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1.
The lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of the deep rough mutant Haemophilus influenzae I69 consists of lipid A and a single 3-deoxy-d-manno-oct-2-ulosonic acid (Kdo) residue substituted with one phosphate at position 4 or 5 (Helander, I. M., Lindner, B., Brade, H., Altmann, K., Lindberg, A. A., Rietschel, E. T., and Z?hringer, U. (1988) Eur. J. Biochem. 177, 483-492). The waaA gene encoding the essential LPS-specific Kdo transferase was cloned from this strain, and its nucleotide sequence was identical to H. influenzae DSM11121. The gene was expressed in the Gram-positive host Corynebacterium glutamicum and characterized in vitro to encode a monofunctional Kdo transferase. waaA of H. influenzae could not complement a knockout mutation in the corresponding gene of an Re-type Escherichia coli strain. However, complementation was possible by coexpressing the recombinant waaA together with the LPS-specific Kdo kinase gene (kdkA) of H. influenzae DSM11121 or I69, respectively. The sequences of both kdkA genes were determined and differed in 25 nucleotides, giving rise to six amino acid exchanges between the deduced proteins. Both E. coli strains which expressed waaA and kdkA from H. influenzae synthesized an LPS containing a single Kdo residue that was exclusively phosphorylated at position 4. The structure was determined by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of deacylated LPS. Therefore, the reaction products of both cloned Kdo kinases represent only one of the two chemical structures synthesized by H. influenzae I69.  相似文献   

2.
The lipopolysaccharide of Haemophilus influenzae contains a single 3-deoxy-D-manno-octulosonic acid (Kdo) residue derivatized with either a phosphate or an ethanolamine pyrophosphate moiety at the 4-OH position. In previous studies, we identified a kinase unique to H. influenzae extracts that phosphorylates Kdo-lipid IV(A), a key precursor of lipopolysaccharide in this organism. We have now identified the gene encoding the Kdo kinase by using an expression cloning approach. A cosmid library containing random DNA fragments from H. influenzae strain Rd was constructed in Escherichia coli. Extracts of 472 colonies containing individual hybrid cosmids were assayed for Kdo kinase activity. A single hybrid cosmid directing expression of the kinase was found. The kinase gene was identified by activity assays, sub-cloning, and DNA sequencing. When the putative kinase gene was expressed in E. coli behind a T7 promoter, massive overproduction of kinase activity was achieved ( approximately 8000-fold higher than in H. influenzae membranes). The catalytic properties and the product generated by the overexpressed kinase, assayed with Kdo-lipid IV(A) as the substrate, were the same as observed with H. influenzae membranes. Unexpectedly, the kinase gene was identical to a previously characterized open reading frame (orfZ), which had been shown to be important for establishing bacteremia in an infant rat model (Hood, D. W., Deadman, M. E., Allen, T., Masoud, H., Martin, A., Brisson, J. R., Fleischmann, R., Venter, J. C., Richards, J. C., and Moxon, E. R. (1996) Mol. Microbiol. 22, 951-965). However, based solely on the genome sequence of H. influenzae Rd, no biochemical function had been assigned to the product of orfZ, which we now designate kdkA ("Kdo kinase A"). Although Kdo phosphorylation may be critical for bacterial virulence of H. influenzae, it does not appear to be required for growth.  相似文献   

3.
A Haemophilus influenzae gene encoding a protein with high homology to ArcB receptor protein from Escherichia coli has been cloned. An error in the previously reported sequence of this gene has been found, thus increasing its open reading frame. The cloned gene comprising the entire open reading frame restores oxygen-dependent regulation of succinate dehydrogenase in an ArcB-deficient E. coli strain. Thus, this gene is a functional analog of ArcB from E. coli. By screening partially sequenced bacterial genomes using the BLAST program, proteins with high homology to ArcB protein from E. coli were found in Salmonella typhi, Yersinia pestis, Vibrio cholerae, and Pasteurella multocida. Comparison of these proteins with ArcB protein from E. coli and H. influenzae revealed conserved amino acid regions. Transmembrane helix II was shown to be highly homologous in all the ArcB-type proteins. The involvement of this region in ArcB-mediated oxygen-dependent regulation is suggested.  相似文献   

