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1.
Abstract The addition of 1 mM glycine betaine to the growth medium of Chromatium sp. NCIMB 8379 relieved growth inhibition caused by exposure to supra-optimal Nad concentrations. Intracellular glycine betaine concentrations were dependent upon the NaCl concentration of the growth medium up to 3 M exogenous Nad. Kinetic data for the accumulation of [methyl-14C]-glycine betaine demonstrated that Chromatium sp. NCIMB 8379 possesses a constitutively expressed active transport system for glycine betaine. The transport system was saturable with respect to glycine betaine concentration and exhibited typical Michaelis-Menten type kinetics: K m= 24 μ M, V max= 306 nmol min−1 mg protein−1 at an external NaCl concentration of 1 M. The rate of glycine betaine transport decreased progressively with increasing growth medium NaCl concentration. This transport system may represent an adaptive response to growth in high osmolarity environments in this halotolerant isolate, allowing accumulation of glycine betaine from the external cell environment or recycling synthesised glycine betaine which has passively diffused from the cell.  相似文献   

2.
Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase toxin (ACT) intoxicates cells by producing intracellular cAMP. B. pertussis outer membrane vesicles (OMV) contain ACT on their surface (OMV-ACT), but the properties of OMV-ACT were previously unknown. We found that B. pertussis in the lung from a fatal pertussis case contains OMV, suggesting an involvement in pathogenesis. OMV-ACT and ACT intoxicate cells with and without the toxin's receptor CD11b/CD18. Intoxication by ACT is blocked by antitoxin and anti-CD11b antibodies, but not by cytochalasin-D; in contrast, OMV-ACT is unaffected by either antibody and blocked by cytochalasin-D. Thus OMV-ACT can deliver ACT by processes distinct from those of ACT alone.  相似文献   

3.
R L Shattuck  D R Storm 《Biochemistry》1985,24(23):6323-6328
Bordetella pertussis, the pathogen responsible for whooping cough, releases a soluble calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase into its culture medium. Recently, Confer and Eaton [Confer, D., & Eaton, J. (1982) Science (Washington, D.C.) 217, 948-950], as well as Hanski and Farfel [Hanski, E., & Farfel, Z. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 290, 5526-5536], have shown that crude extracts from B. pertussis containing adenylate cyclase activity cause elevations in intracellular cAMP when incubated with human neutrophils or lymphocytes. These investigators proposed that the bacterial enzyme enters animal cells and catalyzes the formation of cAMP from intracellular ATP. In this study, B. pertussis adenylate cyclase was purified to remove contaminating islet activating protein and examined for its effects on intracellular cAMP levels of human erythrocytes and N1E-115 mouse neuroblastoma cells. In both cases, the enzyme catalyzed the formation of intracellular cAMP. Addition of calmodulin to the adenylate cyclase preparations completely inhibited formation of intracellular cAMP catalyzed by the bacterial enzyme, indicating that cAMP was not synthesized extracellularly and then taken up by the cells. These experiments illustrate that the bacterial enzyme does enter animal cells and that the enzyme-calmodulin complex does not.  相似文献   

4.
Invasive adenylate cyclase toxin of Bordetella pertussis   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Bordetella pertussis produces an adenylate cyclase which is a toxin. The enzyme penetrates eukaryotic cells and, upon activation by host calmodulin, generates high levels of intracellular cAMP; as a result bactericidal functions of immune effector cells are considerably impaired. The toxin is composed of a single polypeptide that possesses both the catalytic and the toxic functions. It penetrates the host cell directly from the plasma membrane and is concomitantly inactivated by a proteolytic degradation.  相似文献   

5.
We developed an improved method of linker insertion mutagenesis for introducing 2 or 16 codons into the Bordetella pertussis cyaA gene which encodes a calmodulin-dependent adenylate cyclase. A recombinant kanamycin resistance cassette, containing oligonucleotide linkers, was cloned in plasmids which carried a truncated cyaA gene, fused at its 3' end to the 5' end of the Escherichia coli lacZ gene, specifying the alpha-peptide. This construction permitted a double selection for in-frame insertions by using screening for kanamycin resistance and for lactose-positive phenotype, resulting from alpha-complementation. We showed that most of the two-amino acid insertions within the N-terminal moiety of the catalytic domain of adenylate cyclase abolished enzymatic activity and/or altered the stability of the protein. All two-amino acid insertions within the C-terminal part of adenylate cyclase resulted in fully stable and active enzymes. These results confirm the modular structure of the catalytic domain of adenylate cyclase, previously proposed on the basis of proteolytic studies. Two-amino acid insertions between residues 247-248 and 335-336 were shown to affect the calmodulin responsiveness of adenylate cyclase, suggesting that the corresponding region in the enzyme is involved in the binding of calmodulin or in the process of calmodulin activation. In addition, we have identified within the primary structure of adenylate cyclase several permissive sites which tolerate 16-amino acid insertions without interfering with the catalytic activity or calmodulin binding. By inserting foreign antigenic determinants into these permissive sites the resulting recombinant adenylate cyclase toxin could be used to deliver specific epitopes into antigen-presenting cells.  相似文献   

