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1.
The bacterial mechanosensitive channel MscS forms a homoheptamer of subunits composed of a transmembrane (TM) domain and a large cytoplasmic (CP) domain. Recent studies suggest that a lateral expansion of the TM domain, structural change in the CP domain, and TM-CP interactions are essential to open the channel. However, it has not been examined whether the CP domain undergoes structural changes during channel opening. The aim of this study was to estimate structural changes in the CP domain during channel opening using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) spectroscopy. To monitor changes in the horizontal diameter of the CP domain, four point mutants (A132C, F178C, L246C, and R259C), all of which had channel activity, were created and labeled with Alexa488 and Alexa568 for FRET analysis. The FRET efficiency of these mutants decreased when lysophosphatidylcholine was applied to open the channel, suggesting that the CP domain swells up when the channel opens. The degree of the decease in FRET efficiency after lysophosphatidylcholine treatment was smaller in the D62N/F178C mutant, which was deficient in the TM-CP interactions, than in the F178C mutant. These findings provide the first, to our knowledge, experimental evidence that the CP domain swells up during channel opening, and the swelling is mediated by the TM-CP interactions.  相似文献   

2.
The colicin A pore-forming domain (pfColA) was fused to a bacterial signal peptide (sp-pfColA). This was inserted into the Escherichia coli inner membrane in functional form and could be coimmunoprecipitated with epitope-tagged immunity protein (EpCai). We constructed a series of fusion proteins in which various numbers of sp-pfColA alpha-helices were fused to alkaline phosphatase (AP). We showed that a fusion protein made up of the hydrophobic alpha-helices 8 and 9 of sp-pfColA fused to AP was specifically coimmunoprecipitated with EpCai produced in the same cells. This is the first biochemical evidence that Cai recognizes and interacts with the colicin A hydrophobic helical hairpin.  相似文献   

3.
We have identified a gene involved in bacterial cell division, located immediately upstream of the ftsI gene in the min 2 region of the Escherichia coli chromosome. This gene, which we named ftsL, was detected through characterization of TnphoA insertions in a plasmid containing this chromosomal region. TnphoA topological analysis and fractionation of alkaline phosphatase fusion proteins indicated that the ftsL gene product is a 13.6-kDa cytoplasmic membrane protein with a cytoplasmic amino terminus, a single membrane-spanning segment, and a periplasmic carboxy terminus. The ftsL gene is essential for cell growth and division. A null mutation in ftsL resulted in inhibition of cell division, formation of long, nonseptate filaments, ultimate cessation of growth, and lysis. Under certain growth conditions, depletion of FtsL or expression of the largest ftsL-phoA fusion produced a variety of cell morphologies, including Y-shaped bacteria, indicating a possible general weakening of the cell wall. The FtsL protein is estimated to be present at about 20 to 40 copies per cell. The periplasmic domain of the protein displays a sequence with features characteristic of leucine zippers, which are involved in protein dimerization.  相似文献   

4.
Structural changes in channel proteins give critical insights required for understanding the gating transitions that underpin function. Tryptophan (Trp) is uniquely sensitive to its environment and can be used as a reporter of conformational changes. Here, we have used site-directed Trp insertion within the pore helices of the small mechanosensitive channel protein, MscS, to monitor conformational transitions. We show that Trp can be inserted in place of Leu at the two pore seal positions, Leu105 and Leu109, resulting in functional channels. Using Trp105 as a probe, we demonstrate that the A106V mutation causes a modified conformation in the purified channel protein consistent with a more open state in solution. Moreover, we show that solubilized MscS changes to a more open conformation in the presence of phospholipids or their lysoforms.  相似文献   

5.
