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1.
Lysophospholipase L2, which is bound to the inner membrane of Escherichia coli K-12, was produced in a large amount in cells bearing its cloned structural gene. Starting from these cells, the lysophospholipase L2 was purified approximately 700-fold to near homogeneity by solubilization with KCl, ammonium sulfate fractionation, chromatofocusing in the presence of a zwitterionic detergent, CHAPS (3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate), and heparin-Sepharose affinity column chromatography. The final preparation showed a single protein band with a molecular weight of 38,500 daltons in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The amino acid sequence of the NH2-terminal portion of the purified enzyme was determined. It was in complete agreement with that deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the structural gene, pldB [Kobayashi, T., Kudo, I., Karasawa, K., Mizushima, H., Inoue, K., & Nojima, S. (1985) J. Biochem. 98, 1017-1025.] The purified enzyme hydrolyzes 2-acyl glycerophosphoethanolamine (GPE) and 2-acyl glycerophosphocholine (GPC) more effectively than 1-acyl GPE and 1-acyl GPC, but does not attack diacylphospholipids. The enzyme also catalyzes the transfer of an acyl group from lysophospholipid to phosphatidylglycerol for formation of acyl phosphatidylglycerol. The acyl group was more effectively transferred from 2-acyl lysophospholipid than from the 1-acyl derivative. This enzyme was heat-labile and was inactivated at 55 degrees C within 5 min. The present paper shows clearly that lysophospholipase L2 is a different enzyme protein from lysophospholipase L1 which was formerly purified from the supernatant of the wild strain of E. coli K-12 homogenates [Doi, O. & Nojima, S. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 5208-5214].  相似文献   

2.
Escherichia coli thioesterase I/protease I/lysophospholipase L(1) (TAP) possesses multifunctional enzyme with thioesterase, esterase, arylesterase, protease, and lysophospholipase activities. Leu109, located at the substrate-binding tunnel, when substituted with proline (Pro) in TAP, shifted the substrate-preference from medium-to-long acyl chains to shorter acyl chains of triglyceride and p-nitrophenyl ester, and increased the preference for aromatic-amino acid-derived esters. In the three-dimensional TAP structures, the only noticeable alteration of backbone and side chain conformation was located at the downstream Pro110-Ala123 region rather than at Pro109 itself. The residue Pro110, adjacent to Leu109 or Pro109, was found to contribute to the substrate preference of TAP enzymes for esters containing acyl groups with pi bond(s) or aromatic group(s). Some of the interactions between the enzyme protein and the substrate may be contributed by an attractive force between the Pro110 C-H donor and the substrate pi-acceptor.  相似文献   

3.
After screening 900 E. coli strains of the Clarke and Carbon collection for by lysophospholipase L1 activities, we isolated a clone bearing the plasmid pLC6-34, which showed an increased level of lysophospholipase L1 activity. Strains bearing the plasmid pC124, a subclone of pLC6-34 in plasmid vector pUC8, showed approximately 11.4 times higher lysophospholipase L1 activity than that of the parental strain. Starting from those overproducing strains, the lysophospholipase L1 was purified to near homogeneity by sequential use of ammonium sulfate fractionation, Sephacryl S-300, DEAE-cellulose, hydroxyapatite and Sephacryl S-200 column chromatographies. The apparent molecular weight of the purified lysophospholipase L1 was estimated to be 20,500-22,000 both by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by gel permeation chromatography. The specific activity of the homogeneous lysophospholipase L1 was 10,400 nmol/min/mg protein when 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine was used as the substrate. The amino acid sequence of the amino-terminal portion of purified lysophospholipase L1 was determined and was different from that of lysophospholipase L2, which had previously been purified from the envelope fraction of E. coli strains bearing its cloned structural gene, pldB [Karasawa, K., Kudo, I., Kobayashi, T., Sa-eki, T., Inoue, K., & Nojima, S. (1985) J. Biochem, 98, 1117-1125]. The gene responsible for overproduction of lysophospholipase L1 activity was designated as pldC (phospholipid degradation C). Its restriction enzyme map was also different from that of cloned pldB. These results further confirmed that, in E. coli, there are two lysophospholipases with distinct characteristics.  相似文献   

