首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
It was found in a previous study that Mycobacterium tuberculosis protein tyrosine phosphatase ptpAt promoter is a highly active promoter in slow-growing species of mycobacteria, such as M. tuberculosis and M. bovis BCG, but inert in fast-growing mycobacterial species, such as M. smegmatis. This difference is presumed to be due to the differences between sigma factors systems of slow-growing pathogenic mycobacteria and the fast-growing saprophyte M. smegmatis. Therefore, we constructed a series of plasmids, named pOLYG-13x, which can express various M. tuberculosis sigma factors and also contain a P(ptpAt)-gfp reporter gene construct. By inducing different sigma factor genes of M. tuberculosis in M. smegmatis, we were able to explore the influences of various sigma factors on the expression efficiency of the ptpAt promoter. The result show that of the 10 sigma factors evaluated, only sigF and sigL were able to weakly drive the ptpAt promoter in M. smegmatis and other sigma factors were unable to drive the promoter.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The isolation of elements driving high-level expression of foreign genes in mycobacteria would significantly aid characterization of mycobacterial antigens and recombinant vaccine development. Mycobacterium smegmatis is a widely employed host for recombinant mycobacterial gene expression. This report describes the identification of strong promoter elements of M. smegmatis. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting was employed to isolate DNA fragments permitting high-level expression of the Aequorea victoria green fluorescent protein within recombinant M. smegmatis. Ten postulated M. smegmatis promoters were identified which showed activity two to six times that of the strong beta-lactamase promoter of Mycobacterium fortuitum. The utility of one of these promoters for the over-expression of foreign genes in mycobacteria was demonstrated by the efficient purification of the Mycobacterium leprae 35-kDa antigen from recombinant M. smegmatis.  相似文献   

4.
5.
tRNA genes in mycobacteria: organization and molecular cloning.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
DNAs from nine mycobacteria cleaved with restriction endonucleases were hybridized with cDNA probes synthesized to tRNAs from Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium smegmatis. The tRNA genes are conserved, but their gross genomic organization has diverged in six of the nine species examined. Organisms of the M. tuberculosis H37Ra and H37Rv-M. bovis BCG complex appeared to have identical tRNA gene organization and were indistinguishable from each other. M. tuberculosis and M. smegmatis tRNA-derived cDNA probes hybridized differentially to tRNA-coding DNA segments in five of the species examined, suggesting the existence of qualitatively different tRNA pools in these slow- and fast-growing species. Mycobacterial DNAs hybridized with cDNA synthesized to 23S plus 16S rRNAs from Escherichia coli, and the data suggested that the tRNA genes map close to the rRNA genes. A gene bank of M. tuberculosis H37Rv DNA was constructed, and a recombinant plasmid, pSB2, coding for tRNA(s) and rRNA(s) was partially characterized. Plasmid pSB2 recognized a SalI restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) in M. tuberculosis H37Rv and H37Ra; however, the RFLP is not linked to the tRNA-coding region. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of an RFLP which distinguishes the pathogenic strain M. tuberculosis H37Rv from its avirulent derivative H37Ra.  相似文献   

6.
Song H  Niederweis M 《Gene》2007,399(2):112-119
Mycobacteria contain a large number of redundant genes whose functions are difficult to analyze in mutants because there are only two efficient antibiotic resistance genes available for allelic exchange experiments. Sequence-specific recombinbases such as the Flp recombinase can be used to excise resistance markers. Expression of the flp(e) gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is functional for this purpose in fast-growing Mycobacterium smegmatis but not in slow-growing mycobacteria such as M. bovis BCG or M. tuberculosis. We synthesized the flp(m) gene by adapting the codon usage to that preferred by M. tuberculosis. This increased the G+C content from 38% to 61%. Using the synthetic flp(m) gene, the frequency of removal of FRT-hyg-FRT cassette from the chromosome by the Flp recombinase was increased by more than 100-fold in M. smegmatis. In addition, 40% of all clones of M. bovis BCG had lost the hyg resistance cassette after transient expression of the flp(m) gene. Sequencing of the chromosomal DNA showed that excision of the FRT-hyg-FRT cassette by Flp was specific. These results show that the flp(m) encoded Flp recombinase is not only an improved genetic tool for M. smegmatis, but can also be used in slow growing mycobacteria such as M. tuberculosis for constructing unmarked mutations. Other more sophisticated applications in mycobacterial genetics would also profit from the improved Flp/FRT system.  相似文献   