Phytochromes enable plants to sense light information and regulate developmental responses. Phytochromes interact with partner proteins to transmit light signals to downstream components for plant development. PIRF1 (phytochrome-interacting ROP guanine-nucleotide exchange factor (RopGEF 1)) functions as a light-signaling switch regulating root development through the activation of ROPs (Rho-like GTPase of plant) in the cytoplasm. In vitro pulldown and yeast two-hybrid assays confirmed the interaction between PIRF1 and phytochromes. PIRF1 interacted with the N-terminal domain of phytochromes through its conserved PRONE (plant-specific ROP nucleotide exchanger) region. PIRF1 also interacted with ROPs and activated them in a phytochrome-dependent manner. The Pr form of phytochrome A enhanced the RopGEF activity of PIRF1, whereas the Pfr form inhibited it. A bimolecular fluorescence complementation analysis demonstrated that PIRF1 was localized in the cytoplasm and bound to the phytochromes in darkness but not in light. PIRF1 loss of function mutants (pirf1) of Arabidopsis thaliana showed a longer root phenotype in the dark. In addition, both PIRF1 overexpression mutants (PIRF1-OX) and phytochrome-null mutants (phyA-211 and phyB-9) showed retarded root elongation and irregular root hair formation, suggesting that PIRF1 is a negative regulator of phytochrome-mediated primary root development. We propose that phytochrome and ROP signaling are interconnected through PIRF1 in regulating the root growth and development in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

6.
The full-length ZipA protein from Escherichia coli, one of the essential components of the division proto-ring that provides membrane tethering to the septation FtsZ protein, has been incorporated in single copy into nanodiscs formed by a membrane scaffold protein encircling an E. coli phospholipid mixture. This is an acellular system that reproduces the assembly of part of the cell division components. ZipA contained in nanodiscs (Nd-ZipA) retains the ability to interact with FtsZ oligomers and with FtsZ polymers. Interactions with FtsZ occur at similar strengths as those involved in the binding of the soluble form of ZipA, lacking the transmembrane region, suggesting that the transmembrane region of ZipA has little influence on the formation of the ZipA·FtsZ complex. Peptides containing partial sequences of the C terminus of FtsZ compete with FtsZ polymers for binding to Nd-ZipA. The affinity of Nd-ZipA for the FtsZ polymer formed with GTP or GMPCPP (a slowly hydrolyzable analog of GTP) is moderate (micromolar range) and of similar magnitude as for FtsZ-GDP oligomers. Polymerization does not stabilize the binding of FtsZ to ZipA. This supports the role of ZipA as a passive anchoring device for the proto-ring with little implication, if any, in the regulation of its assembly. Furthermore, it indicates that the tethering of FtsZ to the membrane shows sufficient plasticity to allow for its release from noncentral regions of the cytoplasmic membrane and its subsequent relocation to midcell when demanded by the assembly of a division ring.  相似文献   

7.
The Receptor for Advanced Glycation End-products (RAGE) is a multi-ligand receptor present on most cell types. Upregulation of RAGE is seen in a number of pathological states including, inflammatory and vascular disease, dementia, diabetes and various cancers. We previously demonstrated that alternative splicing of the RAGE gene is an important mechanism which regulates RAGE signaling through the production of soluble ligand decoy isoforms. However, no studies have identified any alternative splice variants within the intracellular region of RAGE, a region critical for RAGE signaling. Herein, we have cloned and characterized a novel splice variant of RAGE that has a truncated intracellular domain (RAGEΔICD). RAGEΔICD is prevalent in both human and mouse tissues including lung, brain, heart and kidney. Expression of RAGEΔICD in C6 glioma cells impaired RAGE-ligand induced signaling through various MAP kinase pathways including ERK1/2, p38 and SAPK/JNK. Moreover, RAGEΔICD significantly affected tumor cell properties through altering cell migration, invasion, adhesion and viability in C6 glioma cells. Furthermore, C6 glioma cells expressing RAGEΔICD exhibited drastic inhibition on tumorigenesis in soft agar assays. Taken together, these data indicate that RAGEΔICD represents a novel endogenous mechanism to regulate RAGE signaling. Significantly, RAGEΔICD could play an important role in RAGE related disease states through down regulation of RAGE signaling.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract: Abundant senile plaques are a histological hallmark in the brain of Alzheimer's disease patients. Such plaques consist of, among many other constituents, aggregated βA4 amyloid peptide. This peptide is derived from an amyloid precursor protein (APP) by irregular proteolytic processing and is considered to be involved in the development of Alzheimer's disease. To study possible interactions of brain proteins with 0A4 amyloid or other fragments of APP, βA4 amyloid and βA4 amyloid extended to the C-terminus of APP were recombinantly produced as fusion proteins termed "Amy" and "AmyC," respectively. Using Amy and AmyC affinity chromatography, a 35-kDa protein from rat brain was isolated that bound tightly to AmyC but not to Amy, thus indicating an interaction of the protein with the C-terminus of APP. This 35-kDa protein was identified as the glycolytic enzyme gIyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH). Binding of GAPDH to AmyC but not to Amy was confirmed by gel filtration. Although AmyC slightly reduced the Vmax of GAPDH, the same reduction was observed in the presence of Amy. These findings suggest that the interaction of the cytoplasmic domain of APP with GAPDH is unlikely to influence directly the rate of glycolysis but may serve another function.