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1.
A new type of heme-deficient mutant was isolated in Salmonella typhimurium by neomycin selection. The mutant was deficient in uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase activity, coded by the hemE gene. The hemE gene was located between the genes rif and thi at 128 min on the chromosomal map of S. typhimurium.  相似文献   

2.
A new type of heme-deficient mutant of Salmonella typhimurium LT2 was isolated using neomycin. The mutant, designated as strain SASY74, accumulated uroporphyrin I and coproporphyrin I. Extracts of the mutant converted 5-aminolevulinic acid to uroporphyrin I. Extracts of the mutant SASY74 and of the uroporphyrinogen synthase-deficient mutant SASY32 complemented each other and converted, when incubated together, 5-aminolevulinic acid to protoporphyrin. This finding excludes the possibility that uroporphyrinogen I synthase in strain SASY74 is deficient in its cosynthase-binding ability. Hence, the most probable explanation for the accumulation of uroporphyrin I and coproporphyrin I by the mutant is the lack of the uroporphyrinogen III cosynthase activity. This mutant is the first isolated in bacteria with such deficiency, and the mutation is analogous, as far as porphyrin synthesis is concerned, to human congenital porphyria. Mapping of the corresponding gene (hemD) by conjugation and P22-mediated transduction suggests the following gene order on the chromosome: ilv....hemC, hemD, cya....metE. The hemC and hemD genes are probably adjacent; this is the first case in which two hem genes of Enterobacteriaceae are contiguous on the chromosomal map.  相似文献   

3.
A new type of haem-deficient mutant was isolated in Escherichia coli K12 by neomycin selection. The mutant was deficient in uroporphyrinogen III cosynthase activity as indicated by the accumulation of uroporphyrin I and coproporphyrin. The mapping of the corresponding hemD gene by P1-mediated transduction showed that the new gene was located between ilv and cya, at min 83 on the chromosomal map of Escherichia coli K12.  相似文献   

4.
The complex pathway of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis can be dissected into five sections: the pathways that produce 5-aminolevulinate (the C-4 and the C-5 pathways), the steps that transform ALA to uroporphyrinogen III, which are ubiquitous in the biosynthesis of all tetrapyrroles, and the three branches producing specialized end products. These end products include corrins and siroheme, chlorophylls and hemes and linear tetrapyrroles. These branches have been subjects of recent reviews. This review concentrates on the early steps leading up to uroporphyrinogen III formation which have been investigated intensively in recent years in animals, in plants, and in a wide range of bacteria.Abbreviations ALA 5-aminolevulinic acid - ALAS 5-aminolevulinic acid synthase - GR glutamyl-tRNA reductase - GSA glutamate-1-semialdehyde - GSAT glutamate-1-semialdehyde aminotransferase - HMB hydroxymethylbilane - PBG porphobilinogen - PBGD porphobilinogen deaminase - PBGS porphobilinogen synthase - URO uroporphyrin - URO'gen uroporphyrinogen - US uroporphyrinogen III synthase  相似文献   

5.
A new type of haem-deficient mutant was isolated in Escherichia coli K12 by neomycin selection. The mutant, designated SASX38, accumulated uroporphyrin, coproporphyrin and protoporphyrin. Since it possessed normal ferrochelatase activity, it was assumed to be deficient in protoporphyrinogen oxidase activity. The gene affected in the mutant was designated hemG. Mapping of the hemG gene by phage P1-mediated transduction showed that it was located very close to the chlB gene (frequency of cotransduction 78.7%), between the metE and rha markers. This location is distinct from the other known hem loci in E. coli K12.  相似文献   

