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1.
The molecular basis for differences in germinant recognition of Bacillus megaterium QM B1551 spores containing the GerVB and/or GerUB receptor proteins has been examined by site-directed mutagenesis and the construction of cross-homologue chimeras. Focusing on nonconserved residues predicted to reside in transmembrane domains 9 and 10, we demonstrate that GerVB residues Ser319 and Leu345 are of particular importance in defining the specificity and apparent affinity of the receptor for germinants. Kinetic analyses of mutants with different amino acid substitutions at these positions indicate that Ser319 and Leu345 are not involved directly in the binding of germinants, but probably reside in regions of the receptor where structural perturbations can affect the conformation of, or access to, germinant binding sites. Position 345 is also shown to be of importance in GerUB, where the F345A mutation severely impairs receptor function. Functionality is restored in the GerUB Ala345 background by substituting putative outer-loop residues adjacent to TM10 for the corresponding residues in GerVB, indicating that a degree of structural coordination between these regions is important to receptor function.  相似文献   

2.
The molecular basis for the recognition of glucose as a germinant molecule by spores of Bacillus megaterium QM B1551 has been examined. A chromosome-located locus (BMQ_1820, renamed gerWB) is shown to encode a receptor B-protein subunit that interacts with the GerUA and GerUC proteins to form a receptor that is cognate for both glucose and leucine. GerWB represents the third receptor B protein that binds to glucose in this strain. Site-directed mutagenesis (SDM) experiments conducted on charged proline and aromatic residues predicted to reside in the transmembrane domains of a previously characterized receptor B protein, GerVB, reveal the importance to receptor function of a cluster of residues predicted to reside in the middle of the transmembrane 6 (TM6) domain. Reductions in the region of 70- to 165-fold in the apparent affinity of receptors for glucose in which Glu196, Tyr191, and Phe192 are individually replaced by SDM indicate that some or all of these residues may be directly involved in the binding of glucose and perhaps other germinants to the germinant receptor.Spores of Bacillus species are formed via the process of sporulation in response to nutrient starvation and are characterized by metabolic dormancy and extreme properties of resistance to a range of stress factors. Reinitiation of metabolism and the generation of a new vegetative cell necessitate the dormant spore to undergo the process of germination, which can be stimulated by a number of biochemical and/or physical means (19, 33).Two pathways to germination that are probably the most relevant under physiological conditions have been identified. The first of these has been identified in Bacillus subtilis only recently (35). In this pathway an inner-membrane-located serine/threonine kinase (PrkC) triggers germination upon binding of meso-diaminopimelate-containing muropeptides, with the inference being that these peptidoglycan fragments may signal the presence of growing bacteria in the surrounding milieu.In terms of research activities, the more established physiological route to germination is mediated by germinant receptors that, as with the serine/threonine kinase mentioned above, are located within the inner membrane that separates the protoplast and protective outer layers of the spore (13, 20, 22, 23, 47). Orthologues of the GerA family of receptors have evolved to recognize a diverse range of amino acids, nucleotides, and sugars, the presence of which signals to the spore that environmental conditions may be conducive to growth. Structural genes encoding the germinant receptors are typically arranged in tricistronic operons, and molecular-genetic and biochemical evidence indicates that the receptor is a complex of all three protein subunits (3, 14, 41).Although we can state with reasonable confidence that the germinant receptors provide cognate binding sites for defined germinant molecules, interaction with which leads to initiation of the germination cascade, the precise function of the germinant receptors is not yet clear. Whether they have a direct role, for example, in transporting small molecules released from the spore core very early in the germination process, has yet to be determined (32, 38). Similarly, the molecular mechanism and/or transduction process that permits germinant-activated receptor proteins, which are present only in extremely low abundance, to stimulate the opening of significantly more plentiful calcium dipicolinate (Ca2+-DPA) channels (42, 43) and possibly ion channel proteins in some species (24, 39) is entirely unknown.Molecular-genetic and bioinformatic evidence has been presented, however, to suggest that the B-protein subunit of the receptor presents the site for the receptor-ligand interaction (6, 16, 29). In particular, experiments conducted in our own laboratory using cross-homologue chimeric constructs and site-directed mutagenesis (SDM) experiments with two closely related receptor B proteins have begun to yield insights into the structure-function relationships in the Bacillus megaterium GerU receptor (4, 5). GerU structural genes, which are plasmid-borne on the wild-type QM B1551 strain, are required to initiate the B. megaterium QM B1551 germinative response to glucose, proline, leucine, and inorganic salts (6, 36). Subsequent analysis revealed that whereas spores bearing the GerUB protein can initiate germination in response to glucose and leucine, those bearing the GerVB protein can additionally respond to proline and high concentrations of inorganic salts (6).The molecular basis for this difference in germinant recognition was examined and revealed that spores bearing a B-protein chimera, comprising the first one to eight transmembrane (TM) domains of GerUB plus TM9 to TM10 of GerVB, gain a germinative response to proline (4). However, while a single residue in TM10 of GerVB (leucine 345) was shown to be crucial to the proline-mediated germinative response, amino acid substitution and kinetic analyses indicated that this position is not directly involved in binding to the germinant (5). Indeed, while a number of residues have been identified as being important to receptor function, particularly in response to proline- and leucine-stimulated germination, the residues involved directly in binding to germinants—and, in particular, those involved in binding to glucose—have yet to be identified. This communication reports on an investigation performed to elucidate further the proteins involved in the recognition of glucose as a germinant by B. megaterium spores and to identify the receptor residues that may be directly involved in the receptor-ligand interaction.  相似文献   

