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The DosS (DevS) and DosT histidine kinases form a two-component system together with the DosR (DevR) response regulator in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. DosS and DosT, which have high sequence similarity to each other over the length of their amino acid sequences, contain two GAF domains (GAF-A and GAF-B) in their N-terminal sensory domains. Complementation tests in conjunction with phylogenetic analysis showed that DevS of Mycobacterium smegmatis is more closely related to DosT than DosS. We also demonstrated in vivo that DosS and DosT of M. tuberculosis play a differential role in hypoxic adaptation. DosT responds to a decrease in oxygen tension more sensitively and strongly than DosS, which might be attributable to their different autooxidation rates. The different responsiveness of DosS and DosT to hypoxia is due to the difference in their GAF-A domains accommodating the hemes. Multiple alignment analysis of the GAF-A domains of mycobacterial DosS (DosT) homologs and subsequent site-directed mutagenesis revealed that just one substitution of E87, D90, H97, L118, or T169 of DosS with the corresponding residue of DosT is sufficient to convert DosS to DosT with regard to the responsiveness to changes in oxygen tension.Oxygen sensing is important for facultative anaerobes to adapt to changes in metabolic necessities during the transition between aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Although Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) is an obligate aerobe, a gradual depletion of O2 from its culture is known to lead to a drastic change in gene expression (8, 21, 24, 28, 34, 37, 39). Approximately 48 genes of M. tuberculosis were reported to be induced under early hypoxic conditions, which is mediated by the DosSR (DevSR) two-component system (16, 24, 34). The induction of the DosR regulon is important for survival of M. tuberculosis under hypoxic conditions and for it to enter the nonreplicating dormant state (2, 19). The DosSR two-component system consists of the DosS histidine kinase (HK) and its cognate DosR response regulator (RR) (24, 26, 29). The DosT HK, which shares high sequence similarity to DosS over the length of their primary structures, was also found to cross talk with DosR (26, 30). The N-terminal domains of DosS and DosT contain two tandem GAF domains (GAF-A and GAF-B from their N termini), and the three-dimensional structure of the GAF-A and GAF-B domains was determined (5, 25). A b-type heme is embedded in the GAF-A domain, composed of one five-stranded antiparallel β-sheet and four α-helices (5, 14, 25, 32). The heme is positioned nearly perpendicular to the β-sheet, and H149 and H147 of the polypeptides serve as the proximal axial ligands for DosS and DosT, respectively (5, 25). The ligand-binding state at the distal axial position of heme and the redox state of the heme iron modulate the autokinase activity of DosS and DosT. The O2-bound (oxyferrous) and ferric forms of the HKs are inactive, whereas the unliganded ferrous (deoxyferrous) form as well as NO- and CO-bound forms are active (17, 36). The heme iron of DosT is stable against autooxidation of Fe2+ to Fe3+ in the presence of O2, indicating that its conversion between deoxyferrous and oxyferrous forms is the mechanism by which DosT recognizes O2 (17). However, the autooxidation property of oxyferrous DosS remains controversial. Kumar et al. (17) and Cho et al. (5) reported that DosS undergoes autooxidation on exposure to O2, while other research groups demonstrated that the oxyferrous form of DosS is stable against autooxidation (13, 14, 36). Recently, different roles of DosS and DosT in O2 sensing by M. tuberculosis were suggested. DosT plays a more important role in the early phase of hypoxic conditions than DosS when the growth of M. tuberculosis is transferred from aerobic to hypoxic conditions (11).Mycobacterium smegmatis possesses a single DevS HK that phosphorylates the DevR RR (20). The DevSR two-component system is also implemented in hypoxic adaptation of this bacterium (20). Like DosT of M. tuberculosis, the autokinase activity of M. smegmatis DevS was shown to be controlled by the ligand-binding state of its heme (18). Regarding the autooxidation property, DevS of M. smegmatis was suggested to be similar to DosT rather than DosS; i.e., the heme iron in DevS is resistant to autooxidation from an oxyferrous to a ferric state in the presence of O2 (18).In this paper we report several lines of evidence for the functional difference between DosS and DosT in the hypoxic adaptation of mycobacteria and discuss the implications of these findings.  相似文献   