4.
Bacteriocin 28b from Serratia marcescens binds to Escherichia coli outer membrane proteins OmpA and OmpF and to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) core (J. Enfedaque, S. Ferrer, J. F. Guasch, J. Tomás, and M. Requé, Can. J. Microbiol. 42:19-26, 1996). A cosmid-based genomic library of S. marcescens was introduced into E. coli NM554, and clones were screened for bacteriocin 28b resistance phenotype. One clone conferring resistance to bacteriocin 28b and showing an altered LPS core mobility in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was found. Southern blot experiments using DNA fragments containing E. coli rfa genes as probes suggested that the recombinant cosmid contained S. marcescens genes involved in LPS core biosynthesis. Subcloning, isolation of subclones and Tn5tac1 insertion mutants, and sequencing allowed identification of two apparently cotranscribed genes. The deduced amino acid sequence from the upstream gene showed 80% amino acid identity to the KdtA protein from E. coli, suggesting that this gene codes for the 3-deoxy-manno-octulosonic acid transferase of S. marcescens. The downstream gene (kdtX) codes for a protein showing 20% amino acid identity to the Haemophilus influenzae kdtB gene product. The S. marcescens KdtX protein is unrelated to the KdtB protein of E. coli K-12. Expression of the kdtX gene from S. marcescens in E. coli confers resistance to bacteriocin 28b.  相似文献   

5.
Bacterial catalases are induced by exposure to peroxide (e.g., Escherichia coli katG) or entry into stationary phase (e.g., E. coli katE). To study regulatory systems in Haemophilus influenzae, we complemented an E. coli rpoS mutant, which is unable to induce katE in stationary phase, with a plasmid library of H. influenzae Rd- chromosomal DNA. Nineteen complementing clones with a catalase-positive phenotype were obtained and characterized after screening about 10(5) transformants. All carried the same structural gene for an H. influenzae catalase. The DNA sequence of this gene, called hktE, encodes a 508-amino-acid polypeptide with strong homology to eukaryotic catalases and E. coli katE. However, hktE is regulated like E. coli katG, with catalase activity increasing 10-fold and hktE mRNA levels increasing 4-fold upon exposure to ascorbic acid, which serves to generate hydrogen peroxide. Mutations in the known global regulatory genes of H. influenzae--crp, cya, and sxy--do not affect the inducibility of hktE. The hktE gene maps to a 225-kb segment of the H. influenzae chromosome in a region encoding resistance to spectinomycin.  相似文献   

6.
The organization of the fatty acid synthetic genes of Haemophilus influenzae Rd is remarkably similar to that of the paradigm organism, Escherichia coli K-12, except that no homologue of the E. coli fabF gene is present. This finding is unexpected, since fabF is very widely distributed among bacteria and is thought to be the generic 3-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) synthase active on long-chain-length substrates. However, H. influenzae Rd contains a homologue of the E. coli fabB gene, which encodes a 3-ketoacyl-ACP synthase required for unsaturated fatty acid synthesis, and it seemed possible that the H. influenzae FabB homologue might have acquired the functions of FabF. E. coli mutants lacking fabF function are unable to regulate the compositions of membrane phospholipids in response to growth temperature. We report in vivo evidence that the enzyme encoded by the H. influenzae fabB gene has properties essentially identical to those of E. coli FabB and lacks FabF activity. Therefore, H. influenzae grows without FabF function. Moreover, as predicted from studies of the E. coli fabF mutants, H. influenzae is unable to change the fatty acid compositions of its membrane phospholipids with growth temperature. We also demonstrate that the fabB gene of Vibrio cholerae El Tor N16961 does not contain a frameshift mutation as was previously reported.  相似文献   

7.
We have tried to approach the nature of the last common ancestor to Haemophilus influenzae and Escherichia coli and to determine how each bacterium could have diverged from this putative organism. The approach used was exhaustive analysis of the homologous proteins coded by genes present in these bacteria, using as criteria for sequence relatedness an alignment of at least 80 amino acid residues and a PAM distance (number of accepted point mutations per 100 residues separating two sequences) below 250. Evolutionarily significant similarities were found between 1,345 H. influenzae proteins (85% of the total genome) and 3,058 E. coli. proteins (75% of the total genome), many of them belonging to families of various sizes (from 666 doublets to 35 large groups of more than 10 members). Nearly all the genes found by this approach to be duplicated in both bacteria were already duplicated in their last common ancestor. This was deduced from (1) the comparison of the respective distributions of evolutionary distances between orthologs (genes separated only by speciation events) and paralogs (genes duplicated in the same genome) and (2) the analysis of the phylogenetic trees reconstructed for each family of paralogs containing at least two members belonging to each bacterium. The distributions of the different categories of homologs show a significant loss of paralogous genes in H. influenzae (reduction proportional to the genome size), of many sequences which are still present in one copy in E. coli, and of some entire gene families. Phylogenetic trees also confirmed this recent loss of paralogous genes in H. influenzae. Thus, the genome size of the last common ancestor of these two bacteria would have been close to that of present-day E. coli, and the evolution of H. influenzae toward a parasitic life led to an important decrease in its genome size by some mechanism of streamlining. During this recent evolution, the memory of the gene order present in the last common ancestor has been blurred, but a few short conserved chromosomal fragments can still be detected in present-day E. coli and H. influenzae.   相似文献   