6.
A protein had been previously described, which was labeled by radioactive 5-aminolevulinic acid in isolated developing chloroplasts. In the present study we have shown that this protein (Mr approximately equal to 43,000) probably exists as a monomer in the chloroplast stroma. The labeling is blocked if known inhibitors of 5-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase are added to the incubation mixture, and is markedly decreased in intensity if nonradioactive 5-aminolevulinate or porphobilinogen are added to the incubation mixture; other intermediates in the porphyrin biosynthetic pathway, uroporphyrinogen III, uroporphyrin III, and protoporphyrin IX, do not decrease the labeling of the 43-kDa protein appreciably. Nondenaturing gels of the proteins isolated from the incubation with radioactive 5-aminolevulinic acid were stained for porphobilinogen deaminase activity. A series of red fluorescent bands was obtained which coincided with the radioactive bands visualized by autoradiography. It is concluded that the soluble chloroplast protein that is labeled in organello by radioactive 5-aminolevulinic acid is porphobilinogen deaminase.  相似文献   

7.
To study the post-uroporphyrin steps in heme and chlorophyll biosynthesis in Chlorobium, we attempted to clone the uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase ( hemE) gene. A Chlorobium genomic library was used to transform a restriction-minus Salmonella typhimurium strain. The recombinant DNA molecules were transduced into an auxotrophic Salmonella double mutant ( hemA(-) hemE(-)) by phage P22. Faster-growing colonies indicated complementation of the hemE mutation. Each clone was tested by backcross transduction of the mutant. Growth rates of the confirmed clones in LB medium were comparable to wild-type Salmonella. HPLC analysis of the substrate (uroporphyrinogen) and the product (coproporphyrinogen) of the decarboxylase activity was performed in one such clone. This clone showed an active hemE gene within a 4-kb insert.  相似文献   

8.
This report suggests an important physiological role of a CYP in the accumulation of uroporphyrin I arising from catalytic oxidative conversion of uroporphyrinogen I to uroporphyrin I in the periplasm of Escherichia coli cultured in the presence of 5-aminolevulinic acid. A structurally competent Streptomyces griseus CYP105D1 was expressed as an engineered, exportable form in aerobically grown E. coli. Its progressive induction in the presence of 5-aminolevulinic acid-supplemented medium was accompanied by an accumulation of a greater than 100-fold higher amount of uroporphyrin I in the periplasm relative to cells lacking CYP105D1. Expression of a cytoplasm-resident engineered CYP105D1 at a comparative level to the secreted form was far less effective in promoting porphyrin accumulation in the periplasm. Expression at a 10-fold molar excess over the exported CYP105D1 of another periplasmically exported hemoprotein, the globular core of cytochrome b5, did not substitute the role of the periplasmically localized CYP105D1 in promoting porphyrin production. This, therefore, eliminated the possibility that uroporphyrin accumulation is merely a result of increased hemoprotein synthesis. Moreover, in the strain that secreted CYP105D1, uroporphyrin production was considerably reduced by azole-based P450 inhibitors. Production of both holo-CYP105D1 and uroporphyrin was dependent upon 5-aminolevulinic acid, except that at higher concentrations this resulted in a decrease in uroporphyrin. This study suggests that the exported CYP105D1 oxidatively catalyzes periplasmic conversion of uroporphyrinogen I to uroporphyrin I in E. coli. The findings have significant implications in the ontogenesis of human uroporphyria-related diseases.  相似文献   

9.
Mutations that cause a block in a late step of the protoheme IX biosynthetic pathway, i.e., in a step after uroporphyrinogen III, map at 94 degrees on the Bacillus subtilis chromosomal genetic map. We have cloned and sequenced the hem genes at this location. The sequenced region contains six open reading frames: ponA, hemE, hemH, hemY, ORFA, and ORFB. The ponA gene product shows over 30% sequence identity to penicillin-binding proteins 1A of Escherichia coli, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Streptococcus oralis and probably has a role in cell wall metabolism. The hemE gene was identified from amino acid sequence comparisons as encoding uroporphyrinogen III decarboxylase. The hemH gene was identified by enzyme activity analysis of the HemH protein expressed in E. coli. It encodes a water-soluble ferrochelatase which catalyzes the final step in protoheme IX synthesis, the insertion of ferrous iron into protoporphyrin IX. The function of the hemY gene product was not elucidated, but mutation analysis shows that it is required for a late step in protoheme IX synthesis. The hemY gene probably encodes an enzyme with coproporphyrinogen III oxidase or protoporphyrinogen IX oxidase activity or both of these activities. Inactivation of the ORFA and ORFB genes did not block protoheme IX synthesis. Preliminary evidence for a hemEHY mRNA was obtained, and a promoter region located in front of hemE was identified. From these combined results we conclude that the hemEHY gene cluster encodes enzymes for the synthesis of protoheme IX from uroporphyrinogen III and probably constitutes an operon.  相似文献   