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The environment encountered by Mycobacterium tuberculosis during infection is genotoxic. Most bacteria tolerate DNA damage by engaging specialized DNA polymerases that catalyze translesion synthesis (TLS) across sites of damage. M. tuberculosis possesses two putative members of the DinB class of Y-family DNA polymerases, DinB1 (Rv1537) and DinB2 (Rv3056); however, their role in damage tolerance, mutagenesis, and survival is unknown. Here, both dinB1 and dinB2 are shown to be expressed in vitro in a growth phase-dependent manner, with dinB2 levels 12- to 40-fold higher than those of dinB1. Yeast two-hybrid analyses revealed that DinB1, but not DinB2, interacts with the β-clamp, consistent with its canonical C-terminal β-binding motif. However, knockout of dinB1, dinB2, or both had no effect on the susceptibility of M. tuberculosis to compounds that form N2-dG adducts and alkylating agents. Similarly, deletion of these genes individually or in combination did not affect the rate of spontaneous mutation to rifampin resistance or the spectrum of resistance-conferring rpoB mutations and had no impact on growth or survival in human or mouse macrophages or in mice. Moreover, neither gene conferred a mutator phenotype when expressed ectopically in Mycobacterium smegmatis. The lack of the effect of altering the complements or expression levels of dinB1 and/or dinB2 under conditions predicted to be phenotypically revealing suggests that the DinB homologs from M. tuberculosis do not behave like their counterparts from other organisms.The emergence and global spread of multi- and extensively drug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis have further complicated the already daunting challenge of controlling tuberculosis (TB) (15). The mechanisms that underlie the evolution of drug resistance in M. tuberculosis by chromosomal mutagenesis and their association with the conditions that tubercle bacilli encounter during the course of infection are poorly understood (6). It has been postulated that hypoxia, low pH, nutrient deprivation, and nitrosative and oxidative stress impose environmental and host immune-mediated DNA-damaging insults on infecting bacilli (64). In addition, the observed importance of excision repair pathways for the growth and survival of M. tuberculosis in murine models of infection (13, 55) and the upregulation of M. tuberculosis genes involved in DNA repair and modification in pulmonary TB in humans provide compelling evidence that the in vivo environment is DNA damaging (51).Damage tolerance constitutes an integral component of an organism''s response to genotoxic stress, preventing collapse of the replication fork at persisting, replication-blocking lesions through the engagement of specialized DNA polymerases that are able to catalyze translesion synthesis (TLS) across the sites of damage (19, 21, 60). Most TLS polymerases belong to the Y family, which comprises a wide range of structurally related proteins present in bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes (44). Of these, the DinB subfamily of Y family polymerases, whose founder member is Escherichia coli Pol IV (63), is conserved among all domains of life (44). The association of Y family polymerases with inducible mutagenesis has implicated these enzymes in the adaptation of bacteria to environmental stress (17, 20, 39, 54, 58, 59, 66). Their key properties are exemplified in E. coli Pol IV: the polymerase catalyzes efficient and accurate TLS across certain N2-dG adducts (27, 28, 34, 40, 45, 67) and has been implicated in the tolerance of alkylation damage (4); furthermore, overexpression of Pol IV significantly increases mutation rates in E. coli (reviewed in references 21 and 26), and dinB is the only SOS-regulated gene required at induced levels for stress-induced mutagenesis in this organism (20). Furthermore, overproduction of E. coli Pol IV inhibits replication fork progression through replacement of the replicative polymerase to form an alternate replisome in which Pol IV modulates the rate of unwinding of the DnaB helicase (25) and also reduces colony-forming ability (61).The M. tuberculosis genome encodes two Y family polymerase homologs belonging to the DinB subfamily, designated herein as DinB1 (DinX, encoded by Rv1537) and DinB2 (DinP, encoded by Rv3056), as well as a third, distantly related homolog encoded by Rv3394c (see Fig. S1 in the supplemental material) (9). On the basis of sequence similarity with their counterparts from E. coli (63) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (54), including the complete conservation of key acidic residues essential for catalysis, DinB1 and DinB2 may be functional DNA polymerases (see Fig. S1). In contrast, Rv3394c lacks these residues and as such is unlikely to have polymerase activity (see Fig. S1). Unlike most Y family polymerase-encoding genes investigated with other bacteria (17, 26, 54, 58), dinB1 and dinB2 expression in M. tuberculosis is not dependent on RecA, the SOS response, or the presence of DNA damage (5, 7, 52). That these genes are regulated by other mechanisms and so may serve distinct roles in DNA metabolism in M. tuberculosis is suggested by the observation that dinB1 is differentially expressed in pulmonary TB (51) and is a member of the SigH regulon (30), whereas expression of dinB2 is induced following exposure to novobiocin (5).In this study, we adopted a genetic approach to investigate the function of dinB1 and dinB2 in M. tuberculosis. Mutants with altered complements or expression levels of dinB1 and/or dinB2 were analyzed in vitro and in vivo under conditions predicted to be phenotypically revealing based on DinB function established with other model organisms. The lack of discernible phenotypes in any of the assays employed suggests that the DinB homologs from M. tuberculosis do not behave like their counterparts from other organisms.  相似文献   

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《Journal of bacteriology》2009,191(6):1951-1960