4.
The human pathogenic fungus Cryptococcus neoformans secretes a phospholipase enzyme that demonstrates phospholipase B (PLB), lysophospholipase hydrolase and lysophospholipase transacylase activities. This enzyme has been postulated to be a cryptococcal virulence factor. We cloned a phospholipase-encoding gene (PLB1) from C. neoformans and constructed plb1 mutants using targeted gene disruption. All three enzyme activities were markedly reduced in the mutants compared with the wild-type parent. The plb1 strains did not have any defects in the known cryptococcal virulence phenotypes of growth at 37 degrees C, capsule formation, laccase activity and urease activity. The plb1 strains were reconstituted using the wild-type locus and this resulted in restoration of all extracellular PLB activities. In vivo testing demonstrated that the plb1 strain was significantly less virulent than the control strains in both the mouse inhalational model and the rabbit meningitis model. We also found that the plb1 strain exhibited a growth defect in a macrophage-like cell line. These data demonstrate that secretory phospholipase is a virulence factor for C. neoformans.  相似文献   

5.
Lysophospholipases A1 which catalyse the hydrolysis of acyl groups from 1-acylglycerophosphocholine (GPC) have been characterized in a number of mammalian tissues and do not exhibit any acyl specificity. In the present study lysophospholipase activity in guinea-pig heart microsomes (microsomal fractions) that hydrolyses 2-acyl-GPC was detected and characterized. The enzyme showed a high degree of acyl specificity. The relative rates of hydrolysis of individual 2-acyl-GPCs with different fatty acids was as follows: C18:2/C20:1/C18:1/C16:0, 14:6:1:1. When substrates were presented in pairs, the hydrolysis of each substrate by the enzyme was inhibited, but to very different extents. Of each pair of lysolipids examined (2-arachidonoyl- and 2-palmitoyl-GPC; 2-arachidonoyl- and 2-linoleoyl-GPC), the one with the expected higher rate of hydrolysis was more severely inhibited and the degree of inhibition was dependent on the concentration of the other lysolipid. The characteristics of the lysophospholipase A2 suggest the enzyme could work in concert with phospholipase A1 to release arachidonic and linoeic acids for further metabolism. The properties of lysophospholipase A2 and A1 suggest that they are different enzymes.  相似文献   

6.
The conversion of phosphatidylglycerol to acyl phosphatidylglycerol by extracts of Escherichia coli K-12 strains was examined under various conditions. The maximum rate of conversion was observed at pH 7.2 in the presence of 50% (v/v) diethyl ether and 10 mM CaCl2. This conversion was found to involve two sequential reactions: (1) The formation of 2-acyl glycerophosphoglycerol and 2-acyl glycerophosphoethanolamine from phosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidylethanolamine, respectively, by detergent-resistant phospholipase A in the presence of Ca2+ and (2) transfer of the acyl group of 2-acyl lysophospholipid to phosphatidylglycerol by a heat-labile factor(s) in the presence of diethyl ether. Neither fatty, acid acyl-CoA nor 1-acyl lysophospholipid could act as an acyl donor for phosphatidylglycerol. The heat-labile factor(s) was found in both the inner membrane and supernatant fractions.  相似文献   

7.
T. Galliard  S. Dennis 《Phytochemistry》1974,13(9):1731-1735
Characterization of reaction products showed that an enzyme (lipolytic acyl hydrolase) isolated from potato tubers could act on endogenous substrates as a galactolipase (E.C. 3.1.1.26), lysophospholipase (E.C. 3.1.1.5) or a ‘phospholipase B’ but not as a lipase (E.C. 3.1.1.3). The affinity of the enzyme for methanol as acyl acceptor (acyl transferase activity) was higher than its affinity for water (acyl hydrolase activity). The nomenclature of acyl hydrolases in plants is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Positional distribution of fatty acids in phospholipids from Brevibacterium ammoniagenes was analyzed to find that phosphatidylethanolamine consisted mainly of 1-saturated acyl 2-unsaturated acyl species while phosphatidylglycerol consisted mainly of 1-unsaturated acyl 2-saturated acyl species. Three acyltransferase systems were characterized in a membrane preparation--the acylations of glycerophosphate, 1-acyl-glycerophosphate, and 2-acyl-glycerophosphate--which appeared to be catalyzed by different enzymes. The distribution of fatty acids in the phosphatidylethanolamine molecule was not correlated simply with the specificities of these enzymes, but the relatively high specificity for palmitoyl-CoA of the glycerophosphate acyltransferase system to form 2-acyl-glycerophosphate, followed the relatively high specificity for oleoyl-CoA of the 2-acyl-glycerophosphate acyltransferase system, provided a basis for producing the major molecular species of phosphatidylglycerol.  相似文献   