7.
Lama A  Pawaria S  Dikshit KL 《FEBS letters》2006,580(17):4031-4041
Unraveling of microbial genome data has indicated that two distantly related truncated hemoglobins (trHbs), HbN and HbO, might occur in many species of slow-growing pathogenic mycobacteria. Involvement of HbN in bacterial defense against NO toxicity and nitrosative stress has been proposed. A gene, encoding a putative HbN homolog with conserved features of typical trHbs, has been identified within the genome sequence of fast-growing mycobacterium, Mycobacterium smegmatis. Sequence analysis of M. smegmatis HbN indicated that it is relatively smaller in size and lacks N-terminal pre-A region, carrying 12-residue polar sequence motif that is present in HbN of M. tuberculosis. HbN encoding gene of M. smegmatis was expressed in E. coli as a 12.8kD homodimeric heme protein that binds oxygen reversibly with high affinity (P50 approximately 0.081 mm Hg) and autooxidizes faster than M. tuberculosis HbN. The circular dichroism spectra indicate that HbN of M. smegmatis and M. tuberculosis are structurally similar. Interestingly, an hmp mutant of E. coli, unable to metabolize nitric oxide, exhibited very low NO uptake activity in the presence of M. smegmatis HbN as compared to HbN of M. tuberculosis. On the basis of cellular heme content, specific nitric oxide dioxygenase (NOD) activity of M. smegmatis HbN was nearly one-third of that from M. tuberculosis. Additionally, the hmp mutant of E. coli, carrying M. smegmatis HbN, exhibited nearly 10-fold lower cell survival under nitrosative stress and nitrite derived reactive nitrogen species as compared to the isogenic strain harboring HbN of M. tuberculosis. Taken together, these results suggest that NO metabolizing activity and protection provided by M. smegmatis HbN against toxicity of NO and reactive nitrogen is significantly lower than HbN of M. tuberculosis. The lower efficiency of M. smegmatis HbN for NO detoxification as compared to M. tuberculosis HbN might be related to different level of NO exposure and nitrosative stress faced by these mycobacteria during their cellular metabolism.  相似文献   

8.
Reporter systems efficient at monitoring temporal gene expression in slow-growing mycobacteria would significantly aid the characterization of gene expression in specific environments. Bacterial luciferase is a reporter that has not been widely used to study gene expression in mycobacteria. This report describes the determination of the degradation of bacterial luciferase in Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Ra and its utility as a reporter of temporal gene expression in this slow-growing mycobacterium. The inducible/repressible alanine dehydrogenase promoter of M. tuberculosis H37Rv was used to track the decay kinetics of Vibrio harveyi luciferase in both mid-log phase and stationary phase grown M. tuberculosis H37Ra, which proved to be highly similar during both phases of growth. The luciferase reporter was then used to detect changes in expression from the heat-shock promoter, phsp60, of M. bovis BCG during M. tuberculosis H37Ra growth in culture. Quantitative real-time PCR analysis of groEL2, the hsp60 homologue in M. tuberculosis, displayed a similar pattern of expression to phsp60-driven luciferase. These results strongly suggest that the luciferase reporter can be used to monitor temporal changes in gene expression in M. tuberculosis and may serve as a novel system to examine gene expression under specific conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Brown AC  Parish T 《Plasmid》2006,55(1):81-86
The Escherichia coli-mycobacterium shuttle vector pJAM2 has been used to inducibly express genes in mycobacteria. The vector carries the promoter region from the highly inducible acetamidase gene of Mycobacterium smegmatis which is used to drive expression of heterologous genes. We used pJAM2 to over-express the Mycobacterium tuberculosis gene Rv2868c, a homologue of gcpE. In M. smegmatis the plasmid was stable, but the promoter region was readily deleted when the parental vector or recombinant plasmids were transformed into M. tuberculosis. We mapped the deletion by sequencing and found that it encompassed the entire acetamidase promoter and adjacent sequence totalling approximately 7.3 kb and occurred very soon after introduction into M. tuberculosis. This is the first report of instability of a vector carrying the acetamidase promoter in M. tuberculosis.  相似文献   