8.
Lrp (leucine-responsive regulatory protein) plays a global regulatory role in Escherichia coli, affecting expression of dozens of operons. Numerous lrp-related genes have been identified in different bacteria and archaea, including asnC, an E. coli gene that was the first reported member of this family. Pairwise comparisons of amino acid sequences of the corresponding proteins shows an average sequence identity of only 29% for the vast majority of comparisons. By contrast, Lrp-related proteins from enteric bacteria show more than 97% amino acid identity. Is the global regulatory role associated with E. coli Lrp limited to enteric bacteria? To probe this question we investigated LrfB, an Lrp-related protein from Haemophilus influenzae that shares 75% sequence identity with E. coli Lrp (highest sequence identity among 42 sequences compared). A strain of H. influenzae having an lrfB null allele grew at the wild-type growth rate but with a filamentous morphology. A comparison of two-dimensional (2D) electrophoretic patterns of proteins from parent and mutant strains showed only two differences (comparable studies with lrp(+) and lrp E. coli strains by others showed 20 differences). The abundance of LrfB in H. influenzae, estimated by Western blotting experiments, was about 130 dimers per cell (compared to 3,000 dimers per E. coli cell). LrfB expressed in E. coli replaced Lrp as a repressor of the lrp gene but acted only to a limited extent as an activator of the ilvIH operon. Thus, although LrfB resembles Lrp sufficiently to perform some of its functions, its low abundance is consonant with a more local role in regulating but a few genes, a view consistent with the results of the 2D electrophoretic analysis. We speculate that an Lrp having a global regulatory role evolved to help enteric bacteria adapt to their ecological niches and that it is unlikely that Lrp-related proteins in other organisms have a broad regulatory function.  相似文献   

9.
Haemophilus influenzae was found to produce a DNA polymerase that was similar to polymerase I of Escherichia coli. E. coli polA mutants were used as backgrounds for the selection of H. influenzae polA suppressor genes. Six different H. influenzae fragments were isolated that could suppress E. coli polA mutations. None of the suppressors appeared to encode the H. influenzae equivalent of the E. coli polA gene. One type of clone, represented by pGW41, caused a polymerase I activity to appear in a suppressed polA1 mutant. Plasmids from the pGW41 class contained two genes (pol-2 and pol-3) that were both required for polA suppression. Mutated nonsuppressing derivatives of the pGW41 class were used to create H. influenzae mutants that were deficient in polymerase I.  相似文献   

10.
Conservation of a tRNA core for aminoacylation   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The core region of Escherichia coli tRNA(Cys)is important for aminoacylation of the tRNA. This core contains an unusual G15:G48 base pair, and three adenosine nucleotides A13, A22 and A46 that are likely to form a 46:[13:22] adenosine base triple. We recently observed that the 15:48 base pair and the proposed 46:[13:22] triple are structurally and functionally coupled to contribute to aminoacylation. Inspection of a database of tRNA sequences shows that these elements are only found in one other tRNA, the Haemophilus influenzae tRNA(Cys). Because of the complexity of the core, conservation of sequence does not mean conservation of function. We here tested whether the conserved elements in H. influenzae tRNA(Cys)were also important for aminoacylation of H. influenzae tRNA(Cys). We cloned and purified a recombinant H. influenzae cysteine-tRNA synthe-tase and showed that it depends on 15:48 and 13, 22 and 46 in a relationship analogous to that of E. coli cysteine-tRNA synthetase. The functional conservation of the tRNA core is correlated with sequence conservation between E.coli and H.influenzae cysteine-tRNA synthetases. As the genome of H. influenzae is one of the smallest and may approximate a small autonomous entity in the development of life, the dependence of this genome on G15:G48 and its coupling with the proposed A46:[A13:A22] triple for aminoacylation with cysteine suggests an early role of these motifs in the evolution of decoding genetic information.  相似文献   