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Summary The activity of the mechanosensitive (MS) ion channels in membrane patches, excised fromE. coli spheroplasts, was analyzed using the patch-clamp technique. Outer membranes from a mutant lacking the major lipoprotein (Lpp) and its wildtype parent were examined. The MS-channel activities in the wild-type membrane rarely revealed substates at the time resolution used. These channels showed a stretch sensitivity indicated by the IISP (the suction for ane-fold increase in channel open probability) of 4.9 mm Hg suction. The MS-channel activities oflpp included a prominent substate and showed a weaker mechano-sensitivity with an 1/S p of 10.0 mm Hg. Whereas small amphipaths (chlorpromazine, trinitrophenol) or a larger amphipath (lysolecithin) all activated the MS channel in the wild-type membrane under minimal suction, only the larger lysolecithin could activate the MS channel in thelpp membranes. After lysolecithin addition, thelpp membrane became more effective in transmitting the stretch force to the MS channel, as indicated by a steepening of the Boltzmann curve. We discuss one interpretation of these results, in which the major lipoprotein serves as a natural amphipath inserted in the inner monolayer and the loss of this natural amphipath makes the bilayer less able to transmit the gating force.  相似文献   

11.
Envelope preparations obtained by passing Escherichia coli cells through a French pressure cell were separated by sucrose density gradient centrifugation into two distinct particulate fractions. The fraction with the higher density was enriched in fragments derived from the cell wall, as indicated by the high content of lipopolysaccharide, the low content of cytochromes, and the similar morphology of the fragments and intact cell walls. The less-dense fraction was enriched in vesicles derived from the cytoplasmic membrane, as indicated by the enrichment of cytochromes, the enzymes lactic and succinic dehydrogenase and nitrate reductase, and the morphological similarity of the vesicles to intact cytoplasmic membrane. Both fractions were rich in phospholipid. The protein composition was compared by mixing the cytoplasmic membrane-enriched fraction from a (3)H-labeled culture with the cell wall-enriched fraction from a (14)C-labeled culture and examining the resulting mixture by gel electrophoresis. Thirty-four bands of radioactive protein were resolved; of these, 27 were increased two- to fourfold in the cytoplasmic membrane-enriched fraction, whereas 6 were similarly increased in the cell wall-enriched fraction. One of the proteins which is clearly localized in the cell wall is the protein with a molecular weight of 44,000, which is the major component of the envelope. This protein accounted for 70% of the total protein of the cell wall, and its occurrence in the envelope from spheroplasts suggests that it is a structural protein of the outer membranous component of the cell wall.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Escherichia coli cell division protein FtsK is a homolog of Bacillus subtilis SpoIIIE and appears to act late in the septation process. To determine whether FtsK localizes to the septum, we fused three N-terminal segments of FtsK to green fluorescent protein (GFP) and expressed them in E. coli cells. All three segments were sufficient to target GFP to the septum, suggesting that as little as the first 15% of the protein is a septum-targeting domain. Localized fluorescence was detectable only in cells containing a visible midcell constriction, suggesting that FtsK targeting normally occurs only at a late stage of septation. The largest two FtsK-GFP fusions were able at least partially to complement the ftsK44 mutation in trans, suggesting that the N- and C-terminal domains are functionally separable. However, overproduction of FtsK-GFP resulted in a late-septation phenotype similar to that of ftsK44, with fluorescent dots localized at the blocked septa, suggesting that high levels of the N-terminal domain may still localize but also inhibit FtsK activity. Interestingly, under these conditions fluorescence was also sometimes localized as bands at potential division sites, suggesting that FtsK-GFP is capable of targeting very early. In addition, FtsK-GFP localized to potential division sites in cephalexin-induced and ftsI mutant filaments, further supporting the idea that FtsK-GFP can target early, perhaps by recognizing FtsZ directly. This hypothesis was supported by the failure of FtsK-GFP to localize in ftsZ mutant filaments. In ftsK44 mutant filaments, FtsA and FtsZ were usually localized to potential division sites between the blocked septa. When the ftsK44 mutation was incorporated into the FtsK-GFP fusions, localization to midcell ranged between very weak and undetectable, suggesting that the FtsK44 mutant protein is defective in targeting the septum.  相似文献   

14.