6.
Assay of calmodulin with Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Low levels of the calcium-dependent regulator protein, calmodulin, may be measured utilizing membranes prepared from Bordetella pertussis which contain and adenylate cyclase which is activated by this protein. The activation is dose dependent and tissue levels of calmodulin can be determined over a range from 2 pg to 100 ng with good reliability. We demonstrate how this bioassay may be employed to measure the levels of calmodulin in a variety of protein and cellular preparations.  相似文献   

7.
Spurious protein activators of Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A variety of proteins and tissue preparations (rabbit erythrocyte lysate, catalase, peroxidase, creatine phosphokinase, and lima bean trypsin inhibitor) contain protein activator(s) of the extracellular adenylate cyclase of intact Bordetella pertussis organisms. Stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity of up to 1000-fold over basal activity can be obtained. Activation of the adenylate cyclase is due to the presence of calmodulin in these protein preparations. The criteria to establish this were: Ca2+ dependence of the activation, inhibition by trifluoperazine, heat stability of the activator, chromatographic behavior like authentic calmodulin, and stimulation of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase by the activators. The great sensitivity of the B.pertussis adenylate cyclase assay makes this and ideal system for the detection of trace amounts of calmodulin, in the presence of large amounts of other proteins.  相似文献   

8.
Beyond its well-documented role in vesicle endocytosis, clathrin has also been implicated in the internalization of large particles such as viruses, pathogenic bacteria, and even latex beads. We have discovered an additional clathrin-dependent endocytic process that results in the internalization of large, double-membrane vesicles at lateral membranes of cells that are coupled by gap junctions (GJs). GJ channels bridge apposing cell membranes to mediate the direct transfer of electrical currents and signaling molecules from cell to cell. Here, we report that entire GJ plaques, clusters of GJ channels, can be internalized to form large, double-membrane vesicles previously termed annular gap junctions (AGJs). These internalized AGJ vesicles subdivide into smaller vesicles that are degraded by endo/lysosomal pathways. Mechanistic analyses revealed that clathrin-dependent endocytosis machinery-components, including clathrin itself, the alternative clathrin-adaptor Dab2, dynamin, myosin-VI, and actin are involved in the internalization, inward movement, and degradation of these large, intercellular double-membrane vesicles. These findings contribute to the understanding of clathrin's numerous emerging functions.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The activity of Bordetella pertussis extracytoplasmic adenylate cyclase (AC) decreased during decelerating growth phase in a Stainer-Scholte medium. Neither proteolytic activity nor virulence variation (phase variation; antigenic modulation) appears to be responsible for the observed activity fall. The addition of methyl--cyclo-dextrin enhances AC activity and prevents the inhibition of AC activity by fatty acids. Cyclodextrin could entrap inhibitors increasing in this way the AC activity. These results show that the inclusion of cyclodextrin in the culture medium increases the AC activity.D.F. Hozbor and O.M. Yantorno are with the Centro de Investigación y Desarrollo en Fermentaciones Industriales (CINDEFI), Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, 47 y 115, (1900) La Plata, Argentina. A. Samo is with the Comisión de Investigaciones Cientificas de la Provincia de Buenos Aires.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract To investigate the high prevalence among infants of antibodies to Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase toxin (ACT), cord-blood sera were examined for antibodies to ACT, filamentous hemagglutinin (FHA) and pertussis toxin (PT) using immunoblot analysis. Antibodies reactive with ACT were the most prevalent in neonatal sera. Similar reactivity of IgG with ACT was found in each sample of a given neonatal-maternal pair, yet IgM reactive with ACT was virtually absent in neonatal sera, suggesting that antibodies to ACT are maternally derived. Antibodies to ACT might come from infection or childhood vaccination of the mothers since pertussis vaccines from all US manufacturers elicited antibodies to ACT in mice. Alternatively, these antibodies may have been elicited by a cross-reactive antigen such as Escherichia coli α-hemolysin, since all of the neonatal and maternal sera contained antibodies reactive with α-hemolysin.  相似文献   