10.
The preparation of the aminomethyl-bilinogen which results from formal "head to tail" condensation of porphobilinogen is described. The chemical cyclocondensation of this compound at pH 7.4 yields uroporphyrinogen I. Enzymatic studies with enzyme preparations from Propionibacterium shermanii, which synthesize uroporphyrinogens from porphobilinogen, show that the rate of cyclisation is increased by these enzymes and indicate that the bilinogen also might be used for uroporphyrinogen III formation. This is also suggested by studies on the formation of cobyrinic acid from [4-14C]5-aminolevulinate via uroporphyrinogen III in the presence of the aminomethylbilinogen by cell-free extracts from Clostridium tetanomorphum.  相似文献   

11.
New Rifampin-Resistant Mutant of Escherichia coli   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
A rifampin-resistant ribonucleic acid (RNA) polymerase mutant, rif(r)51, derived from a presumptive RNA synthesis mutant of Escherichia coli K-12, complements rif(r) RNA polymerase mutants isolated from other strains of E. coli K-12.  相似文献   

12.
A 3.8-kilobase DNA fragment from Bacillus subtilis containing the hemA gene has been cloned and sequenced. Four open reading frames were identified. The first is hemA, encoding a protein of 50.8 kilodaltons. The primary defect of a B. subtilis 5-aminolevulinic acid-requiring mutant was identified as a cysteine-to-tyrosine substitution in the HemA protein. The predicted amino acid sequence of the B. subtilis HemA protein showed 34% identity with the Escherichia coli HemA protein, which is known to code for the NAD(P)H:glutamyl-tRNA reductase of the C5 pathway for 5-aminolevulinic acid synthesis. The B. subtilis HemA protein also complements the defect of an E. coli hemA mutant. The second open reading frame in the cloned fragment, called ORF2, codes for a protein of about 30 kilodaltons with unknown function. It is not the proposed hemB gene product porphobilinogen synthase. The third open reading frame is hemC, coding for porphobilinogen deaminase. The fourth open reading frame extends past the sequenced fragment and may be identical to hemD, coding for uroporphyrinogen III cosynthase. Analysis of deletion mutants of the hemA region suggests that (at least) hemA, ORF2, and hemC may be part of an operon.  相似文献   

13.
Nine new hem12 haploid mutants of baker's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), totally or partially deficient in uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase activity, were subjected to both genetic and biochemical analysis. The mutations sites studied are situated far apart within the HEM12 gene located on chromosome IV. Uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase activity in the cell-free extracts of the mutants was decreased by 50-100%. This correlated well with the decrease of haem formation and the increased accumulation and excretion of porphyrins observed in vivo. The pattern of porphyrins (uroporphyrin and its decarboxylation products) accumulated in the cells of mutants partially deficient in uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase activity did not differ significantly, although differences in vitro were found in the relative activity of the mutant enzyme at the four decarboxylation steps. The excreted porphyrins comprised mainly dehydroisocoproporphyrin or pentacarboxyporphyrin. In heterozygous hem12-1/HEM12 diploid cells, a 50% decrease in decarboxylase activity led to an increased accumulation of porphyrins as compared with the wild-type HEM12/HEM12 diploid, which points to the semi-dominant character of the hem12-1 mutation. The biochemical phenotypes of both the haploid and the heterozygous diploid resembles closely the situation encountered in porphyria cutanea tarda, the most common human form of porphyria.  相似文献   

