Hydrogen peroxide treatment of alpha- beta- spores causes DNA strand breaks more readily than does comparable treatment of wild-type spores, and alpha- beta- spores, but not wild-type spores, which survive hydrogen peroxide treatment have acquired a significant number of mutations. The hydrogen peroxide resistance of wild-type spores appears to be acquired in at least two incremental steps during sporulation. The first increment is acquired at about the time of alpha/beta-type SASP synthesis, and the second increment is acquired approximately 2 h later, at about the time of dipicolinic acid accumulation. During sporulation of the alpha- beta- strain, only the second increment of hydrogen peroxide resistance is acquired. In contrast, sporulation mutants which accumulate alpha/beta-type SASP but progress no further in sporulation acquire only the first increment of hydrogen peroxide resistance. These findings strongly suggest that binding of alpha/beta-type SASP to DNA provides one increment of spore hydrogen peroxide resistance. Indeed, binding of alpha/beta-type SASP to DNA in vitro provides strong protection against cleavage of DNA by hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

4.
DNA in dormant spores of Bacillus species is in an A-like conformation   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The DNA in dormant spores of Bacillus species is associated with alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble proteins (SASP), which are double-stranded DNA-binding proteins whose amino acid sequence has been highly conserved in evolution. In vitro these proteins bind most strongly to DNA which readily adopts an A-like conformation, as binding of alpha/beta-type SASP causes DNA to assume an A-like conformation. As predicted by this conformational change in DNA, binding of alpha/beta-type SASP to relaxed but covalently closed plasmid DNA results in the introduction of a large number of negative supercoils. Associated with the conformational change in DNA brought about by alpha/beta-type SASP binding is a change in its photochemistry such that ultraviolet irradiation does not generate pyrimidine dimers, but rather a thyminyl-thymine adduct termed spore photoproduct (SP). The latter two properties of DNA complexed with alpha/beta-type SASP in vitro are similar to those of DNA in dormant spores of Bacillus species in which: (i) plasmid DNA has a much higher number of negative supercoils than plasmid in growing cells; and (ii) ultraviolet irradiation produces SP and no pyrimidine dimers, while only pyrimidine dimers are formed in growing cells. During sporulation these changes in the properties of spore DNA take place in parallel with synthesis of alpha/beta-type SASP, and the magnitude of the changes is greatly reduced in mutants that make low amounts of these proteins. A straightforward interpretation of these data is that DNA in dormant spores of Bacillus species is in an A-like conformation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble spore proteins (SASP) of Bacillus subtilis bind to DNA and alter its conformation, topology, and photochemistry, and thereby spore resistance to UV light. Three mutations have been introduced into the B. subtilis sspC gene, which codes for the alpha/beta-type wild-type SASP, SspCwt. One mutation (SspCTyr) was a conservative change, as residue 29 (Leu) was changed to Tyr, an amino acid found at this position in other alpha/beta-type SASP. The other mutations changed residues conserved in all alpha/beta-type SASP. In one (SspCAla), residue 52 (Gly) was changed to Ala; in the second (SspCGln), residue 57 (Lys) was changed to Gln. The effects of the wild-type and mutant SspC on DNA properties were examined in vivo in B. subtilis spores and Escherichia coli as well as in vitro with use of purified protein. Both SspCwt and SspCTyr interacted similarly with DNA in vivo and in vitro, restoring much UV resistance to spores lacking major alpha/beta-type SASP, causing a large increase in plasmid negative supercoiling, and altering DNA UV photochemistry from cell type to spore type. In contrast, SspCAla had no detectable effect on DNA properties in vivo or in vitro, while SspCGln had effects intermediate between those of SspCAla and SspCwt. Strikingly, neither SspCAla nor SspCGln bound well to DNA in vitro. These results confirm the importance of the conserved primary sequence of alpha/beta-type SASP in the ability of these proteins to bind to spore DNA and cause spore UV resistance.  相似文献   

6.
Sporulation of a Bacillus subtilis strain (termed alpha(-) beta(-)) lacking the majority of the alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble spore proteins (SASP) that are synthesized in the developing forespore and saturate spore DNA exhibited a number of differences from that of the wild-type strain, including delayed forespore accumulation of dipicolinic acid, overexpression of forespore-specific genes, and delayed expression of at least one mother cell-specific gene turned on late in sporulation, although genes turned on earlier in the mother cell were expressed normally in alpha(-) beta(-) strains. The sporulation defects in alpha(-) beta(-) strains were corrected by synthesis of chromosome-saturating levels of either of two wild-type, alpha/beta-type SASP but not by a mutant SASP that binds DNA poorly. Spores from alpha(-) beta(-) strains also exhibited less glutaraldehyde resistance and slower outgrowth than did wild-type spores, but at least some of these defects in alpha(-) beta(-) spores were abolished by the synthesis of normal levels of alpha/beta-type SASP. These results indicate that alpha/beta-type SASP may well have global effects on gene expression during sporulation and spore outgrowth.  相似文献   