We have identified a clonal complex of Mycobacterium bovis present at high frequency in cattle in population samples from several sub-Saharan west-central African countries. This closely related group of bacteria is defined by a specific chromosomal deletion (RDAf1) and can be identified by the absence of spacer 30 in the standard spoligotype typing scheme. We have named this group of strains the African 1 (Af1) clonal complex and have defined the spoligotype signature of this clonal complex as being the same as the M. bovis BCG vaccine strain but with the deletion of spacer 30. Strains of the Af1 clonal complex were found at high frequency in population samples of M. bovis from cattle in Mali, Cameroon, Nigeria, and Chad, and using a combination of variable-number tandem repeat typing and spoligotyping, we show that the population of M. bovis in each of these countries is distinct, suggesting that the recent mixing of strains between countries is not common in this area of Africa. Strains with the Af1-specific deletion (RDAf1) were not identified in M. bovis isolates from Algeria, Burundi, Ethiopia, Madagascar, Mozambique, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda. Furthermore, the spoligotype signature of the Af1 clonal complex has not been identified in population samples of bovine tuberculosis from Europe, Iran, and South America. These observations suggest that the Af1 clonal complex is geographically localized, albeit to several African countries, and we suggest that the dominance of the clonal complex in this region is the result of an original introduction into cows naïve to bovine tuberculosis.Mycobacterium bovis causes bovine tuberculosis (TB), an important disease of domesticated cattle that has a major economic and health impact throughout the world (61, 64, 65). The pathogen is a member of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex, which includes many species and subspecies that cause similar pathologies in a variety of mammalian hosts. The most notable member of the complex is M. tuberculosis, the most important bacterial pathogen of humans. In contrast to M. tuberculosis, which is largely host restricted to humans, M. bovis is primarily maintained in bovids, in particular, domesticated cattle, although the pathogen can frequently be recovered from other mammals, including humans (61). Bovine TB is found in cattle throughout the world and has been reported on every continent where cattle are farmed (3).Bovine TB has been reduced or eliminated from domestic cattle in many developed countries by the application of a test-and-cull policy that removes infected cattle (3, 8, 16, 17, 61, 64, 65). However, in Africa, although bovine TB is known to be common in both cattle and wildlife, control policies have not been enforced in many countries due to cost implications, lack of capacity, and infrastructure limitations (8, 16, 17, 57). In 1998, Cosivi et al. reported of bovine TB, “Of all nations in Africa, only seven apply disease control measures as part of a test-and-slaughter policy and consider bovine TB a notifiable disease; the remaining 48 control the disease inadequately or not at all” (16). In the intervening years, the situation is not thought to have improved (8); however, preliminary surveys of bovine TB have been carried out in some African countries (4, 7, 12, 37, 44, 49, 53, 54, 56).The most common epidemiological molecular-typing method applied to strains of M. bovis is spoligotyping. This method identifies polymorphism in the presence of spacer units in the direct-repeat (DR) region in strains of the M. tuberculosis complex (36, 67). The DR is composed of multiple, virtually identical 36-bp regions interspersed with unique DNA spacer sequences of similar size (direct variant repeat [DVR] units). Spacer sequences are unique to the DR region, and copies are not located elsewhere in the chromosome (68). The DR region may contain over 60 DVR units; however, 43 of the spacer units were selected from the spacer sequences of the M. tuberculosis reference strain H37Rv and M. bovis BCG strain P3 and are used in the standard application of spoligotyping to strains of the M. tuberculosis complex (29, 36). The DR region is polymorphic because of the loss (deletion) of single or multiple spacers, and each spoligotype pattern from strains of M. bovis is given an identifier (http://www.Mbovis.org).Several studies of the DR regions in closely related strains of M. tuberculosis have concluded that the evolutionary trend for this region is primarily loss of single DVRs or multiple contiguous DVRs (22, 29, 68); duplication of DVR units or point mutations in spacer sequences were found to be rare. The loss of discrete units observed by Groenen et al. (29) led them to suggest that the mechanism for spacer loss was homologous recombination between repeat units. However, a study by Warren et al. (69) suggested that for strains of M. tuberculosis, insertion of IS6110 sequences into the DR region and recombination between adjacent IS6110 elements were more important mechanisms for the loss of spacer units.The population structure of the M. tuberculosis group of organisms is apparently highly clonal, without any transfer and recombination of chromosomal sequences between strains (15, 30, 60, 61). In a strictly clonal population, the loss by deletion of unique chromosomal