10.
Recent development of vectors and methodologies to introduce recombinant DNA into members of the genus Mycobacterium has provided new approaches for investigating these important bacteria. While most pathogenic mycobacteria are slow-growing, Mycobacterium smegmatis is a fast-growing, non-pathogenic species that has been used for many years as a host for mycobacteriophage propagation and, recently, as a host for the introduction of recombinant DNA. Its use as a cloning host for the analysis of mycobacterial genes has been limited by its inability to be efficiently transformed with plasmid vectors. This work describes the isolation and characterization of mutants of M. smegmatis that can be transformed, using electroporation, at efficiencies 10(4) to 10(5) times greater than those of the parent strain, yielding more than 10(5) transformants per microgram of plasmid DNA. The mutations conferring this efficient plasmid transformation (Ept) phenotype do not affect phage transfection or the integration of DNA into the M. smegmatis chromosome, but seem to be specific for plasmid transformation. Such Ept mutants have been used to characterize plasmid DNA sequences essential for replication of the Mycobacterium fortuitum plasmid pAL5000 in mycobacteria by permitting the transformation of a library of hybrid plasmid constructs. Efficient plasmid transformation of M. smegmatis will facilitate the analysis of mycobacterial gene function, expression and replication and thus aid in the development of BCG as a multivalent recombinant vaccine vector and in the genetic analysis of the virulence determinants of pathogenic mycobacteria.  相似文献   

11.
Mycobacterium marinum , like Mycobacterium tuberculosis , is a slow-growing pathogenic mycobacteria that is able to survive and replicate in macrophages. Using the promoter-capture vector pFPV27, we have constructed a library of 200–1000 bp fragments of M. marinum genomic DNA inserted upstream of a promoterless green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene. Only those plasmids that contain an active promoter will express GFP. Macrophages were infected with this fusion library, and phagosomes containing fluorescent bacteria were isolated. Promoter constructs that were more active intracellularly were isolated with a fluorescence-activated cell sorter, and inserts were partially sequenced. The promoter fusions expressed intracellularly exhibited homology to mycobacterial genes encoding, among others, membrane proteins and biosynthetic enzymes. Intracellular expression of GFP was 2–20 times that of the same clones grown in media. Several promoter constructs were transformed into Mycobacterium smegmatis , Mycobacterium bovis BCG and Mycobacterium tuberculosis . These constructs were positive for GFP expression in all mycobacterial strains tested. Sorting fluorescent bacteria in phagosomes circumvents the problem of isolating a single clone from macrophages, which may contain a mixed bacterial population. This method has enabled us to isolate 12 M. marinum clones that contain promoter constructs differentially expressed in the macrophage.  相似文献   

12.
Until recently, genetic analysis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis, was hindered by a lack of methods for gene disruptions and allelic exchange. Several groups have described different methods for disrupting genes marked with antibiotic resistance determinants in the slow-growing organisms Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) and M. tuberculosis. In this study, we described the first report of using a mycobacterial suicidal plasmid bearing the counterselectable marker sacB for the allelic exchange of unmarked deletion mutations in the chromosomes of two substrains of M. bovis BCG and M. tuberculosis H37Rv. In addition, our comparison of the recombination frequencies in these two slow-growing species and that of the fast-growing organism Mycobacterium smegmatis suggests that the homologous recombination machinery of the three species is equally efficient. The mutants constructed here have deletions in the lysA gene, encoding meso-diaminopimelate decarboxylase, an enzyme catalyzing the last step in lysine biosynthesis. We observed striking differences in the lysine auxotrophic phenotypes of these three species of mycobacteria. The M. smegmatis mutant can grow on lysine-supplemented defined medium or complex rich medium, while the BCG mutants grow only on lysine-supplemented defined medium and are unable to form colonies on complex rich medium. The M. tuberculosis lysine auxotroph requires 25-fold more lysine on defined medium than do the other mutants and is dependent upon the detergent Tween 80. The mutants described in this work are potential vaccine candidates and can also be used for studies of cell wall biosynthesis and amino acid metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
We have previously reported the isolation and characterization of a functional initiator tRNA gene,metA, and a second initiator tRNA-like sequence,metB, fromMycobacterium tuberculosis. Here we describe the fine mapping of the initiator tRNA gene locus of the avirulent (H37Ra) and virulent (H37Rv) strains ofM. tuberculosis. The genomic blot analyses show that the 1.7 kb (harbouringmetE) and the 6.0 kb BamHI (harbouringmetA) fragments are linked. Further, sequencing of a portion of the 6.0kb fragment, in conjunction with the sequence of the 1.7 kb fragment confirmed the presence of an IS6110 element in the vicinity ofmetB. The IS element is flanked by inverted (28 bp, with 3 contiguous mismatches in the middle) and direct (3 bp) repeats considered to be the hallmarks of IS6110 integration sites. The organization of the initiator tRNA gene locus is identical in both the H37Ra and H37Rv strains and they carry a single copy of the functional initiator tRNA gene. Interestingly, the fast growingMycobacterium smegmatis also bears a single initiator tRNA gene. This finding is significant in view of the qualitative differences in total tRNA pools and the copy number of rRNA genes in the fast- and slow-growing mycobacteria. Finally, we discuss hypotheses related to the origin ofmetB inM. tuberculosis.  相似文献   