12.
Adenylate cyclase (AC) toxin from Bordetella pertussis inserts into eukaryotic cells, producing intracellular cAMP, as well as hemolysis and cytotoxicity. Concentration dependence of hemolysis suggests oligomers as the functional unit and inactive deletion mutants permit partial restoration of intoxication and/or hemolysis, when added in pairs [M. Iwaki, A. Ullmann, P. Sebo, Mol. Microbiol. 17 (1995) 1015-1024], suggesting dimerization/oligomerization. Using affinity co-precipitation and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), we demonstrate specific self-association of AC toxin molecules in solution. Flag-tagged AC toxin mixed with biotinylated-AC toxin, followed by streptavidin beads, yields both forms of the toxin. FRET measurements of toxin, labeled with different fluorophores, demonstrate association in solution, requiring post-translational acylation, but not calcium. AC toxin mixed with DeltaR, an inactive mutant, results in enhancement of hemolysis over that with wild type alone, suggesting that oligomers are functional. Dimers and perhaps higher molecular mass forms of AC toxin occur in solution in a manner that is relevant to toxin action.  相似文献   

13.
The cytotoxic effect of adenylate cyclase (AC) toxin from Bordetella pertussis on host cells has been attributed to the production of supraphysiologic levels of cyclic AMP by the toxin. We have tested this hypothesis and show that at least two different mechanisms, cAMP accumulation/ATP depletion and oligomerization/pore formation, contribute, perhaps synergistically, to AC toxin-induced cytotoxicity. Wild-type (WT) AC toxin causes cell death associated with an increase in cAMP, a reduction in ATP, activation of caspases 3/7, and increased annexin V and TUNEL staining. In contrast, a non-acylated, enzymatically active, non-haemolytic form of AC toxin is able to increase cAMP, reduce ATP and elicit annexin V staining, but the decrease in ATP and the annexin staining are transient and there is minimal caspase activation, TUNEL staining and cell death. Mutant AC toxins defective in either enzymatic activity or the ability to deliver their enzymatic domain are able to kill J774 cells, without cAMP production, and with minimal caspase activation and TUNEL staining. Comparison of the potencies of WT toxin and those of mutants that only increase cAMP or only create transmembrane pores establishes that at least two mechanisms are contributory and that simply the production of cAMP is not enough to account for the cytotoxicity produced by AC toxin.  相似文献   

14.
The interaction of the adenylate cyclase catalytic domain (AC) of the Bordetella pertussis major exotoxin with its activator calmodulin (CaM) was studied by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy using three fluorescent groups located in different regions of AC: tryptophan residues (W69 and W242), a nucleotide analogue (3'-anthraniloyl-2'-deoxyadenosine 5'-triphosphate, Ant-dATP) and a cysteine-specific probe (acrylodan). CaM binding elicited large changes in the dynamics of W242, which dominates the fluorescence emission of both AC and AC-CaM, similar to that observed for isolated CaM-binding sequences of different lengths [Bouhss, A., Vincent, M., Munier, H., Gilles, A.M., Takahashi, M., Barzu, O., Danchin, A. & Gallay, J. (1996) Eur. J. Biochem.237, 619-628]. In contrast, Ant-dATP remains completely immobile and inaccessible to the solvent in both the AC and AC-CaM nucleotide-binding sites. As AC contains no cysteine residue, a single-Cys mutant at position 75 was constructed which allowed labeling of the catalytic domain with acrylodan. Its environment is strongly apolar and rigid, and only slightly affected by CaM. The protein's hydrodynamic properties were also studied by fluorescence anisotropy decay measurements. The average Brownian rotational correlation times of AC differed significantly according to the probe used (19 ns for W242, 25 ns for Ant-dATP, and 35 ns for acrylodan), suggesting an elongated protein shape (axial ratio of approximately 1.9). These values increased greatly with the addition of CaM (39 ns for W242, 60-70 ns for Ant-dATP and 56 ns for acrylodan). This suggests that (a) the orientation of the probes is altered with respect to the protein axes and (b) the protein becomes more elongated with an axial ratio of approximately 2.4. For comparison, the hydrodynamic properties of the anthrax AC exotoxin were computed by a mathematical approach (hydropro), which uses the 3D structure [Drum, C.L., Yan, S.-Z., Bard, J., Shen, Y.-Q., Lu, D., Soelalman, S., Grabarek, Z., Bohm, A. & Tang, W.-J. (2002) Nature (London)415, 396-402]. A change in axial ratio is also observed on CaM binding, but in the reverse direction from that for AC: from 1.7 to 1.3. The mechanisms of activation of the two proteins by CaM may therefore be different.  相似文献   