DNA cannot be replaced by recombination from another strain, and the deleted region will act as a molecular marker for the strain and all its descendants. Deletions of specific chromosomal regions (regions of difference [RDs] or large sequence polymorphisms) have been very successful at identifying phylogenetic relationships in the M. tuberculosis complex (11, 25, 26, 35, 48, 50, 61, 62, 66). However, because the loss of spoligotype spacer sequences is so frequent, identical spoligotype patterns can occur independently in unrelated lineages (homoplasy), and therefore, the deletion of spoligotype spacers may be an unreliable indicator of phylogenetic relationship (61, 69).In samples of M. bovis strains from Cameroon, Nigeria, Chad, and Mali, spoligotyping was used to show that many of the strains had similar spoligotype patterns that lacked spacer 30, and it has been suggested that strains from these four countries are phylogenetically related (12, 18, 49, 53). We have extended the previous observations of spoligotype similarities between strains from these countries and confirmed the existence of a unique clonal complex of M. bovis, all descended from a single strain in which a specific deletion of chromosomal DNA occurred. We have named this clonal complex of M. bovis strains African 1 (Af1), and we show that this clonal complex is dominant in these four west-central African countries but rare in eastern and southern Africa. Extended genotyping, using variable-number tandem repeats (VNTR), of strains with the most common spoligotype patterns suggests that each of these four west-central African countries has a unique population structure. Evolutionary scenarios that may have led to the present day distribution of the Af1 clonal complex are discussed.  相似文献   

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It is expected that the obligatory human pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis must adapt metabolically to the various nutrients available during its cycle of infection, persistence, and reactivation. Cholesterol, which is an important part of the mammalian cytoplasmic membrane, is a potential energy source. Here, we show that M. tuberculosis grown in medium containing a carbon source other than cholesterol is able to accumulate cholesterol in the free-lipid zone of its cell wall. This cholesterol accumulation decreases the permeability of the cell wall for the primary antituberculosis drug, rifampin, and partially masks the mycobacterial surface antigens. Furthermore, M. tuberculosis was able to grow on mineral medium supplemented with cholesterol as the sole carbon source. Targeted disruption of the Rv3537 (kstD) gene inhibited growth due to inactivation of the cholesterol degradation pathway, as evidenced by accumulation of the intermediate, 9-hydroxy-4-androstene-3,17-dione. Our findings that M. tuberculosis is able to accumulate cholesterol in the presence of alternative nutrients and use it when cholesterol is the sole carbon source in vitro may facilitate future studies into the pathophysiology of this important deadly pathogen.Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis, is a very successful pathogen that infects one-third of the human population (21). Only 10% of primary infected individuals develop active disease during their lifetimes. Tubercle bacilli are able to persist in a dormant state, from which they may reactivate and induce the contagious disease state (13). In asymptomatic hosts, M. tuberculosis exists in reservoirs called granulomas, which are cellular aggregates that restrict bacterial spreading (40). Granulomas are organized collections of mature macrophages that exhibit a certain typical morphology and that arise in response to persistent intracellular pathogens (1, 4). Pathogenic mycobacteria can induce the formation of foamy macrophages filled with lipid-containing bodies; these have been postulated to act as a secure, nutrient-rich reservoir for tubercle bacilli (31). Moreover, M. tuberculosis DNA has been detected in fatty tissues surrounding the kidneys, as well as those of the stomach, lymph nodes, heart, and skin. Tubercle bacilli are able to enter adipocytes, where they accumulate within intracytoplasmic lipid inclusions and survive in a nonreplicating state (26). In vivo, it is expected that M. tuberculosis adapts metabolically to nutrient-poor conditions characterized by glucose deficiency and an abundance of fatty acids (25, 26). The presence of a complex repertoire of lipid metabolism genes in the genome of M. tuberculosis suggests that lipids, including steroids, are important alternative carbon and energy sources for this pathogen (7).One attractive potential alternative nutrient that is readily available in the mammalian host is cholesterol, a major sterol of the plasma membrane. The presence of cholesterol in lipid rafts is required in order for microorganisms to enter the intracellular compartment (14). Studies have shown that cholesterol is essential for the uptake of mycobacteria by macrophages, and it has been found to accumulate at the site of M. tuberculosis entry (2, 12, 30). Moreover, cholesterol depletion overcomes the phagosome maturation block experienced by Mycobacterium avium-infected macrophages (10).It is well known that cholesterol can be utilized by fast-growing, nonpathogenic mycobacteria (5, 20, 