14.
D-Cycloserine is an effective second-line drug against Mycobacterium avium and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. To analyze the genetic determinants of D-cycloserine resistance in mycobacteria, a library of a resistant Mycobacterium smegmatis mutant was constructed. A resistant clone harboring a recombinant plasmid with a 3.1-kb insert that contained the glutamate decarboxylase (gadA) and D-alanine racemase (alrA) genes was identified. Subcloning experiments demonstrated that alrA was necessary and sufficient to confer a D-cycloserine resistance phenotype. The D-alanine racemase activities of wild-type and recombinant M. smegmatis strains were inhibited by D-cycloserine in a concentration-dependent manner. The D-cycloserine resistance phenotype in the recombinant clone was due to the overexpression of the wild-type alrA gene in a multicopy vector. Analysis of a spontaneous resistant mutant also demonstrated overproduction of wild-type AlrA enzyme. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the overproducing mutant revealed a single transversion (G-->T) at the alrA promoter, which resulted in elevated beta-galactosidase reporter gene expression. Furthermore, transformants of Mycobacterium intracellulare and Mycobacterium bovis BCG carrying the M. smegmatis wild-type alrA gene in a multicopy vector were resistant to D-cycloserine, suggesting that AlrA overproduction is a potential mechanism of D-cycloserine resistance in clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis and other pathogenic mycobacteria. In conclusion, these results show that one of the mechanisms of D-cycloserine resistance in M. smegmatis involves the overexpression of the alrA gene due to a promoter-up mutation.  相似文献   

15.
A number of essential genes have been identified in mycobacteria, but methods to study these genes have not been developed, leaving us unable to determine the function or biology of the genes. We investigated the use of a tetracycline-inducible expression system in Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium smegmatis. Using a reporter gene which encodes an unstable variant of GFP, we showed that tetracycline-inducible expression occurred in M. smegmatis and that expression levels were titratable to some extent by varying the concentration of tetracycline. The removal of tetracycline led to cessation of GFP expression, and we showed that this was a controllable on/off switch for fluorescence upon addition and removal of the antibiotic inducer. The system also functioned in M. tuberculosis, giving inducible expression of the reporter gene. We used homologous recombination to construct a strain of M. tuberculosis that expressed the only copy of the tryptophan biosynthetic enzyme, TrpD, from the tetracycline-inducible promoter. This strain was conditionally auxotrophic, showing auxotrophy only in the absence of tetracycline, confirming that trpD was tightly controlled by the foreign promoter. This is the first demonstration of the use of an inducible promoter to generate a conditional auxotroph of M. tuberculosis. The ability to tightly regulate genes now gives us the possibility to define the functions of essential genes by switching them off under defined conditions and paves the way for in vivo studies.  相似文献   

16.
We present a comprehensive analysis of carbohydrate uptake systems of the soil bacterium Mycobacterium smegmatis and the human pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Our results show that M. smegmatis has 28 putative carbohydrate transporters. The majority of sugar transport systems (19/28) in M. smegmatis belong to the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter family. In contrast to previous reports, we identified genes encoding all components of the phosphotransferase system (PTS), including permeases for fructose, glucose, and dihydroxyacetone, in M. smegmatis. It is anticipated that the PTS of M. smegmatis plays an important role in the global control of carbon metabolism similar to those of other bacteria. M. smegmatis further possesses one putative glycerol facilitator of the major intrinsic protein family, four sugar permeases of the major facilitator superfamily, one of which was assigned as a glucose transporter, and one galactose permease of the sodium solute superfamily. Our predictions were validated by gene expression, growth, and sugar transport analyses. Strikingly, we detected only five sugar permeases in the slow-growing species M. tuberculosis, two of which occur in M. smegmatis. Genes for a PTS are missing in M. tuberculosis. Our analysis thus brings the diversity of carbohydrate uptake systems of fast- and a slow-growing mycobacteria to light, which reflects the lifestyles of M. smegmatis and M. tuberculosis in their natural habitats, the soil and the human body, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis, produces a heparin-binding haemagglutinin adhesin (HBHA), which is involved in its epithelial adherence. To ascertain whether HBHA is also present in fast-growing mycobacteria, Mycobacterium smegmatis was studied using anti-HBHA monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). A cross-reactive protein was detected by immunoblotting of M. smegmatis whole-cell lysates. However, the M. tuberculosis HBHA-encoding gene failed to hybridize with M. smegmatis chromosomal DNA in Southern blot analyses. The M. smegmatis protein recognized by the anti-HBHA mAbs was purified by heparin-Sepharose chromatography, and its amino-terminal sequence was found to be identical to that of the previously described histone-like protein, indicating that M. smegmatis does not produce HBHA. Biochemical analysis of the M. smegmatis histone-like protein shows that it is glycosylated like HBHA. Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated that the M. smegmatis protein is present on the mycobacterial surface, a cellular localization inconsistent with a histone-like function, but compatible with an adhesin activity. In vitro protein interaction assays showed that this glycoprotein binds to laminin, a major component of basement membranes. Therefore, the protein was called M. smegmatis laminin-binding protein (MS-LBP). MS-LBP does not appear to be involved in adherence in the absence of laminin but is responsible for the laminin-mediated mycobacterial adherence to human pneumocytes and macrophages. Homologous laminin-binding adhesins are also produced by virulent mycobacteria such as M. tuberculosis and Mycobacterium leprae, suggesting that this adherence mechanism may contribute to the pathogenesis of mycobacterial diseases.  相似文献   