9.
The substrate specificity of a calcium-independent, 97-kDa phospholipase B purified from guinea pig intestine was further investigated using various natural and synthetic lipids. The enzyme was equally active toward enantiomeric phosphatidylcholines under conditions allowing a strict phospholipase A activity. The lysophospholipase activity declined with the following substrates: 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine greater than 1-palmitoyl-propanediol-3-phosphocholine greater than 1-palmitoyl-glycol-2-phosphocholine, suggesting some influence of the polar residue vicinal to the cleavage site. The enzyme also acted on various neutral lipids including triacylglycerol, diacylglycerol, and monoacylglycerol, whereas cholesteryl oleate remained refractory to enzymatic hydrolysis. The lipase hydrolyzed sequentially the sn-2 and sn-1 acyl ester bonds of diacylglycerol, although some direct cleavage of the external acyl ester bond could also occur, as shown with diacylglycerol analogues bearing a nonhydrolyzable alkyl ether or amide bond in the sn-1 or sn-2 position. The three main activities of the enzyme (phospholipase A2, lysophospholipase, and diacylglycerol lipase) were resistant to 4-bromophenacyl bromide, but they were inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid), and diisopropyl fluorophosphate, suggesting the possible involvement of both cysteine and serine residues in a single active site. It is concluded that guinea pig intestinal phospholipase B, which was also detected in rat and rabbit, is actually a glycerol ester lipase with broad substrate specificity and some unique enzymatic properties.  相似文献   

10.
The substrate specificity of Escherichia coli outer membrane phospholipase A was analyzed in mixed micelles of lipid with deoxycholate or Triton X-100. Diglycerides, monoglycerides, and Tweens 40 and 85 in Triton X-100 are hydrolyzed at rates comparable to those of phospholipids and lysophospholipids. p-Nitrophenyl esters of fatty acids with different chain lengths and triglycerides are not hydrolyzed. The minimal substrate characteristics consist of a long acyl chain esterified to a more or less hydrophilic headgroup as is the case for the substrate monopalmitoylglycol. Binding occurs via the hydrocarbon chain of the substrate; diacyl compounds are bound three to five times better than monoacyl compounds. When acting on lecithins, phospholipase A1 activity is six times higher than phospholipase A2 activity or 1-acyl lysophospholipase activity. Activity on the 2-acyl lyso compound is about two times less than that on the 1-acyl lysophospholipid. The enzyme therefore has a clear preference for the primary ester bond of phospholipids. In contrast to phospholipase A1 activity, phospholipase A2 activity is stereospecific. Only the L isomer of a lecithin analogue in which the primary acyl chain was replaced by an alkyl ether group is hydrolyzed. The D isomer of this analogue is a competitive inhibitor, bound with the same affinity as the L isomer. On these ether analogues the enzyme shows the same preference for the primary acyl chain as with the natural diester phospholipids. Despite its broad specificity, the enzyme will initially act as a phospholipase A1 in the E. coli envelope where it is embedded in phospholipids.  相似文献   