Fluorescence microscopy has revealed that the phospholipid cardiolipin (CL) and FlAsH-labeled transporters ProP and LacY are concentrated at the poles of Escherichia coli cells. The proportion of CL among E. coli phospholipids can be varied in vivo as it is decreased by cls mutations and it increases with the osmolality of the growth medium. In this report we compare the localization of CL, ProP, and LacY with that of other cytoplasmic membrane proteins. The proportion of cells in which FlAsH-labeled membrane proteins were concentrated at the cell poles was determined as a function of protein expression level and CL content. Each tagged protein was expressed from a pBAD24-derived plasmid; tagged ProP was also expressed from the chromosome. The osmosensory transporter ProP and the mechanosensitive channel MscS concentrated at the poles at frequencies correlated with the cellular CL content. The lactose transporter LacY was found at the poles at a high and CL-independent frequency. ProW (a component of the osmoregulatory transporter ProU), AqpZ (an aquaporin), and MscL (a mechanosensitive channel) were concentrated at the poles in a minority of cells, and this polar localization was CL independent. The frequency of polar localization was independent of induction (at arabinose concentrations up to 1 mM) for proteins encoded by pBAD24-derived plasmids. Complementation studies showed that ProW, AqpZ, MscS, and MscL remained functional after introduction of the FlAsH tag (CCPGCC). These data suggest that CL-dependent polar localization in E. coli cells is not a general characteristic of transporters, channels, or osmoregulatory proteins. Polar localization can be frequent and CL independent (as observed for LacY), frequent and CL dependent (as observed for ProP and MscS), or infrequent (as observed for AqpZ, ProW, and MscL).Modern developments in fluorescence microscopy have led to a new understanding of the organization of bacterial cells, particularly protein and lipid localization (21, 56). Analysis of the subcellular localization of diverse proteins and lipids has shown that they are not uniformly distributed. The phospholipid cardiolipin (CL) localizes at the poles and septal regions (36), and there is evidence for segregation of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) from phosphatidylglycerol (PG) in the membranes of living Escherichia coli cells (69). Localization of many proteins that are integral or peripheral to the cytoplasmic membrane has been studied by fusing them to green fluorescent protein (GFP) (or its derivatives), and it is possible to classify the fusion proteins according to their subcellular localization. The first group, comprised of proteins that are concentrated at the cell poles, includes chemoreceptors (31, 62), the lactose permease LacY (43), and the metabolic sensor kinases DcuS and CitA (55). Members of the second group form helices that extend from pole to pole and include MreB (25), MinD (57), the Sec protein export system (58), and RNase E, which is the main component of the RNA degradosome in E. coli (67). Other proteins may appear to be similarly distributed due to their association with the Sec system (58). Members of the third group are uniformly distributed and include the mechanosensitive channel MscL (45) and the sensor kinase KdpD (32).The polar localization of proteins appears to be a critical feature of the complicated internal localization of bacteria. For example, it is important for temporally and spatially accurate placement of the septum during cell division (15). However, the mechanism of protein organization at bacterial cell poles is still unclear, and in many cases its functional role has not been determined. Do the poles merely serve as a receptacle for proteins, superstructures, or membrane domains with no functional effects, or is this location functionally important for membrane proteins and lipids?Recent evidence indicates that the subcellular localization of the transporter ProP in E. coli is related to membrane phospholipid composition, cardiolipin localization, and ProP function (51, 52). E. coli cells from cultures grown to exponential phase contain mostly the zwitterionic phospholipid PE (approximately 75 mol%) and the anionic phospholipids PG (approximately 20 mol%) and CL (approximately 5 mol%) (8). (Note that cardiolipin is diphosphatidylglycerol.) However, the phospholipid