14.
A late step in anaerobic heme synthesis, the oxidation of protoprophyrinogen with fumarate as electron acceptor, was studied in extracts and particles of Escherichia coli mutants deficient in quinones or cytochromes. Mutants specifically deficient in menaquinone did not couple protoporphyrinogen oxidation to fumarate reduction, whereas mutants containing menaquinone but deficient in either ubiquinone or cytochromes exhibited this activity. These findings indicate that this coupled reaction is dependent upon menaquinone as hydrogen carrier but independent of ubiquinone and cytochromes. Other characteristics of this coupled reaction were also studied. The activity was located exclusively in the membrane fraction of cell-free extracts. Coproporphyrinogen III could not replace protoporphyrinogen as substrate. Methylene blue, triphenyl tetrazolium and nitrate, but not nitrite, could replace fumarate as anaerobic hydrogen acceptor. These findings have implications for the mechanism and regulation of microbial heme and chlorophyll synthesis and for the physiology of cytochrome synthesis in anaerobic microorganisms.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Heme-deficient mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae have been isolated from two isogenic strains with the use of an enrichment method based on photodynamic properties of Zn-protoporphyrin. They defined seven non-overlapping complementation groups. A mutant representative of each group was further analysed. Genetic analysis showed that each mutant carried a single nuclear recessive mutation. Biochemical studies showed that the observed accumulation and/or excretion of the different heme synthesis precursors by the mutant cells correlated well with the enzymatic deficiencies measured in acellular extracts. Six of the seven mutants were blocked in a different enzyme activity: 5-aminolevulinate synthase, porphobilinogen synthase, uroporphyrinogen I synthase, uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase, coproporphyrinogen III oxidase and ferrochelatase. The other mutant had the same phenotype as the mutant deficient in ferrochelatase activity. However, it possessed a normal ferrochelatase activity when measured in vitro, so this mutant was assumed to be deficient in protoporphyrinogen oxidase activity or in the transport and/or reduction of iron.The absence of PBG synthesis led to a total lack of uroporphyrinogen I synthase activity. The absence of heme, the end product, led to an important increase of coproporphyrinogen III oxidase activity, while the activity of 5-aminolevulinate synthase, the first enzyme of the pathway, was not changed. These results are discussed in terms of possible modes of regulation of heme synthesis pathway in yeast.  相似文献   

16.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, as in all eukaryotic organisms, delta-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) is a precursor of porphyrin biosynthesis, a very finely regulated pathway. ALA enters yeast cells through the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) permease Uga4. The incorporation of a metabolite into the cells may be a limiting step for its intracellular metabolization. To determine the relationship between ALA transport and ALA metabolization, ALA incorporation was measured in yeast mutant strains deficient in the delta-aminolevulinic acid-synthase, uroporphyrinogen III decarboxylase, and ferrochelatase, three enzymes involved in porphyrin biosynthesis. Results presented here showed that neither intracellular ALA nor uroporphyrin or protoporphyrin regulates ALA incorporation, indicating that ALA uptake and its subsequent metabolization are not related to each other. Thus a key metabolite as it is, ALA does not have a transport system regulated according to its role.  相似文献   

17.
We have cloned and sequenced a full-length cDNA for uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase (UROD, EC 4.1.1.37) from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) and a partial cDNA clone from barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). The cDNA of tobacco encodes a protein of 43 kDa, which has 33% overall similarity to UROD sequences determined from other organisms. We propose that tobacco UROD has an N-terminal extension of 39 amino acid residues. This extension is most likely a chloroplast transit sequence. The in vitro translation product of UROD was imported into pea chloroplasts and processed to ca. 39 kDa. A truncated cDNA, from which the putative transit peptide had been deleted, was used to over-express the mature UROD in Escherichia coli. Purified protein showed UROD activity, thus providing an adequate source for subsequent enzymatic characterization and inhibition studies. Expression of UROD was investigated by northern and western blot analysis during greening of etiolated barley seedlings, and in segments of barley primary leaves grown under day/night cycles. The amount of RNA and protein increased during illumination Maximum UROD-RNA levels were detected in the basal segments relative to the top of the leaf.Abbreviations ALA 5-aminolevulinic acid - copro coproporphyrin - coprogen coproporphyrinogen - protogen IX protoporphyrinogen IX - UROD uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase - uro uroporphyrin - urogen uroporphyrinogen  相似文献   