7.
Alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble spore proteins (SASP) are essential for the resistance of DNA in spores of Bacillus species to damage. An alpha/beta-type SASP, Ssp2, from Clostridium perfringens was expressed at significant levels in B. subtilis spores lacking one or both major alpha/beta-type SASP (alpha- and alpha- beta- strains, respectively). Ssp2 restored some of the resistance of alpha- beta- spores to UV and nitrous acid and of alpha- spores to dry heat. Ssp2 also restored much of the resistance of alpha- spores to nitrous acid and restored full resistance of alpha- spores to UV and moist heat. These results further indicate the interchangeability of alpha/beta-type SASP in DNA protection in spores.  相似文献   

8.
9.
After a few minutes of germination, nucleoids in the great majority of spores of Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus megaterium were ring shaped. The major spore DNA binding proteins, the alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble proteins (SASP), colocalized to these nucleoid rings early in spore germination, as did the B. megaterium homolog of the major B. subtilis chromosomal protein HBsu. The percentage of ring-shaped nucleoids was decreased in germinated spores with lower levels of alpha/beta-type SASP. As spore outgrowth proceeded, the ring-shaped nucleoids disappeared and the nucleoid became more compact. This change took place after degradation of most of the spores' pool of major alpha/beta-type SASP and was delayed when alpha/beta-type SASP degradation was delayed. Later in spore outgrowth, the shape of the nucleoid reverted to the diffuse lobular shape seen in growing cells.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Small, acid-soluble proteins (SASP) of both the alpha/beta- and gamma-type were present in spores of Sporosarcina ureae and S. halophila, and three genes encoding alpha/beta-type SASP in these species have been cloned and sequenced. The amino acid sequences of the Sporosarcina alpha/beta-type SASP are extremely homologous to those of Bacillus SASP, further indicative of the close evolutionary relationship between these genera.  相似文献   

12.
During germination of spores of Bacillus species the degradation of the spore's pool of small, acid-soluble proteins (SASP) is initiated by a protease termed GPR, the product of the gpr gene. Bacillus megaterium and B. subtilis mutants with an inactivated gpr gene grew, sporulated, and triggered spore germination as did gpr+ strains. However, SASP degradation was very slow during germination of gpr mutant spores, and in rich media the time taken for spores to return to vegetative growth (defined as outgrowth) was much longer in gpr than in gpr+ spores. Not surprisingly, gpr spores had much lower rates of RNA and protein synthesis during outgrowth than did gpr+ spores, although both types of spores had similar levels of ATP. The rapid decrease in the number of negative supertwists in plasmid DNA seen during germination of gpr+ spores was also much slower in gpr spores. Additionally, UV irradiation of gpr B. subtilis spores early in germination generated significant amounts of spore photoproduct and only small amounts of thymine dimers (TT); in contrast UV irradiation of germinated gpr+ spores generated almost no spore photoproduct and three to four times more TT. Consequently, germinated gpr spores were more UV resistant than germinated gpr+ spores. Strikingly, the slow outgrowth phenotype of B. subtilis gpr spores was suppressed by the absence of major alpha/beta-type SASP. These data suggest that (i) alpha/beta-type SASP remain bound to much, although not all, of the chromosome in germinated gpr spores; (ii) the alpha/beta-type SASP bound to the chromosome in gpr spores alter this DNA's topology and UV photochemistry; and (iii) the presence of alpha/beta-type SASP on the chromosome is detrimental to normal spore outgrowth.  相似文献   

13.
The DNA within spores of Bacillus subtilis is complexed with a large amount of alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble spore protein (SASP). Measurement of the interaction of a purified alpha/beta-type SASP with DNA in vitro by a filter binding assay showed that the binding saturated at one molecule of SASP per approximately 5 bp. SASP-DNA binding did not require a divalent cation, was optimal at pH 6.7, and was unaffected by salt up to 400 mM. Binding of SASP to relaxed plasmid DNA in the presence of topoisomerase I resulted in the introduction of 18 (for plasmid pUC19) or 36 (for plasmid pUB110) negative supertwists, a superhelical density similar to that found in several plasmids isolated from spores. The SASP-dependent introduction of negative supertwists did not require a divalent cation, was unaffected by salt, and also gave a value of one molecule of SASP per approximately 5 bp at saturation. There was at least one slow step in the binding of SASP to DNA as seen in both the filter binding and supercoiling assays.  相似文献   