11.
The coding sequence of the Haemophilus influenzae ORF I gene was amplified by PCR and cloned into different Escherichia coli expression vectors. The ORF I-encoded protein was approximately 90 kDa and bound 3H-benzyl-penicillin and 125I-cephradine. This high-molecular-weight penicillin-binding protein (PBP) was also shown to possess transglycosylase activity, indicating that the ORF I product is a bifunctional PBP. The ORF I protein was capable of maintaining the viability of E. coli delta ponA ponB::spcr cells in transcomplementation experiments, establishing the functional relevance of the significant amino acid homology seen between E. coli PBP 1A and 1B and the H. influenzae ORF I product. In addition, the physiological functioning of the H. influenzae ORF I (PBP 1A) product in a heterologous species established the ability of the enzyme not only to recognize the E. coli substrate but also to interact with heterologous cell division proteins. The affinity of the ORF I product for 3H-benzylpenicillin and 125I-cephradine, the MIC of beta-lactams for E. coli delta ponA ponB::spcr expressing the ORF I gene, and the amino acid alignment of the PBP 1 family of high-molecular-weight PBPs group the ORF I protein into the PBP 1A family of high-molecular-weight PBPs.  相似文献   

12.
In this report the first example of functional expression of a fimbrial gene cluster of a non-enteric human pathogen in Escherichia coli is described. This is shown for Haemophilus influenzae fimbriae which mediate adherence to oropharyngeal epithelial cells. A genomic library of H.influenzae type b, strain 770235f+bo, was constructed using a cosmid vector and screened with a synthetic oligonucleotide probe derived from the N-terminal sequence of the fimbrial subunit of H.influenzae. Four cosmid clones were found which hybridized to this oligonucleotide probe. Escherichia coli strains harbouring these clones expressed the H.influenzae fimbriae at their cell surface, as was demonstrated in a whole-cell ELISA and by immunogold electron microscopy using a monoclonal antibody specific for the H.influenzae fimbriae. Surface expression could be maintained during subcloning until a minimal H.influenzae DNA insert of approximately 8.1 kb was obtained. Escherichia coli strains harbouring the 8.1 kb H. influenzae DNA were able to cause a mannose-resistant adherence to oropharyngeal epithelial cells and a mannose-resistant haemagglutination of human AnWj-positive erythrocytes. The nucleotide sequence of hifA, the gene encoding the major fimbrial subunit, was determined. The predicted amino acid sequence shows a significant homology with a number of E.coli fimbrial subunits.  相似文献   

13.
The ability of Haemophilus influenzae, H. parainfluenzae and H. paraphrophilus to utilize iron complexes, iron-proteins and exogenous microbial siderophores was evaluated. In a plate bioassay, all three species used not only ferric nitrate but also the iron chelates ferric citrate, ferric nitrilotriacetate and ferric 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate. Each Haemophilus species examined also used haemin, haemoglobin and haem-albumin as iron sources although only H. influenzae could acquire iron from transferrin or from haemoglobin complexed with haptoglobin. None of the haemophili obtained iron from ferritin or lactoferrin or from the microbial siderophores aerobactin or desferrioxamine B. However, the phenolate siderophore enterobactin supplied iron to both H. parainfluenzae and H. paraphrophilus, and DNA isolated from both organisms hybridized with a DNA probe prepared from the Escherichia coli ferric enterobactin receptor gene fepA. In addition, a monospecific polyclonal antiserum raised against the E. coli 81 kDa ferric enterobactin receptor (FepA) recognized an iron-repressible outer membrane protein (OMP) in H. parainfluenzae of between 80 and 82 kDa (depending on the strain). This anti-FepA serum did not cross-react with any of the OMPs of H. paraphrophilus or H. influenzae. The OMPs of each Haemophilus species were also probed with antisera raised against the 74 kDa Cir or 74 kDa IutA (aerobactin receptor) proteins of E. coli. Apart from one H. parainfluenzae strain (NCTC 10665), in which an OMP of about 80 kDa cross-reacted with the anti-IutA sera, no cross-reactivity was observed between Cir, IutA and the OMPs of H. influenzae, H. parainfluenzae or H. paraphrophilus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
F J Grundy  A Plaut    A Wright 《Journal of bacteriology》1987,169(10):4442-4450
Many bacteria which establish infections after invasion at human mucosal surfaces produce enzymes which cleave immunoglobulin A (IgA), the primary immunoglobulin involved with protection at these sites. Bacterial species such as Haemophilus influenzae which produce IgA1 proteases secrete this enzyme into their environment. However, when the gene encoding this protein was isolated from H. influenzae serotype d and introduced into Escherichia coli, the activity was not secreted into the medium but was localized in the periplasmic space. In this study, the IgA1 protease gene (iga) from an H. influenzae serotype c strain was isolated and the gene from the serotype d strain was reisolated. The IgA1 proteases produced in E. coli from these genes were secreted into the growth medium. A sequence linked to the carboxyl terminus of the iga gene but not present in the original clone was shown to be necessary to achieve normal secretion. Tn5 mutagenesis of the additional carboxyl-terminal region was used to define a 75- to 100-kilodalton coding region required for complete secretion of IgA1 protease but nonessential for protease activity. The iga genes were isolated by a plasmid integration-excision procedure. In this method a derivative of plasmid pBR322 containing a portion of the protease gene and the kanamycin resistance determinant of Tn5 was introduced into H. influenzae by transformation. The kanamycin resistance gene was expressed in H. influenzae, but since pBR322 derivatives are unable to replicate in this organism, kanamycin-resistant transformants arose by integration of the plasmid into the Haemophilus chromosome by homologous recombination. The plasmid, together with the adjoining DNA encoding IgA1 protease, was then excised from the chromosome with DNA restriction enzymes, religated, and reintroduced into E. coli. Comparisons between the H. influenzae protease genes were initiated which are useful in locating functional domains of these enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The Haemophilus influenzae mutB+ gene complements Escherichia coli uvrD mutants. The E. coli uvrD+ gene complements H. influenzae mutB1 mutants.  相似文献   