composition depends on the bacterial growth conditions. We found that the proportion of CL among E. coli lipids varies directly with growth medium osmolality (68), and increased CL synthesis was at least partially attributed to regulation of the cls locus encoding cardiolipin synthase (52). There is residual CL in cls bacteria, indicating that there is an alternative pathway for CL synthesis (51). The CL-specific fluorescent dye 10-N-nonyl-acridine orange (NAO) was used to show that CL clusters at the poles and septa in growing E. coli cells (36, 52). This result was corroborated by analyzing the phospholipid composition of E. coli minicells (DNA-free cells resulting from asymmetric cell division) (24, 51).ProP is an osmosensory transporter that senses increasing osmolality and responds by mediating the cytoplasmic accumulation of organic osmolytes (e.g., proline, glycine betaine, and ectoine). Biochemical regulation of the ProP protein ensures that ProP activity increases with increasing assay medium osmolality (49). We showed that ProP and CL colocalize at the poles and near the septa of dividing E. coli cells and that the polar concentration of ProP correlates with the polar concentration of CL (52). Moreover, we showed that the osmolality required to activate ProP increased in parallel to the CL content when E. coli was cultivated in media with increasing osmolality (51, 52, 68). The osmolality required to activate ProP was also a direct function of CL content in proteoliposomes reconstituted with purified ProP (51). We concluded that concentration at the cell poles controlled the osmoregulatory function of ProP by placing the transporter in a cardiolipin-rich environment.To determine whether CL-dependent membrane protein localization is a general phenomenon in E. coli, we compared the subcellular localization of ProP with that of its paralogue LacY, a well-characterized lactose transporter (16). LacY and ProP are both members of the major facilitator superfamily and H+ symporters. LacY transports the nutrient lactose, and LacY activity decreases while ProP activity increases with increasing osmolality (9). Nagamori et al. reported polar localization of a LacY-GFP fusion protein in E. coli (43). We confirmed this observation and demonstrated that, in contrast to the behavior of ProP, the polar concentration of LacY did not correlate with the polar concentration of CL (51).In this work we further explored the relationship between CL and protein localization in E. coli. We compared ProP with other proteins related to cellular osmoregulation. Bacteria use arrays of osmoregulatory mechanisms to survive and function when the osmotic pressure of their environment changes. In E. coli, the aquaporin AqpZ mediates transmembrane water flux, the transporters ProP, ProU, BetT, and BetU mediate organic osmolyte accumulation at high osmotic pressure, and the mechanosensitive (MS) channels MscL and MscS mediate solute efflux in response to osmotic downshock (71). Localization of these proteins might be expected since AqpZ might influence cell morphology changes by accelerating water flux at particular positions on the cell surface and the pressure sensitivities of MscL and MscS are known to depend on membrane curvature in vitro (18).For ProP and LacY, we labeled the inserted peptide tag CCPGCC with the biarsenical fluorescein reagent FlAsH-EDT2 (fluorescein arsenical helix binder, bis-EDT adduct) (1, 2) to examine the subcellular localization of AqpZ, the integral membrane component ProW of the osmoregulatory ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter ProU, and the MS channel proteins MscS and MscL in cls+ and cls bacteria. Fluorescence microscopy was used to determine the proportion of cells with labeled protein concentrated at the poles as a function of bacterial CL content and protein expression level. For ProP, the frequency with which MscS was concentrated at cell poles was proportional to the level and polar concentration of CL. LacY concentrated at the cell poles at a high and CL-independent frequency. The frequencies with which AqpZ, MscL, and ProW concentrated at the cell poles and septa were low (up to 12%) and CL independent.