22), but it was previously thought that pathogenic mycobacteria might not be able to use cholesterol as a carbon and energy source (3). Recently, however, bioinformatic analysis identified a cassette of cholesterol catabolism genes in actinomycetes, including the M. tuberculosis complex (41). Microarray analysis of Rhodococcus sp. grown in the presence of cholesterol revealed the upregulation of 572 genes, most of which fell within six clearly discernible clusters (41). Most of the identified genes had significant homology to known steroid degradation genes from other organisms and were distributed within a single 51-gene cluster that appears to be very similar to a cluster present in the genome of M. tuberculosis (41). Many of the cholesterol-induced genes had been previously selected by transposon site hybridization analysis of genes that are essential for survival of tubercle bacilli (33) and/or are upregulated in gamma interferon-activated macrophages (37, 42). It was also demonstrated that the M. tuberculosis complex can grow on mineral medium with cholesterol as a primary source of carbon (27, 41). Moreover, the growth of tubercle bacilli on cholesterol was significantly affected by knockout of the mce4 gene, which encodes an ABC transporter responsible for cholesterol uptake (24, 27). Earlier studies had shown that disruption of mce4 attenuated bacterial growth in the spleens of infected animals that had developed adaptive immunity (17, 35).In the present study, we demonstrate for the first time that M. tuberculosis utilizes cholesterol via the 4-androstene-3,17-dione/1,4-androstadiene-3,17-dione pathway (AD/ADD) and that this process requires production of an intact KstD enzyme. We also show that tubercle bacilli growing in medium containing an alternative carbon source can accumulate cholesterol in the free-lipid zone of their cell walls, and this accumulation affects cell wall permeability.  相似文献   

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MfpAMt and QnrB4 are two newly characterized pentapeptide repeat proteins (PRPs) that interact with DNA gyrase. The mfpAMt gene is chromosome borne in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, while qnrB4 is plasmid borne in enterobacteria. We expressed and purified the two PRPs and compared their effects on DNA gyrase, taking into account host specificity, i.e., the effect of MfpAMt on M. tuberculosis gyrase and the effect of QnrB4 on Escherichia coli gyrase. Whereas QnrB4 inhibited E. coli gyrase activity only at concentrations higher than 30 μM, MfpAMt inhibited all catalytic reactions of the M. tuberculosis gyrase described for this enzyme (supercoiling, cleavage, relaxation, and decatenation) with a 50% inhibitory concentration of 2 μM. We showed that the D87 residue in GyrA has a major role in the MfpAMt-gyrase interaction, as D87H and D87G substitutions abolished MfpAMt inhibition of M. tuberculosis gyrase catalytic reactions, while A83S modification did not. Since MfpAMt and QnrB4 have been involved in resistance to fluoroquinolones, we measured the inhibition of the quinolone effect in the presence of each PRP. QnrB4 reversed quinolone inhibition of E. coli gyrase at 0.1 μM as described for other Qnr proteins, but MfpAMt did not modify M. tuberculosis gyrase inhibition by fluoroquinolones. Crossover experiments showed that MfpAMt also inhibited E. coli gyrase function, while QnrB4 did not reverse quinolone inhibition of M. tuberculosis gyrase. In conclusion, our in vitro experiments showed that MfpAMt and QnrB4 exhibit opposite effects on DNA gyrase and that these effects are protein and species specific.The pentapeptide repeat protein (PRP) family includes more than 500 proteins in the prokaryotic and eukaryotic kingdoms (45). PRPs are characterized by the repetition of the pentapeptide repeat motif [S,T,A,V][D,N][L,F][S,T,R][G] (6), which results in a right-handed β-helical structure (8, 17). The functions of the majority of the members of this large and heterogeneous family remain unknown, but three PRPs, McbG (from Escherichia coli), MfpAMt (from Mycobacterium tuberculosis), and Qnr (from Klebsiella pneumoniae and other enterobacteria) were reported to interact with DNA gyrase, at least with the E. coli enzyme (17, 33, 35, 44). McbG was shown to protect E. coli DNA gyrase from the toxic action of microcin B17 (33). Qnr and MfpAMt were involved in resistance to fluoroquinolones, which are synthetic antibacterial agents prescribed worldwide for the treatment of various infectious diseases, including tuberculosis (7).DNA gyrase is an essential ATP-dependent enzyme that transiently cleaves a segment of double-stranded DNA, passes another piece of DNA through the break, and reseals it (12). DNA gyrase is unique in catalyzing the negative supercoiling of DNA in order to facilitate the progression of RNA polymerase. Most eubacteria, such as E. coli, have two type II DNA topoisomerases, i.e., DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV, but a few, such as M. tuberculosis, harbor only DNA gyrase (11).Quinolones target type II topoisomerases, and their activity is measured by the inhibition of supercoiling by gyrase or decatenation by topoisomerase IV and stabilization of complexes composed of topoisomerase covalently linked to cleaved DNA (16). The DNA gyrase active enzyme is a GyrA2GyrB2 heterotetramer. The quinolone-gyrase