15.
The activity of Bordetella pertussis extracytoplasmic adenylate cyclase is 100-fold higher in organisms grown on blood agar than in those grown in synthetic medium. This increase in activity is due to in vivo activation of the enzyme by a factor present in erythrocytes. Activation also occurs in killed or disrupted organisms. The activator can be separated from heme proteins and has been purified approximately 100-fold from erythrocytes, yielding material of approximately 105,000 daltons. It is sensitive to trypsin and alpha-chymotrypsin and exhibits considerable heat stability. Activation of cyclase in intact B. pertussis organisms exhibits a lag of 3 to 4 min and is not reversed by washing. Response to the activator decreases with increasing purification of the adenylate cyclase and is absent in the pure enzyme. The activation does not appear to be proteolytic and does not appear to change access to the substrate, ATP. The activator has no effect on a number of eukaryotic cyclases. We conclude that this is a new type of activation and that the activator differs from all those previously described.  相似文献   

16.
Bordetella pertussis and the other Bordetella species produce a novel adenylate cyclase toxin which enters target cells to catalyze the production of supraphysiologic levels of intracellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP). In these studies, dialyzed extracts from B. pertussis containing the adenylate cyclase toxin, a partially purified preparation of adenylate cyclase toxin, and extracts from transposon Tn5 mutants of B. pertussis lacking the adenylate cyclase toxin, were used to assess the effects of adenylate cyclase toxin on human peripheral blood monocyte activities. Luminol-enhanced chemiluminescence of monocytes stimulated with opsonized zymosan was inhibited greater than 96% by exposure to adenylate cyclase toxin-containing extract, but not by extracts from adenylate cyclase toxin-deficient mutants. The chemiluminescence responses to particulate (opsonized zymosan, Leishmania donovani, and Staphylococcus aureus) and soluble (phorbol myristate acetate) stimuli were inhibited equivalently. The superoxide anion generation elicited by opsonized zymosan was inhibited 92% whereas that produced by phorbol myristate acetate was inhibited only 32% by B. pertussis extract. Inhibition of oxidative activity was associated with a greater than 500-fold increase in monocyte cAMP levels, but treated monocytes remained viable as assessed by their ability to exclude trypan blue and continued to ingest particulate stimuli. The major role of the adenylate cyclase toxin in the inhibition of monocyte oxidative responses was demonstrated by: 1) little or no inhibition by extracts from B. pertussis mutants lacking adenylate cyclase toxin; 2) high level inhibition with extract from B. parapertussis, a related species lacking pertussis toxin; and 3) a reciprocal relationship between monocyte cAMP levels and inhibition of opsonized zymosan-induced chemiluminescence using both crude extract and partially purified adenylate cyclase toxin. Pertussis toxin, which has been shown to inhibit phagocyte responses to some stimuli by a cAMP-independent mechanism, had only a small (less than 20%) inhibitory effect when added at concentrations up to 100-fold in excess of those present in B. pertussis extract. These data provide strong support for the hypothesis that B. pertussis adenylate cyclase toxin can increase cAMP levels in monocytes without compromising target cell viability or impairing ingestion of particles and that the resultant accumulated cAMP is responsible for the inhibition of oxidative responses to a variety of stimuli.  相似文献   

17.
Bordetella pertussis, the bacterium responsible for whooping cough, releases a soluble, calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase into its culture medium. B. pertussis mutants deficient in this enzyme are avirulent, indicating that the adenylate cyclase contributes to the pathogenesis of the disease. It has been proposed that B. pertussis adenylate cyclase may enter animal cells and increase intracellular adenosine cyclic 3',5'-phosphate (cAMP) levels. We have purified the enzyme extensively from culture medium using anion-exchange chromatography in the presence and absence of calmodulin and gel filtration chromatography. The enzyme was purified 1600-fold to a specific activity of 608 mumol of cAMP min-1 mg-1 and was free of islet activating protein. The molecular weight of the enzyme was 43 400 in the absence of calmodulin and 54 200 in the presence of calmodulin. The Km of the bacterial enzyme for adenosine 5'-triphosphate was 2.0 mM, whereas the Km of the calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase from bovine brain was 0.07 mM. Although the enzyme was not purified to homogeneity, its turnover number of 27 000 min-1 is the highest documented for any adenylate cyclase preparation.  相似文献   