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Septation in Escherichia coli requires several gene products. One of these, FtsQ, is a simple bitopic membrane protein with a short cytoplasmic N terminus, a membrane-spanning segment, and a periplasmic domain. We have constructed a merodiploid strain that expresses both FtsQ and the fusion protein green fluorescent protein (GFP)-FtsQ from single-copy chromosomal genes. The gfp-ftsQ gene complements a null mutation in ftsQ. Fluorescence microscopy revealed that GFP-FtsQ localizes to the division site. Replacing the cytoplasmic and transmembrane domains of FtsQ with alternative membrane anchors did not prevent the localization of the GFP fusion protein, while replacing the periplasmic domain did, suggesting that the periplasmic domain is necessary and sufficient for septal targeting. GFP-FtsQ localization to the septum depended on the cell division proteins FtsZ and FtsA, which are cytoplasmic, but not on FtsL and FtsI, which are bitopic membrane proteins with comparatively large periplasmic domains. In addition, the septal localization of ZipA apparently did not require functional FtsQ. Our results indicate that FtsQ is an intermediate recruit to the division site.  相似文献   

17.
18.
A heat-labile protein required for division accumulates during the duplication cycle of Escherichia coli. Its formation appears to commence shortly after the cell divides, and it reaches a maximal amount shortly before the next division. A plausible mechanism for timing cell division depends on building up the critical amount of this protein. Completion of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) replication is also necessary for division to occur, but it does not uniquely initiate division. The evidence for these conclusions comes from heat-shock experiments; heating to 45 C for 15 min delays division increasingly with the age of a cell. A heat shock given near the end of a cycle delays division for about 30 min, whereas at the beginning of the cycle it hardly affects division. The net result is synchronization of cell division. The effect of heat is increased in bacteria which have incorporated p-fluoro-phenylalanine into their proteins. When the incorporation is early and the heat shock is late in the cycle, division is delayed by about 30 min, indicating that the division protein is synthesized early even though its sensitivity is not observed until later. At any time in the cell cycle, heat shock simply delays total protein and DNA synthesis ((3)H-thymidine uptake) for approximately 14 min. DNA replication and cell division are thus discoordinated, since DNA replication is not synchronized by the treatment.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Adherence of Streptococcus pneumoniae is directly mediated by interactions of adhesins with eukaryotic cellular receptors or indirectly by exploiting matrix and serum proteins as molecular bridges. Pneumococci engage vitronectin, the human adhesive glycoprotein and complement inhibitor, to facilitate attachment to epithelial cells of the mucosal cavity, thereby modulating host cell signaling. In this study, we identified PspC as a vitronectin-binding protein interacting with the C-terminal heparin-binding domain of vitronectin. PspC is a multifunctional surface-exposed choline-binding protein displaying various adhesive properties. Vitronectin binding required the R domains in the mature PspC protein, which are also essential for the interaction with the ectodomain of the polymeric immunoglobulin receptor and secretory IgA. Consequently, secretory IgA competitively inhibited binding of vitronectin to purified PspC and to PspC-expressing pneumococci. In contrast, Factor H, which binds to the N-terminal part of mature PspC molecules, did not interfere with the PspC-vitronectin interaction. Using a series of vitronectin peptides, the C-terminal heparin-binding domain was shown to be essential for the interaction of soluble vitronectin with PspC. Binding experiments with immobilized vitronectin suggested a region N-terminal to the identified heparin-binding domain as an additional binding region for PspC, suggesting that soluble, immobilized, as well as cellularly bound vitronectin possesses different conformations. Finally, vitronectin bound to PspC was functionally active and inhibited the deposition of the terminal complement complex. In conclusion, this study identifies and characterizes (on the molecular level) the interaction between the pneumococcal adhesin PspC and the human glycoprotein vitronectin.  相似文献   

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