interaction site in gyrase is thought to be located at the so-called quinolone resistance-determining regions (QRDR) in the A subunit (amino acids 57 to 196 in GyrA) and the B subunit (amino acids 426 to 466 in GyrB), which contain the majority of mutations conferring quinolone resistance (19). The GyrB QRDR is thought to interact with the GyrA QRDR to form a drug-binding pocket (18). Resistance to quinolones is usually due to chromosomal mutations either in the structural genes encoding type II topoisomerases (QRDR) (19, 22) or in regulatory genes producing decreased cell wall permeability or enhancement of efflux pumps (36). The recent emergence of plasmid-borne resistance genes, such as qnr (9, 13, 31, 38, 46), aac(6′)-Ib-cr (32, 39) and qepA (34, 47), renewed interest in quinolone resistance, and especially interest in the new Qnr-based mechanism. Three qnr determinants have been identified so far: qnrA (variants A1 to A6), qnrB (variants B1 to B19), and qnrS (variants S1 and S2) (15, 21, 23, 27). Qnr confers a new mechanism of quinolone resistance by mediating DNA gyrase protection (42): in vitro, QnrA1 and QnrB1 protect E. coli DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV from the inhibitory effect of fluoroquinolones in a concentration-dependent manner (23, 42-44). Although Qnr was shown to bind GyrA and GyrB and compete with DNA binding, the consequences of Qnr binding for enzyme performance are not yet clear.mfpA, a chromosomal gene that encodes a 192-amino-acid PRP, is an intrinsic quinolone resistance determinant of Mycobacterium smegmatis (29). A similar gene, mfpAMt, was found in the M. tuberculosis genome, and MfpAMt shows 67% identity with MfpA. Recent crystallography analysis of MfpAMt showed that its atomic structure displays size, shape, and electrostatic similarity to B-form DNA, and MfpAMt has been suggested to interact with DNA gyrase via DNA mimicry (17). The effect of MfpAMt was studied by testing E. coli DNA gyrase, and MfpAMt showed catalytic inhibition (17, 37), but whether it protects gyrase from quinolones was not assessed. Because the structure and functions of the M. tuberculosis gyrase, as well as its interaction with quinolones, differ from those of the E. coli gyrase (2, 3, 20, 26, 28), we suspected that the PRP-topoisomerase interaction exhibits species specificity, i.e., depends on the proteins issued from the same host.Our objective was to compare the effects of MfpAMt and Qnr on their respective targets, i.e., the effect of MfpAMt on the M. tuberculosis gyrase and the effect of Qnr on the E. coli gyrase, by assessing (i) the catalytic reactions of the enzyme and (ii) the interaction with the DNA gyrase-DNA-fluoroquinolone ternary complex. Among the Qnr proteins, we selected the QnrB4 protein, which is a frequent variant of QnrB and has not yet been purified and studied. We cloned, expressed, and purified the two PRPs, MfpAMt and QnrB4, as recombinant His tag fusion proteins and assessed their functions under the same experimental conditions.  相似文献   

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Mycobacterium abscessus is a rapidly growing mycobacterial species that can be involved in pulmonary and disseminated infections in immunosuppressed or young cystic fibrosis patients. It is an emerging pathogen and has attracted recent attention due to the numerous cases of infection; furthermore, genomic tools have been developed for this species. Nevertheless, the study of this species has until now been limited to spontaneous variants. We report here a comparison of three different mutagenesis systems—the ts-sacB, the phage, and the recombineering systems—and show that there are important differences in their efficiency for the construction of allelic-exchange mutants. We show, using the mmpL4b gene of the glycopeptidolipid pathway as a target, that allelic-exchange mutants can be constructed with a reasonable efficiency (∼7%) using the recombineering system. These observations will facilitate genetic and cellular microbiology experiments involving the construction and use of well-defined mutants to study the virulence determinant of this emerging pathogen.The mycobacterial genus contains plethora of species that are pathogenic for either humans or animals. The most well-known are undoubtedly Mycobacterium leprae, M. tuberculosis, and M. ulcerans, the etiologic agents of human leprosy, tuberculosis, and Buruli ulcer, respectively (47-49). M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis, responsible for Johnes disease in ruminants, is also a serious health concern since it is suspected to be a threat to human via infected milk (9, 10). M. abscessus is an emerging pathogen involved in pulmonary and disseminated infection in young cystic fibrosis patients (26, 36). M. abscessus can cause nosocomial infections of skin and soft tissues in immunosuppressed patients (28, 35). It is also able to cross the blood-brain barrier and to cause meningoencephalitis (42). M. abscessus is phylogenetically related to M. chelonae and, indeed, these species have long been grouped together under the designation of the “M. abscessus-chelonae complex” (6). M. abscessus is a rapid grower that forms colonies in 5 days. Like other mycobacterial species, M. abscessus is equipped with a robust waxy cell wall that, as in other species, probably contributes to virulence (12). The emerging and growing interest in M. abscessus has led to its genome being sequenced (accession no. NC010397) (F. Ripoll et al., unpublished data) and to the development of DNA microarrays (Jean-Yves Coppée, unpublished data).The availability of genomic resources and animal models (32) makes M. abscessus a very attractive system. However, there is no defined mutagenesis system for this species and, to the best of our knowledge, no defined mutants have been constructed thus far. The consequence is that the study of this organism has been restricted to spontaneous variants. Utilization of spontaneous mutants has, nevertheless, allowed the characterization of morphotypically rough isolates that are hypervirulent both in vitro and in vivo (7, 8, 17). These rough isolates are low glycopeptidolipid producers. Glycopeptidolipid is an extractable lipid found at the surface of the bacilli (4, 11, 13). However, its role in the virulence process is currently unknown. The lack of a suitable genetic system is certainly responsible for the rarity of studies on this species (fewer than 500 references in Medline, whereas there are more than 32,000 for M. tuberculosis). Other mycobacterial species, especially M. tuberculosis, have been genetically intractable for many years (15, 18, 24). This has forced researchers to develop dedicated systems for the construction of allelic-exchange mutants. Three major systems have mainly been used thus far in M. tuberculosis and in other mycobacteria: (i) a thermosensitive counterselectable plasmid based on sucrose sensitivity (21-23), (ii) a thermosensitive mycobacteriophage (2) and, more recently, (iii) a mycobacterial recombinase-based system (43, 44). These three systems are effective in M. tuberculosis, M. smegmatis, and other refractory species, including M. avium subsp. avium, and allow straightforward construction of both marked and unmarked mutants.The aim of the present study was to compare the three main mutagenesis systems available for mycobacteria and to determine which system is best adapted to M. abscessus. To this end, we used mmpL4b as a target gene and the three genetic tools described above. The mmpL4b gene is involved in glycopeptidolipid synthesis (29, 40) and is a good model target because its mutation results in a rough phenotype that can be visually distinguished. We show here that there are large differences in efficacy between the three systems and that the mycobacterial recombinase-based system is the most efficient. For an unknown reason, allelic exchange is much less frequent in M. abscessus than in other species, including M. tuberculosis; this complicates the construction of defined mutants. The availability of a suitable genetic system will undoubtedly facilitates the characterization of the virulence determinants in this emerging pathogen.  相似文献   

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Several mycoplasma species feature a membrane protrusion at a cell pole, and unknown mechanisms provide gliding motility in the direction of the pole defined by the protrusion. Mycoplasma gallisepticum, an avian pathogen, is known to form a membrane protrusion composed of bleb and infrableb and to glide. Here, we analyzed the gliding motility of M. gallisepticum cells in detail. They glided in the direction of the bleb at an average speed of 0.4 μm/s and remained attached around the bleb to a glass surface, suggesting that the gliding mechanism is similar to that of a related species, Mycoplasma pneumoniae. Next, to elucidate the cytoskeletal structure of M. gallisepticum, we stripped the envelopes by treatment with Triton X-100 under various conditions and observed the remaining structure by negative-staining transmission electron microscopy. A unique cytoskeletal structure, about 300 nm long and 100 nm wide, was found in the bleb and infrableb. The structure, resembling an asymmetrical dumbbell, is composed of five major parts from the distal end: a cap, a small oval, a rod, a large oval, and a bowl. Sonication likely divided the asymmetrical dumbbell into a core and other structures. The cytoskeletal structures of M. gallisepticum were compared with those of M. pneumoniae in detail, and the possible protein components of these structures were considered.Mycoplasmas are commensal and occasionally pathogenic bacteria that lack a peptidoglycan layer (50). Several species feature a membrane protrusion at a pole; for Mycoplasma mobile, this protrusion is called the head, and for Mycoplasma pneumoniae, it is called the attachment organelle (25, 34-37, 52, 54, 58). These species bind to solid surfaces, such as glass and animal cell surfaces, and exhibit gliding motility in the direction of the protrusion (34-37). This motility is believed to be essential for the mycoplasmas'' pathogenicity (4, 22, 27, 36). Recently, the proteins directly involved in the gliding mechanisms of mycoplasmas were identified and were found to have no similarities to those of known motility systems, including bacterial flagellum, pilus, and slime motility systems (25, 34-37).Mycoplasma gallisepticum is an avian pathogen that causes serious damage to the production of eggs for human consumption (50). The cells are pear-shaped and have a membrane protrusion, consisting of the so-called bleb and infrableb (29), and gliding motility (8, 14, 22). Their putative cytoskeletal