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Azotobacter vinelandii ArrF is an iron-responsive small RNA that is under negative control of Ferric uptake regulator protein. A. vinelandiiarrF mutant that had a deletion of the entire arrF gene was known to overproduce poly-β-hydroxybutyrate (PHB). Proteins differentially expressed in the mutant were identified by gel-based proteomics and confirmed by real-time RT-PCR. 6-Phosphogluconolactonase and E1 component of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, which leads to the production of NADPH and acetyl-CoA, were upregulated, while proteins in the tricarboxylic acid cycle that consumes acetyl-CoA were downregulated. Heat-shock proteins such as HSP20 and GroEL were highly overexpressed in the mutant. Antioxidant proteins such as Fe-containing superoxide dismutase (FeSOD), a putative oxidoreductase, alkyl hydroperoxide reductase, flavorprotein WrbA, and cysteine synthase were also overexpressed in the ∆arrF mutant, indicating that the PHB accumulation is stressful to the cells. Upregulated in the ∆arrF mutant were acetyl-CoA carboxylase, flagellin, and adenylate kinase, though the reasons for their overexpression are unclear. Among genes upregulated in the mutant, sodB coding for FeSOD and phbF encoding PHB synthesis regulator PhbF were negatively regulated by small RNA ArrF probably in an antisense mechanism. The deletion of arrF gene, therefore, would increase PhbF and FeSOD levels, which favors PHB synthesis in the mutant. On the other hand, glutamate synthetase, elongation factor-Tu, iron ABC transporter, and major outer membrane porin OprF were downregulated in the ∆arrF mutant. Based on the results, it is concluded that multiple factors including the direct effect of small RNA ArrF might be responsible for the PHB overproduction in the mutant.  相似文献   

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Halomonas bluephagenesis, a robust and contamination-resistant microorganism has been developed as a chassis for “Next Generation Industrial Biotechnology”. The non-model H. bluephagenesis requires efficient tools to fine-tune its metabolic fluxes for enhanced production phenotypes. Here we report a highly efficient gene expression regulation system (PrrF1-2-HfqPa) in H. bluephagenesis, small regulatory RNA (sRNA) PrrF1 scaffold from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and a target-binding sequence that downregulate gene expression, and its cognate P. aeruginosa Hfq (HfqPa), recruited by the scaffold to facilitate the hybridization of sRNA and the target mRNA. The PrrF1-2-HfqPa system targeting prpC in H. bluephagenesis helps increase 3-hydroxyvalerate fraction in poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate) to 21 mol% compared to 3.1 mol% of the control. This sRNA system repressed phaP1 and minD simultaneously, resulting in large polyhydroxybutyrate granules. Further, an sRNA library targeting 30 genes was employed for large-scale target identification to increase mevalonate production. This work expands the study on using an sRNA system not based on Escherichia coli MicC/SgrS-Hfq to repress gene expression, providing a framework to exploit new powerful genome engineering tools based on other sRNAs.  相似文献   

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Summary In Escherichia coli the iron uptake systems are regulated by the fur gene product. The synthesis of the outer membrane proteins fiu, fepA, fecA, fhuA, fhuE and cir is derepressed at low iron concentrations in the medium or constitutive in a fur mutant. The fur gene region cloned into pACYC184 was analysed by restriction analysis, Tn1000 mutagenesis and complementation studies. The presence of fur + plasmids repressed synthesis of the proteins fepA, fecA, fhuE and cir in a chromosomal fur mutant. More quantitatively, the repression to wild-type levels was shown with lac fusions to the genes fiu, fepA and cir. In minicells an 18,000 dalton protein was identified as the fur gene product. Correlated with the fur protein a slightly smaller protein, possibly a degradation product, was observed. The gene fur was mapped on the E. coli chromosome near nagA at about 15.5 min.  相似文献   

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In several Gram-negative pathogens the fur (ferric uptake regulator) gene product controls the expression of many genes involved in iron uptake and virulence. To facilitate the study of iron-regulated gene expression in Bordetella pertussis, we cloned the fur gene from this organism. The B. pertussis fur gene product was 54% identical to the Escherichia coli Fur and complemented two E. coli fur mutants. As with the E. coli fur gene, sequences upstream of the B. pertussis fur were homologous to the consensus Fur-binding site and to the consensus catabolite activator protein binding site.  相似文献   