18.
H R Masure  D R Storm 《Biochemistry》1989,28(2):438-442
Bordetella pertussis produces a calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase that is associated with the whole bacteria and released into its culture media. Preparations of this enzyme invade animal cells, causing elevations in intracellular cAMP levels. Cell-associated adenylate cyclase accounted for 28% of the total adenylate cyclase activity while 72% was released into the culture supernatant. Over 90% of the cell-associated adenylate cyclase activity was sensitive to trypsin treatment of whole cells, indicating that the catalytic domain of the enzyme is localized on the outer surface of the bacterial cells. Enzyme activity was released from whole cells by treatment with SDS. This activity was resolved as a large form (Mr 215,000) by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In contrast, the culture supernatant contained only the 45,000-dalton catalytic subunit. Enzyme activity released from spheroplasts by sonication was resolved into a large form (Mr 215,000) and a small form (Mr 45,000). The appearance of the small form with spheroplast formation was probably the result of proteolytic degradation. Antibodies generated against the catalytic subunit purified from culture supernatants cross-reacted with and immunoprecipitated both the large and small forms of adenylate cyclase isolated from bacterial cells. Furthermore, incubation of the cell-associated enzyme with a crude bacterial extract resulted in a time-dependent disappearance of the 215,000-dalton form and a concomitant increase in the amount of the smaller 45,000-dalton form. There was also a parallel increase in the ability of the cell-associated preparation to elevate intracellular cAMP levels in N1E-115 mouse neuroblastoma cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase (AC) toxin belongs to the RTX family of toxins but is the only member with a known catalytic domain. The principal pathophysiologic function of AC toxin appears to be rapid production of intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) by insertion of its catalytic domain into target cells (referred to as intoxication). Relative to other RTX toxins, AC toxin is weakly hemolytic via a process thought to involve oligomerization of toxin molecules. Monoclonal antibody (MAb) 3D1, which binds to an epitope (amino acids 373 to 399) at the distal end of the catalytic domain of AC toxin, does not affect the enzymatic activity of the toxin (conversion of ATP into cAMP in a cell-free system) but does prevent delivery of the catalytic domain to the cytosol of target erythrocytes. Under these conditions, however, the ability of AC toxin to cause hemolysis is increased three- to fourfold. To determine the mechanism by which the hemolytic potency of AC toxin is altered, we used a series of deletion mutants. A mutant toxin, DeltaAC, missing amino acids 1 to 373 of the catalytic domain, has hemolytic activity comparable to that of wild-type toxin. However, binding of MAb 3D1 to DeltaAC enhances its hemolytic activity three- to fourfold similar to the enhancement of hemolysis observed with 3D1 addition to wild-type toxin. Two additional mutants, DeltaN489 (missing amino acids 6 to 489) and DeltaN518 (missing amino acids 6 to 518), exhibit more rapid hemolysis with quicker onset than wild-type toxin does, while DeltaN549 (missing amino acids 6 to 549) has reduced hemolytic activity compared to wild-type AC toxin. These data suggest that prevention of delivery of the catalytic domain or deletion of the catalytic domain, along with additional amino acids distal to it, elicits a conformation of the toxin molecule that is more favorable for hemolysis.  相似文献   

20.
The penetration of Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase into various mammalian cells exhibits similar kinetics; the accumulation of both intracellular cyclase activity and cyclic AMP is rapid, reaching constant levels after 15-60 min of incubation. The kinetics of enzyme penetration into turkey erythrocytes is different; cyclase activity and cyclic AMP accumulate linearly and do not reach constant levels even after 6 h of incubation. In the preceding paper [Friedman, Farfel & Hanski (1987) Biochem. J. 243, 145-151] we have suggested that the constant level of intracellular cyclase activity reflects a steady state formed by continuous penetration and intracellular inactivation of the enzyme. In contrast with other mammalian cells, no inactivation of cyclase is observed in turkey erythrocytes. These results further support the notion that there is continuous penetration and deactivation of the invasive enzyme in mammalian cells. A 5-6-fold increase in specific activity of the invasive cyclase is detected in a pellet fraction of human lymphocytes in which a similar increase in specific activity of the plasma-membrane marker 5'-nucleotidase is observed. A similar increase in the invasive-cyclase specific activity is detected in a membrane fraction of human erythrocytes. Cyclase activity in a membrane-enriched fraction of human lymphocytes reached a constant level after 20 min of cell exposure to the enzyme. Similar time courses were observed for accumulation of cyclase activity and cyclic AMP in whole lymphocytes [Friedman, Farfel & Hanski (1987) Biochem, J. 243, 145-151]. We suggest therefore that cyclic AMP generation by the invasive enzyme as well as the intracellular inactivation process occur while it is associated with a membrane fraction identical, or closely associated, with the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

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