structures may maintain this characteristic morphology because M. gallisepticum, like other mycoplasma species, does not have a cell wall (50). In sectioning electron microscopy (EM) studies of M. gallisepticum, an intracellular electron-dense structure in the bleb and infrableb was observed, suggesting the existence of a cytoskeletal structure (7, 24, 29, 37, 58). Recently, the existence of such a structure has been confirmed by scanning EM of the structure remaining after Triton X-100 extraction (13), although the details are still unclear.A human pathogen, M. pneumoniae, has a rod-shaped cytoskeletal structure in the attachment organelle (9, 15, 16, 31, 37, 57). M. gallisepticum is related to M. pneumoniae (63, 64), as represented by 90.3% identity between the 16S rRNA sequences, and it has some open reading frames (ORFs) homologous to the component proteins of the cytoskeletal structures of M. pneumoniae (6, 17, 48). Therefore, the cytoskeletal structures of M. gallisepticum are expected to be similar to those of M. pneumoniae, as scanning EM images also suggest (13).The fastest-gliding species, M. mobile, is more distantly related to M. gallisepticum; it has novel cytoskeletal structures that have been analyzed through negative-staining transmission EM after extraction by Triton X-100 with image averaging (45). This method of transmission EM following Triton X-100 extraction clearly showed a cytoskeletal “jellyfish” structure. In this structure, a solid oval “bell,” about 235 nm wide and 155 nm long, is filled with a 12-nm hexagonal lattice. Connected to this bell structure are dozens of flexible “tentacles” that are covered with particles 20 nm in diameter at intervals of about 30 nm. The particles appear to have 180° rotational symmetry and a dimple at the center. The involvement of this cytoskeletal structure in the gliding mechanism was suggested by its cellular localization and by analyses of mutants lacking proteins essential for gliding.In the present study, we applied this method to M. gallisepticum and analyzed its unique cytoskeletal structure, and we then compared it with that of M. pneumoniae.  相似文献   

17.
Analysis of Lyme borreliosis (LB) spirochetes, using a novel multilocus sequence analysis scheme, revealed that OspA serotype 4 strains (a rodent-associated ecotype) of Borrelia garinii were sufficiently genetically distinct from bird-associated B. garinii strains to deserve species status. We suggest that OspA serotype 4 strains be raised to species status and named Borrelia bavariensis sp. nov. The rooted phylogenetic trees provide novel insights into the evolutionary history of LB spirochetes.Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) have been shown to be powerful and pragmatic molecular methods for typing large numbers of microbial strains for population genetics studies, delineation of species, and assignment of strains to defined bacterial species (4, 13, 27, 40, 44). To date, MLST/MLSA schemes have been applied only to a few vector-borne microbial populations (1, 6, 30, 37, 40, 41, 47).Lyme borreliosis (LB) spirochetes comprise a diverse group of zoonotic bacteria which are transmitted among vertebrate hosts by ixodid (hard) ticks. The most common agents of human LB are Borrelia burgdorferi (sensu stricto), Borrelia afzelii, Borrelia garinii, Borrelia lusitaniae, and Borrelia spielmanii (7, 8, 12, 35). To date, 15 species have been named within the group of LB spirochetes (6, 31, 32, 37, 38, 41). While several of these LB species have been delineated using whole DNA-DNA hybridization (3, 20, 33), most ecological or epidemiological studies have been using single loci (5, 9-11, 29, 34, 36, 38, 42, 51, 53). Although some of these loci have been convenient for species assignment of strains or to address particular epidemiological questions, they may be unsuitable to resolve evolutionary relationships among LB species, because it is not possible to define any outgroup. For example, both the 5S-23S intergenic spacer (5S-23S IGS) and the gene encoding the outer surface protein A (ospA) are present only in LB spirochete genomes (36, 43). The advantage of using appropriate housekeeping genes of LB group spirochetes is that phylogenetic trees can be rooted with sequences of relapsing fever spirochetes. This renders the data amenable to detailed evolutionary studies of LB spirochetes.LB group spirochetes differ remarkably in their patterns and levels of host association, which are likely to affect their population structures (22, 24, 46, 48). Of the three main Eurasian Borrelia species, B. afzelii is adapted to rodents, whereas B. valaisiana and most strains of B. garinii are maintained by birds (12, 15, 16, 23, 26, 45). However, B. garinii OspA serotype 4 strains in Europe have been shown to be transmitted by rodents (17, 18) and, therefore, constitute a distinct ecotype within B. garinii. These strains have also been associated with high pathogenicity in humans, and their finer-scale geographical distribution seems highly focal (10, 34, 52, 53).In this study, we analyzed the intra- and interspecific phylogenetic relationships of B. burgdorferi, B. afzelii, B. garinii, B. valaisiana, B. lusitaniae, B. bissettii, and B. spielmanii by means of a novel MLSA scheme based on chromosomal housekeeping genes (30, 48).  相似文献   

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