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Small RNAs (sRNAs) exert important functions in pseudomonads. Classical sRNAs comprise the 4.5S, 6S, 10Sa and 10Sb RNAs, which are known in enteric bacteria as part of the signal recognition particle, a regulatory component of RNA polymerase, transfer–messenger RNA (tmRNA) and the RNA component of RNase P, respectively. Their homologues in pseudomonads are presumed to have analogous functions. Other sRNAs of pseudomonads generally have little or no sequence similarity with sRNAs of enteric bacteria. Numerous sRNAs repress or activate the translation of target mRNAs by a base-pairing mechanism. Examples of this group in Pseudomonas aeruginosa are the iron-repressible PrrF1 and PrrF2 sRNAs, which repress the translation of genes encoding iron-containing proteins, and PhrS, an anaerobically inducible sRNA, which activates the expression of PqsR, a regulator of the Pseudomonas quinolone signal. Other sRNAs sequester RNA-binding proteins that act as translational repressors. Examples of this group in P. aeruginosa include RsmY and RsmZ, which are central regulatory elements in the GacS/GacA signal transduction pathway, and CrcZ, which is a key regulator in the CbrA/CbrB signal transduction pathway. These pathways largely control the extracellular activities (including virulence traits) and the selection of the energetically most favourable carbon sources, respectively, in pseudomonads.  相似文献   

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The 12 histidine and four cysteine residues of the Fur repressor of Escherichia coli were changed, respectively, to leucine and serine by site-directed mutagenesis of the fur gene. The affects of these mutations were measured in vivo by ligation of the mutated genes to a wild-type fur promoter followed by measurement of the ability of these plasmids to regulate expression of a lacZ fusion in the aerobactin operon. In vitro affects were assayed by insertion of the mutated genes in the expression vector pMON2064 attended by isolation of the altered Fur proteins and appraisal of their capacity to bind to operator DNA. The results suggest that cysteine residues at positions 92 and 95 are important for the activity of the Fur protein.  相似文献   

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Escherichia coli strains harboringtrans-acting mutations affecting the expression of Mn-superoxide dismutase (SOD) gene (sodA) were used to studysodA regulation. Complementation studies revealed that eitherarc (aerobic respiratory control) orfur (ferric uptake regulation) loci independently complemented anaerobic expression of asodA::lacZ protein fusion in one mutant strain (UV16). This mutant exhibited phenotypes (i.e., elevated outer membrane proteins, enzyme activity, and dye sensitivity) typical offur andarc mutants. When these mutations were introduced into an otherwise wild-type background, anaerobicsodA expression occurred only when botharc andfur mutations were present simultaneously, suggesting cooperative roles of Fur and Arc insodA repression. The reconstructedfur arcA andfur arcB double mutants were still inducible by iron chelators, suggesting the possible involvement of another iron-containing repressor protein. A second independent mutant strain harboring atrans-acting regulatory mutation (UV14) was only partially complemented by multicopy plasmids carryingfur + orarc + genes, implicating other genetic elements insodA regulation.  相似文献   

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In this study, a genomic library of Magnetospirillum gryphiswaldense MSR-1 strain was constructed and a fur-like gene (encoding Fur protein, ferric uptake regulator) was isolated and sequenced. This gene consisted of 420 bp and encoded 139 amino acid residues. To investigate the function of this gene in MSR-1, a fur mutant was generated by double crossover with a kanamycin cassette inserted into its coding region. Iron uptake and magnetosome formation were dramatically inhibited by disruption of fur. Iron content analysis of the fur mutant indicated that it contained approximately 0.037% by dry weight, which was at least 10-fold less than that observed in the wild type. Electron microscopy revealed the absence of a magnetosome in the fur mutant, although it was able to tolerate 1 mM H2O2 at 10-fold higher level than wild-type. These data suggest that Fur protein may possess a novel function in magnetic bacteria. Published in Russian in Biokhimiya, 2007, Vol. 72, No. 11, pp. 1532–1539.  相似文献   

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Cystic fibrosis (CF) patients suffer from chronic bacterial lung infections, most notably by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which persists for decades in the lungs and undergoes extensive evolution. P. aeruginosa requires iron for virulence and uses the fluorescent siderophore pyoverdine to scavenge and solubilize ferric iron during acute infections. Pyoverdine mutants accumulate in the lungs of some CF patients, however, suggesting that the heme and ferrous iron acquisition pathways of P. aeruginosa are more important in this environment. Here, we sought to determine how evolution of P. aeruginosa in the CF lung affects iron acquisition and regulatory pathways through the use of longitudinal CF isolates. These analyses demonstrated a significant reduction of siderophore production during the course of CF lung infection in nearly all strains tested. Mass spectrometry analysis of one of these strains showed that the later CF isolate has streamlined the metabolic flux of extracellular heme through the HemO heme oxygenase, resulting in more-efficient heme utilization. Moreover, gene expression analysis shows that iron regulation via the PrrF small RNAs (sRNAs) is enhanced in the later CF isolate. Finally, analysis of P. aeruginosa gene expression in the lungs of various CF patients demonstrates that both PrrF and HemO are consistently expressed in the CF lung environment. Combined, these results suggest that heme is a critical source of iron during prolonged infection of the CF lung and that changes in iron and heme regulatory pathways play a crucial role in adaptation of P. aeruginosa to this ever-changing host environment.  相似文献   

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