18.
Knipfer N  Seth A  Roudiak SG  Shrader TE 《Gene》1999,231(1-2):95-104
We report here that the existence of the potentially broad substrate specificity protease Lon (also called La), is evolutionarily discontinuous within the order Actinomycetales. Lon homologues were identified in the fast-growing species Mycobacterium smegmatis, and the slow-growing species Micobacterium avium and Mycobacterium intracellulare. However, Lon homologues were not detected in the slow-growing species Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mycobacterium bovis, or Mycobacterium leprae; or in the non-mycobacterial Actinomycetale Corynebacterium glutamica. To characterize the function of the Lon protease within the Actinomycetales, a viable M. smegmatis Deltalon strain was constructed, demonstrating that lon is not essential under certain conditions. Surprisingly, lon was also dispensable in M. smegmatis cells already lacking intact 20S proteasome alpha- and beta-subunit genes (called prcA and prcB, respectively). Creation of the later double deletion strain (prcBA::kan Deltalon) necessitated use of a novel gene deletion strategy that does not require an antibiotic resistance marker. The M. smegmatis prcBA::kan Deltalon double mutants displayed wild type (wt) growth rates and wt stress tolerances. In addition, the M. smegmatis prcBA::kan Deltalon double mutants degraded at wt rates the broad spectrum of truncated proteins induced by treating cells with puromycin. This later result was in sharp contrast to those in Escherichia coli, where either lon or hslUV single mutants are strongly impaired in their degradation of puromycyl peptides (hslV is a prcB homologue). Overall these data suggested that mycobacterial species contain additional ATP-dependent proteases that have broad substrate specificity. Consistent with this suggestion, M. smegmatis and M. tuberculosis each contain at least one homologue of ClpP, the proteolytic subunit common to the ClpAP and ClpXP proteases.  相似文献   

19.
The genus Mycobacterium comprises clinically important pathogens such as M. tuberculosis , which has re-emerged as a major cause of morbidity and mortality world-wide especially with the emergence of multidrug-resistant strains. The use of fast-growing species such as Mycobacterium smegmatis has allowed important advances to be made in the field of mycobacterial genetics and in the study of the mechanisms of resistance in mycobacteria. The isolation of an aminoglycoside-resistance gene from Mycobacterium fortuitum has recently been described. The aac(2 ' )-Ib gene is chromosomally encoded and is present in all isolates of M. fortuitum . The presence of this gene in other mycobacterial species is studied here and genes homologous to that of M. fortuitum have been found in all mycobacterial species studied. In this report, the cloning of the aac(2 ' )-Ic gene from M. tuberculosis H37Rv and the aac(2 ' )-Id gene from M. smegmatis mc2155 is described. Southern blot hybridizations have shown that both genes are present in all strains of this species studied to date. In addition, the putative aac(2 ' )-Ie gene has been located in a recent release of the Mycobacterium leprae genome. The expression of the aac(2 ' )-Ic and aac(2 ' )-Id genes has been studied in M. smegmatis and only aac(2 ' )-Id is correlated with aminoglycoside resistance. In order to elucidate the role of the aminoglycoside 2'- N -acetyltransferase genes in mycobacteria and to determine whether they are silent resistance genes or whether they have a secondary role in mycobacterial metabolism, the aac(2 ' )-Id gene from M. smegmatis has been disrupted in the chromosome of M. smegmatis mc2155. The disruptant shows an increase in aminoglycoside susceptibility along with a slight increase in the susceptibility to lysozyme.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号