11.
Although both 2-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine may be produced from phosphatidylcholine hydrolysis, studies on the former have lagged behind that of the latter. In this study a lysophospholipase A2 that hydrolyses 2-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine has been characterized in guinea pig heart mitochondria. The lysophospholipase A2 activity was not dependent on Ca2+ and was inhibited differentially by saturated and unsaturated fatty acids. This lysophospholipase A2 activity was able to discriminate among different molecular species of 2-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholines when they were presented individually or in pairs. The order of decreasing rates of hydrolysis of different molecular species of 2-lysophosphatidylcholines, when the substrates were presented singly, was 18:2 greater than 20:4 greater than 18:1 greater than 16:0. A differential inhibition of the rate of hydrolysis of the individual substrates was observed when the substrates were presented in pairs. The degree of inhibition was dependent on the molar ratio of the mixed substrates. The characteristics of the enzyme suggest that involvement in the selective release of fatty acids from mitochondrial phosphatidylcholine would depend on a high selectivity of phospholipase A1 for different molecular species of phosphatidylcholine. A lysophospholipase A1 activity was also characterized in the mitochondria with a distinct acyl specificity from the lysophospholipase A2. Other characteristics of the two lysophospholipases suggest that the two reactions are not catalysed by the same enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Fatty acid metabolism was examined in Escherichia coli plsB mutants that were conditionally defective in sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase activity. The fatty acids synthesized when acyl transfer to glycerol-3-phosphate was inhibited were preferentially transferred to phosphatidylglycerol. A comparison of the ratio of phospholipid species labeled with 32Pi and [3H]acetate in the presence and absence of glycerol-3-phosphate indicated that [3H]acetate incorporation into phosphatidylglycerol was due to fatty acid turnover. A significant contraction of the acetyl coenzyme A pool after glycerol-3-phosphate starvation of the plsB mutant precluded the quantitative assessment of the rate of phosphatidylglycerol fatty acid labeling. Fatty acid chain length in membrane phospholipids increased as the concentration of the glycerol-3-phosphate growth supplement decreased, and after the abrupt cessation of phospholipid biosynthesis abnormally long chain fatty acids were excreted into the growth medium. These data suggest that the acyl moieties of phosphatidylglycerol are metabolically active, and that competition between fatty acid elongation and acyl transfer is an important determinant of the acyl chain length in membrane phospholipids.  相似文献   

13.
cPLA2γ was identified as an ortholog of cPLA2α, which is a key enzyme in eicosanoid production. cPLA2γ was reported to be located in endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondria and to have lysophospholipase activity beside phospholipase A2 (PLA2) activity. However, subcellular localization, mechanism of membrane binding, regulation and physiological function have not been fully established. In the present study, we examined the subcellular localization and enzymatic properties of cPLA2γ with C-terminal FLAG-tag. We found that cPLA2γ was located not only in ER but also mitochondria even in the absence of the prenylation. Purified recombinant cPLA2γ catalyzed an acyltransferase reaction from one molecule of lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) to another, forming phosphatidylcholine (PC). LPC or lysophosphatidylethanolamine acted as acyl donor and acceptor, but lysophosphatidylserine, lysophosphatidylinositol and lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) did not. PC and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) also acted as weak acyl donors. Reaction conditions changed the balance of lysophospholipase and transacylation activities, with addition of LPA/PA, pH > 8, and elevated temperature markedly increasing transacylation activity; this suggests that lysophospholipase/transacylation activities of cPLA2γ may be regulated by various factors. As lysophospholipids are known to accumulate in ischemia heart and to induce arryhthmia, the cPLA2γ that is abundant in heart may have a protective role through clearance of lysophospholipids by its transacylation activity.  相似文献   

14.
Lysophospholipase of Escherichia coli.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
A lysophospholipase from Escherichia coli cells was purified about 1,500-fold to near homogeneity by extraction with Tris-HCl buffer, streptomycin treatment, (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, column chromatographies on Sephadex G-200, DEAE-cellulose and hydroxylapatite-cellulose, and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The final preparation had a molecular weight of 39,500 plus or minus 500. The enzyme hydrolyzes 1-acylglycerylphosphorylethanolamine, 2-acylglycerylphosphorylethanoiamine, and 1-acylglycerylphosphorylglycerol, but does not attack diacylphospholipids with long chain fatty acids, such as phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylglycerol. The enzyme does not show any esterase activity against p-nitrophenyl acetate or palmitate. Although it does not hydrolyze triacylglycerol or diacylglycerol, it hydrolyzes 1-acylglycerol at almost the same rate as 1-acyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphorylethanolamine. Results indicated that the acyl-hydrolyzing activities toward monoacyl-glycerylphosphorylethanolamine and monoacylglycerol belong to the same enzyme. In general, acidic and nonionic detergents inhibited the reaction. This lysophospholipase preparation hydrolyzes the monomolecular and micellar forms of lysophospholipids as well as of monoacylglycerol. The monomolecular and micellar forms of Triton X-100 both inhibited the hydrolyses of lysophospholipids and monoacylglycerol.  相似文献   