14.
Treatment of wild-type spores of Bacillus subtilis with glutaraldehyde or an iodine-based disinfectant (Betadine) did not cause detectable mutagenesis, and spores (termed alpha-beta-) lacking the major DNA-protective alpha/beta-type, small, acid-soluble proteins (SASP) exhibited similar sensitivity to these agents. A recA mutation did not sensitize wild-type or alpha-beta- spores to Betadine or glutaraldehyde, nor did spore treatment with these agents result in significant expression of a recA-lacZ fusion when the treated spores germinated. Spore glutaraldehyde sensitivity was increased dramatically by removal of much spore coat protein, but this treatment had no effect on Betadine sensitivity. In contrast, nitrous acid treatment of wild-type and alpha-beta- spores caused significant mutagenesis, with alpha-beta- spores being much more sensitive to this agent. A recA mutation further sensitized both wild-type and alpha-beta- spores to nitrous acid, and there was significant expression of a recA-lacZ fusion when nitrous acid-treated spores germinated. These results indicate that: (a) nitrous acid kills B. subtilis spores at least in part by DNA damage, and alpha/beta-type SASP protect against this DNA damage; (b) killing of spores by glutaraldehyde or Betadine is not due to DNA damage; and (c) the spore coat protects spores against killing by glutaraldehyde but not Betadine. Further analysis also demonstrated that spores treated with nitrous acid still germinated normally, while those treated with glutaraldehyde or Betadine did not.  相似文献   

15.
Alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble proteins (SASP) of dormant spores of Bacillus subtilis bind to DNA and increase its resistance to a variety of damaging agents both in vivo and in vitro. When spores germinate, degradation of alpha/beta-type SASP is rapidly initiated by a sequence-specific protease, which is termed GPR. Three mutations have been introduced into the B. subtilis sspC gene, which codes for the wild-type alpha/beta-type SASP SspCwt; all three mutations change residues in the highly conserved sequence recognized by GPR. In one mutant protein (SspCV), residue 33 (Ser) was changed to Val; in the second (SspCDL), residues 30 and 31 (Glu and Ile) were changed to Asp and Leu, respectively; and in the third mutant protein (SspCDLV), residues 30, 31, and 33 were changed to Asp, Leu, and Val. All three mutant proteins were rapidly degraded by GPR during spore germination, and SspCDL and SspCDLV were degraded by GPR in vitro at rates 8 to 9% of that for SspCwt, although not exclusively at the single site cleaved by GPR in SspCwt. These results indicate (i) that the sequence specificity of GPR is broader than originally imagined and (ii) that GPR can cleave the sequence in SspCDLV. Since the latter sequence is identical to that cleaved during the proteolytic activation of GPR, this result further supports an autoprocessing model for GPR activation during sporulation. The properties of these mutant proteins were also examined, both in vivo in B. subtilis spores and in Escherichia coli and in vitro with purified protein. SspC(v) interacted with DNA similarly to SspC(wt) in vivo, resorting UV and heat resistance to spores lacking major alpha/beta-type SASP to the same extent as SspC(wt). In contrasst, SspC(DL) had much less effect on DNA properties in vivo and bound strongly only to poly(dG) . poly(dC) in vitro; SspC(DLV) exhibited only weak binding to poly(dG).poly(dC) in vitro. These results confirm the importance of the conserved primary sequence of alpha/beta-type SASP in the binding of these proteins to spore DNA and alteration of DNA properties and show further that the GRP recognition region in alpha/beta-type SASP plays some role in DNA binding.  相似文献   

16.
Inactivation of the Bacillus subtilis sspF gene had no effect on sporulation, spore resistance, or germination in a wild-type strain or one lacking DNA protective alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble proteins (SASP). Overexpression of SspF in wild-type spores or in spores lacking major alpha/beta-type SASP (alpha- beta- spores) had no effect on sporulation but slowed spore outgrowth and restored a small amount of UV and heat resistance to alpha- beta- spores. In vitro analyses showed that SspF is a DNA binding protein and is cleaved by the SASP-specific protease (GPR) at a site similar to that cleaved in alpha/beta-type SASP. SspF was also degraded during spore germination and outgrowth, and this degradation was initiated by GPR.  相似文献   