17.
The function of UreC, the product of a 1,335-bp-long open reading frame upstream from the urease structural genes (ureAB) of Helicobacter pylori, was investigated. We present data showing that the ureC gene product is a phosphoglucosamine mutase. D. Mengin-Lecreulx and J. van Heijenoort (J. Biol. Chem. 271:32-39, 1996) observed that UreC is similar (43% identity) to the GlmM protein of Escherichia coli. Those authors showed that GlmM is a phosphoglucosamine mutase catalyzing interconversion of glucosamine-6-phosphate into glucosamine-1-phosphate, which is subsequently transformed into UDP-N-acetylglucosamine. The latter product is one of the main cytoplasmic precursors of cell wall peptidoglycan and outer membrane lipopolysaccharides. The present paper reports that, like its E. coli homolog glmM, the H. pylori ureC gene is essential for cell growth. It was known that growth of a lethal conditional glmM mutant of E. coli at a nonpermissive temperature can be restored in the presence of the ureC gene. We showed that complete complementation of the glmM mutant can be obtained with a plasmid overproducing UreC. The peptidoglycan content and the specific phosphoglucosamine mutase activity of such a complemented strain were measured; these results demonstrated that the ureC gene product functions as a phosphoglucosamine mutase. Homologs of the UreC and GlmM proteins were identified in Haemophilus influenzae, Mycobacterium leprae, Clostridium perfringens, Synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803, and Methanococcus jannaschii. Significant conservation of the amino acid sequence of these proteins in such diverse organisms suggests a very ancient common ancestor for the genes and defines a consensus motif for the phosphoglucosamine mutase active site. We propose renaming the H. pylori ureC gene the glmM gene.  相似文献   

18.
UvrA protein is a major component of ABC endonuclease complex involved in nucleotide excision repair (NER) mechanism. Although NER system is best characterized in Escherichia coli, not much information is available in Haemophilus influenzae. However, based on amino acid homology, uvrA ORF has been identified on H. influenzae genome [gene identification No. HI0249, Science 269 (1995) 496]. H. influenzae Rd uvrA ORF was cloned and overexpressed in E. coli. The expressed UvrA protein was purified using a two-step column chromatography protocol to a single band of expected molecular weight (104 kDa) and characterized for its ATPase and DNA binding activity. In addition, when H. influenzae uvrA was introduced in E. coli uvrA mutant strain AB1886, its UV resistance was restored to near wild type level.  相似文献   

19.
The nucleotide sequence of region 1 of the K5 antigen gene cluster of Escherichia coli was determined. This region is postulated to encode functions which, at least in part, participate in translocation of polysaccharide across the periplasmic space and onto the cell surface. Analysis of the nucleotide sequence revealed five genes that encode proteins with predicted molecular masses of 75.7, 60.5, 44, 43, and 27 kDa. The 27-kDa protein was 70.7% homologous to the CMP-2-keto-3-deoxyoctulosonic acid synthetase enzyme encoded by the E. coli kdsB gene, indicating the presence of a structural gene for a similar enzyme within the region 1 operon. The 43-kDa protein was homologous to both the Ctrb and BexC proteins encoded by the Neisseria meningitidis and Haemophilus influenzae capsule gene clusters, respectively, indicating common stages in the expression of capsules in these gram-negative bacteria. However, no homology was detected between the 75.7, 60.5-, and 44-kDa proteins and any of the proteins so far described for the H. influenzae and N. meningitidis capsule gene clusters.  相似文献   

20.
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