15.
Previously we reported that lysophospholipase D in rat plasma hydrolyzes endogenous unsaturated lysophosphatidylcholines (LPCs) preferentially to saturated LPCs to lysophosphatidic acids with growth factor-like and hormone-like activities. In this study, we examined the possibility that association of LPCs with different proteins in rat plasma has an effect on the preference of lysophospholipase D for unsaturated LPCs. Large portions of various LPCs were found to be recovered in the lipoprotein-poor bottom fraction. Furthermore, the percentages of LPCs associated with albumin isolated from rat plasma were shown not to be consistent with their percentage conversions to lysophosphatidic acids by lysophospholipase D on incubation of rat plasma at 37 degrees C. These results indicate that distinct distributions of LPCs in the plasma protein fractions are not critical factors for the substrate specificity of lysophospholipase D. Experiments with Nagase analbuminemic rats suggested that albumin-LPC complexes are not necessarily required for the hydrolysis by lysophospholipase D; lipoprotein-associate LPCs appeared to be good substrates for the phospholipase. We found that both saturated and unsaturated LPCs are present mainly as 1-acyl isomers in rat plasma. This result indicates that the preference of lysophospholipase D for unsaturated LPCs is not attributable to a difference in position of the acyl group attached to the glycerol backbone of LPC. In addition, lysophospholipase D was also found to attack choline phospholipids with a long chain group and a short chain alkyl group, although their percentage hydrolyses were low. Taken altogether, these results suggest that lysophospholipase D shows higher affinities for free forms of unsaturated acyl type LPCs equilibrated with albumin-bound and lipoprotein-associated forms, than for free forms of saturated acyl type LPCs and analogs of platelet-activating factor.  相似文献   

16.
A major concern in the use of class IIa bacteriocins as food preservatives is the well-documented resistance development in target Listeria strains. We studied the relationship between leucocin A, a class IIa bacteriocin, and the composition of the major phospholipid, phosphatidylglycerol (PG), in membranes of both sensitive and resistant L. monocytogenes strains. Two wild-type strains, L. monocytogenes B73 and 412, two spontaneous mutants of L. monocytogenes B73 with intermediate resistance to leucocin A (+/-2.4 and +/-4 times the 50% inhibitory concentrations [IC50] for sensitive strains), and two highly resistant mutants of each of the wild-type strains (>500 times the IC50 for sensitive strains) were analyzed. Electrospray mass spectrometry analysis showed an increase in the ratios of unsaturated to saturated and short- to long-acyl-chain species of PG in all the resistant L. monocytogenes strains in our study, although their sensitivities to leucocin A were significantly different. This alteration in membrane phospholipids toward PGs containing shorter, unsaturated acyl chains suggests that resistant strains have cells with a more fluid membrane. The presence of this phenomenon in a strain (L. monocytogenes 412P) which is resistant to both leucocin A and pediocin PA-1 may indicate a link between membrane composition and class IIa bacteriocin resistance in some L. monocytogenes strains. Treatment of strains with sterculic acid methyl ester (SME), a desaturase inhibitor, resulted in significant changes in the leucocin A sensitivity of the intermediate-resistance strains but no changes in the sensitivity of highly resistant strains. There was, however, a decrease in the amount of unsaturated and short-acyl-chain PGs after treatment with SME in one of the intermediate and both of the highly resistant strains, but the opposite effect was observed for the sensitive strains. It appears, therefore, that membrane adaptation may be part of a resistance mechanism but that several resistance mechanisms may contribute to a resistance phenotype and that levels of resistance vary according to the type of mechanisms present.  相似文献   

17.
Human acyloxyacyl hydrolase (AOAH) is a leukocyte enzyme that hydrolyzes acyloxyacyl bonds in the lipid A region of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), thereby detoxifying the LPS. We report here that the enzyme also acts in vitro on glycerophospholipids, lysophospholipids, and diacylglycerol. While AOAH preferentially removes palmitate or stearate from the sn-1 position of phospholipid and diacylglycerol substrates that have unsaturated acyl chains in the sn-2 position, it is able to cleave both palmitates from sn-1,2-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and sn-1,2-dipalmitoylglycerol. This apparent preference for removing saturated (or shorter) acyl chains from glycerolipids is consistent with its ability to cleave laurate more rapidly than palmitoleate from lipopolysaccharide (Erwin, A. L., and Munford, R. S. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 16444-16449). AOAH also catalyzes acyl transfer from LPS and phosphatidylethanolamine to acceptor lipids; approximately equal amounts of laurate and myristate are transferred from LPS to monooleoylglyceryl ether, forming acyloleoylglyceryl ether. The demonstration that AOAH has phospholipase, lysophospholipase, diacylglycerol lipase, and acyltransferase activities in vitro suggests that the enzyme may have roles in addition to LPS deacylation (detoxification) in phagocytic cells.  相似文献   