17.
The binding of alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble spore proteins (SASP) to DNA of spores of Bacillus species is the major determinant of DNA resistance to a variety of damaging treatments. The primary sequence of alpha/beta-type SASP is highly conserved; however, the N-terminal third of these proteins is less well conserved than the C-terminal two-thirds. To determine the functional importance of residues in the N-terminal region of alpha/beta-type SASP, variants of SspC (a minor alpha/beta-type SASP from Bacillus subtilis) with modified N termini were generated and their structural and DNA binding properties studied in vitro and in vivo. SspC variants with deletions of up to 14 residues ( approximately 20% of SspC residues) were able to bind DNA in vitro and adopted similar conformations when bound to DNA, as determined by circular dichroism spectroscopy and protein-protein cross-linking. Progressive deletion of up to 11 N-terminal residues resulted in proteins with progressively lower DNA binding affinity. However, SspC(Delta)(14) (in which 14 N-terminal residues have been deleted) showed significantly higher affinity for DNA than the larger proteins, SspC(Delta)(10) and SspC(Delta)(11). The affinity of these proteins for DNA was shown to be largely dependent upon the charge of the first few N-terminal residues. These results are interpreted in the context of a model for DNA-dependent alpha/beta-type SASP protein-protein interaction involving the N-terminal regions of these proteins.  相似文献   

18.
Dry Bacillus subtilis spores lacking their two major DNA-binding proteins (small, acid-soluble proteins [SASP] alpha and beta) were much more sensitive to dry heat than were wild-type spores. Survivors of dry heat treatment of both wild-type and mutant spores exhibited a high frequency of mutations, and the DNA from the heated spores had increased numbers of single-strand breaks. These data indicate that SASP alpha and beta provide significant protection to spore DNA against the damaging effects of dry heat. This DNA damage may be in part depurination, and a purified alpha/beta-type SASP gave significant protection against dry heat-induced DNA depurination in vitro.  相似文献   

19.
D L Popham  S Sengupta    P Setlow 《Applied microbiology》1995,61(10):3633-3638
Spores of a Bacillus subtilis strain with an insertion mutation in the dacB gene, which codes for an enzyme involved in spore cortex biosynthesis, have a higher core water content than wild-type spores. Spores lacking the two major alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble proteins (SASP) (termed alpha-beta- spores) have the same core water content as do wild-type spores, but alpha-beta- dacB spores had more core water than did dacB spores. The resistance of alpha-beta-, alpha-beta- dacB, dacB, and wild-type spores to dry and moist heat, hydrogen peroxide, and UV radiation has been determined, as has the role of DNA damage in spore killing by moist heat and hydrogen peroxide. These data (i) suggest that core water content has little if any role in spore UV resistance and are consistent with binding of alpha/beta-type SASP to DNA being the major mechanism providing protection to spores from UV radiation; (ii) suggest that binding of alpha/beta-type SASP to DNA is the major mechanism unique to spores providing protection from dry heat; (iii) suggest that spore resistance to moist heat and hydrogen peroxide is affected to a large degree by the core water content, as increased core water resulted in large decreases in spore resistance to these agents; and (iv) indicate that since this decreased resistance (i.e., in dacB spores) is not associated with increased spore killing by DNA damage, spore DNA must normally be extremely well protected against such damage, presumably by the saturation of spore DNA by alpha/beta-type SASP.  相似文献   

20.
Binding of alpha/beta-type small acid-soluble spore proteins (SASP) is the major determinant of DNA resistance to damage caused by UV radiation, heat, and oxidizing agents in spores of Bacillus and Clostridium species. Analysis of several alpha/beta-type SASP showed that these proteins have essentially no secondary structure in the absence of DNA, but become significantly alpha-helical upon binding to double-stranded DNAs or oligonucleotides. Folding of alpha/beta-type SASP induced by a variety of DNAs and oligonucleotides was measured by CD spectroscopy, and this allowed determination of a DNA binding site size of 4 base pairs as well as equilibrium binding parameters of the alpha/beta-type SASP-DNA interaction. Analysis of the equilibrium binding data further allowed determination of both intrinsic binding constants (K) and cooperativity factors (omega), as the alpha/beta-type SASP-DNA interaction was significantly cooperative, with the degree of cooperativity depending on both the bound DNA and the salt concentration. Kinetic analysis of the interaction of one alpha/beta-type SASP, SspC(Tyr), with DNA indicated that each binding event involves the dimerization of SspC(Tyr) monomers at a DNA binding site. The implications of these findings for the structure of the alpha/beta-type SASP.DNA complex and the physiology of alpha/beta-type SASP degradation during spore germination are discussed.  相似文献   

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