18.
Altered hepatic microsomal drug metabolism has been reported to occur in afflicted with hyperbilirubinemia. Similarities of the chemical structures of hydroxymethylbilane, an intermediate in the biosynthesis of uroporphyrinogen, to bilirubin prompted investigations of the effect of bilirubin on the activity of uroporphyrinogen I synthase (porphobilinogen deaminase, EC 4.3.1.8) and the biosynthesis of heme. Bilirubin was found to be a reversible, noncompetitive inhibitor of uroporphyrinogen I synthase. The inhibition constant (Ki) for bilirubin was 1.5 microM. Bile acids had no effect on rat hepatic uroporphyrinogen I synthase activity. Hyperbilirubinemia was achieved in rats by biliary ligation in order to investigate whether elevated levels of bilirubin impair the biosynthesis of hepatic heme in vivo. The relative rate of heme biosynthesis, as measured by the rate of incorporation of delta-[4-14C]aminolevulinic acid into heme, was decreased 59% 24 h after biliary obstruction. The levels of hepatic microsomal heme and cytochrome P-450 were decreased by 43 and 40%, respectively, 72 h after biliary obstruction. The activities of hepatic delta-aminolevulinic acid synthase and uroporphyrinogen I synthase were increased by 39 and 46%, respectively, 72 h after biliary obstruction. During the 48- to 72-h period following biliary obstruction, the urinary excretion of porphobilinogen and uroporphyrin was increased 3.0- and 3.5-fold, respectively, whereas, the urinary excretion of delta-aminolevulinic acid was not altered. During this 48-to 72-h time interval following biliary obstruction, 100% of the uroporphyrin was excreted as isomer I. These results indicate that bilirubin is capable of depressing the biosynthesis of rat hepatic heme and thus cytochrome P-450-mediated drug metabolism by inhibition of the formation of uroporphyrinogen. These findings are a plausible mechanism for reports of impaired clearance of various drugs in patients afflicted with hyperbilirubinemic disease states.  相似文献   

19.
Insertion mutagenesis has been used to isolate Salmonella typhimurium strains that are blocked in the conversion of 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) to heme. These mutants define the steps of the heme biosynthetic pathway after ALA. Insertions were recovered at five unlinked loci: hemB, hemCD, and hemE, which have been mapped previously in S. typhimurium, and hemG and hemH, which have been described only for Escherichia coli. No other simple hem mutants were found. However, double mutants are described that are auxotrophic for heme during aerobic growth and fail to convert coproporphyrinogen III to protoporphyrinogen IX. These mutant strains are defective in two genes, hemN and hemF. Single mutants defective only in hemN require heme for anaerobic growth on glycerol plus nitrate but not for aerobic growth on glycerol. Mutants defective only in hemF have no apparent growth defect. We suggest that these two genes encode alternative forms of coproporphyrinogen oxidase. Anaerobic heme synthesis requires hemN function, while either hemN or hemF is sufficient for aerobic heme synthesis. These phenotypes are consistent with the requirement of a well-characterized class of coproporphyrinogen oxidase for molecular oxygen.  相似文献   

20.
A late step in anaerobic heme synthesis, the oxidation of protoporphyrinogen with fumarate as electron acceptor, was studied in extracts and particles of Escherichia coli mutants deficient in quinones or cytochromes. Mutants specifically deficient in menaquinone did not couple protoporphyrinogen oxidation to fumarate reduction, whereas mutants containing menaquinone but deficient in either ubiquinone or cytochromes exhibited this activity. These findings indicate that this coupled reaction is dependent upon menaquinone as hydrogen carrier but independent of ubiquinone and cytochromes. Other characteristics of this coupled reaction were also studied. The activity was located exclusively in the membrane fraction of cell-free extracts. Coproporphyrinogen III could not replace protoporphyrinogen as substrate. Methylene blue, triphenyl tetrazolium and nitrate, but not nitrite, could replace fumarate as anaerobic hydrogen acceptor. These findings have implications for the mechanism and regulation of microbial heme and chlorophyll synthesis and for the physiology of cytochrome synthesis in anaerobic microorganisms.  相似文献   

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