18.
S Gatt  B Morag    S Rottem 《Journal of bacteriology》1982,151(3):1095-1101
Mycoplasma gallisepticum strains have a membrane-bound lysophospholipase which hydrolyzes lysophospholipid generated in these membranes by treatment with an external phospholipase. This paper studies the hydrolysis of the membranous lysophospholipids by an enzyme residing in the same membrane (intramembrane utilization) or in adjacent membranes (intermembrane utilization). To study intermembrane hydrolysis, the phospholipids of M. gallisepticum were labeled with [3H]oleic acid. Membranes were prepared, heated at 65 degrees C, and subsequently treated with pancreatic phospholipase A2. This resulted in membranes whose enzyme was heat inactivated, but which contained lysophospholipid. When these membranes were mixed with M. gallisepticum cells or membranes, the lysophospholipid was hydrolyzed by the membranous lysophospholipase. To study intramembrane hydrolysis, [3H]oleyl-labeled membranes of M. gallisepticum were treated with pancreatic phospholipase A2 at pH 5.0. At this pH, lysophospholipid was generated but not hydrolyzed. Adjustment of the pH to 7.4 resulted in hydrolysis of the lysophospholipid by the membranous lysophospholipase. These procedures permitted measuring the initial rates of intramembrane and intermembrane hydrolysis of the lysophospholipid, showing that the time course and dependence on endogenous substrate concentration were different in the intramembrane and intermembrane modes of utilization. They also permitted calculation of the molar concentration of the lysophospholipid in the membrane and its rate of hydrolysis, expressed as moles per minute per cell or per square centimeter of cell surface.  相似文献   

19.
The activities of phospholipids acyl-hydrolases in an enzyme preparation from a mold, Corticium centrifugum, were examined. Lecithin acyl-hydrolase had an optimal pH at 3.5. The reaction proceeded beyond the range of 50%. Sigmoidal curves observed suggested the presence of lysophospholipase in the preparation. The latter enzyme activity was found to be seven times as strong as the former at the same pH. Fractionation by DEAE-Sephadex chromatography and analysis of the reaction products demonstrated that the main component of lecithin acyl-hydrolase was phospholipase B, which hydrolyzed both of fatty acyl ester groups of lecithin. This activity was found to be present as a separate enzyme from most of lysophospholipase.  相似文献   

20.
Legionella pneumophila possesses a variety of secreted and cell-associated hydrolytic activities that could be involved in pathogenesis. The activities include phospholipase A, lysophospholipase A, glycerophospholipid:cholesterol acyltransferase, lipase, protease, phosphatase, RNase, and p-nitrophenylphosphorylcholine (p-NPPC) hydrolase. Up to now, there have been no data available on the regulation of the enzymes in L. pneumophila and no data at all concerning the regulation of bacterial phospholipases A. Therefore, we used L. pneumophila mutants in the genes coding for the global regulatory proteins RpoS and LetA to investigate the dependency of hydrolytic activities on a global regulatory network proposed to control important virulence traits in L. pneumophila. Our results show that both L. pneumophila rpoS and letA mutants exhibit on the one hand a dramatic reduction of secreted phospholipase A and glycerophospholipid:cholesterol acyltransferase activities, while on the other hand secreted lysophospholipase A and lipase activities were significantly increased during late logarithmic growth phase. The cell-associated phospholipase A, lysophospholipase A, and p-NPPC hydrolase activities, as well as the secreted protease, phosphatase, and p-NPPC hydrolase activities were significantly decreased in both of the mutant strains. Only cell-associated phosphatase activity was slightly increased. In contrast, RNase activity was not affected. The expression of plaC, coding for a secreted acyltransferase, phospholipase A, and lysophospholipase A, was found to be regulated by LetA and RpoS. In conclusion, our results show that RpoS and LetA affect phospholipase A, lysophospholipase A, acyltransferase, and other hydrolytic activities of L. pneumophila in a similar way, thereby corroborating the existence of the LetA/RpoS regulation cascade.  相似文献   

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