3.
Spore germination is the first step to Bacillus anthracis pathogenicity. Previous work has shown that B. anthracis spores use germination (Ger) receptors to recognize amino acids and nucleosides as germinants. Genetic analysis has putatively paired each individual Ger receptor with a specific germinant. However, Ger receptors seem to be able to partially compensate for each other and recognize alternative germinants. Using kinetic analysis of B. anthracis spores germinated with inosine and L-alanine, we previously determined kinetic parameters for this germination process and showed binding synergy between the cogerminants. In this work, we expanded our kinetic analysis to determine kinetic parameters and binding order for every B. anthracis spore germinant pair. Our results show that germinant binding can exhibit positive, neutral, or negative cooperativity. Furthermore, different germinants can bind spores by either a random or an ordered mechanism. Finally, simultaneous triggering of multiple germination pathways shows that germinants can either cooperate or interfere with each other during the spore germination process. We postulate that the complexity of germination responses may allow B. anthracis spores to respond to different environments by activating different germination pathways.  相似文献   

4.
Dormant Bacillus subtilis spores germinate in the presence of particular nutrients called germinants. The spores are thought to recognize germinants through receptor proteins encoded by the gerA family of operons, which includes gerA, gerB, and gerK. We sought to substantiate this putative function of the GerA family proteins by characterizing spore germination in a mutant strain that contained deletions at all known gerA-like loci. As expected, the mutant spores germinated very poorly in a variety of rich media. In contrast, they germinated like wild-type spores in a chemical germinant, a 1-1 chelate of Ca(2+) and dipicolinic acid (DPA). These observations showed that proteins encoded by gerA family members are required for nutrient-induced germination but not for chemical-triggered germination, supporting the hypothesis that the GerA family encodes receptors for nutrient germinants. Further characterization of Ca(2+)-DPA-induced germination showed that the effect of Ca(2+)-DPA on spore germination was saturated at 60 mM and had a K(m) of 30 mM. We also found that decoating spores abolished their ability to germinate in Ca(2+)-DPA but not in nutrient germinants, indicating that Ca(2+)-DPA and nutrient germinants probably act through parallel arms of the germination pathway.  相似文献   

5.
Spores of Bacillus megaterium QM B1551 germinate in response to a number of trigger compounds, including glucose, proline, leucine, and inorganic salts. An approximate 6-kb region of the 165-kb plasmid was found to harbor a tricistronic receptor operon, gerU, and a monocistronic receptor component, gerVB. The gerU operon was observed to complement the germination response in plasmidless strain PV361 to glucose and leucine, with KBr acting as a cogerminant. Proline recognition is conferred by the monocistronic gerVB gene, the presence of which also improves the germination response to other single-trigger compounds. A chimeric receptor, GerU*, demonstrates interchangeability between receptor components and provides evidence that it is the B protein of the receptor that determines germinant specificity. Introduction of the gerU/gerVB gene cluster to B. megaterium KM extends the range of germinants recognized by this strain to include glucose, proline, and KBr in addition to alanine and leucine. A chromosomally encoded receptor, GerA, the B component of which is predicted to be truncated, was found to be functionally redundant. Similarly, the plasmid-borne antiporter gene, grmA, identified previously as being essential for germination in QM B1551, did not complement the germination defect in the plasmidless variant PV361. Wild-type spores carrying an insertion-deletion mutation in this cistron germinated normally; thus, the role of GrmA in spore germination needs to be reevaluated in this species.  相似文献   

6.
The rates of germination of Bacillus subtilis spores with L-alanine were increased markedly, in particular at low L-alanine concentrations, by overexpression of the tricistronic gerA operon that encodes the spore's germinant receptor for L-alanine but not by overexpression of gerA operon homologs encoding receptors for other germinants. However, spores with elevated levels of the GerA proteins did not germinate more rapidly in a mixture of asparagine, glucose, fructose, and K(+) (AGFK), a germinant combination that requires the participation of at least the germinant receptors encoded by the tricistronic gerB and gerK operons. Overexpression of the gerB or gerK operon or both the gerB and gerK operons also did not stimulate spore germination in AGFK. Overexpression of a mutant gerB operon, termed gerB*, that encodes a receptor allowing spore germination in response to either D-alanine or L-asparagine also caused faster spore germination with these germinants, again with the largest enhancement of spore germination rates at lower germinant concentrations. However, the magnitudes of the increases in the germination rates with D-alanine or L-asparagine in spores overexpressing gerB* were well below the increases in the spore's levels of the GerBA protein. Germination of gerB* spores with D-alanine or L-asparagine did not require participation of the products of the gerK operon, but germination with these agents was decreased markedly in spores also overexpressing gerA. These findings suggest that (i) increases in the levels of germinant receptors that respond to single germinants can increase spore germination rates significantly; (ii) there is some maximum rate of spore germination above which stimulation of GerA operon receptors alone will not further increase the rate of spore germination, as action of some protein other than the germinant receptors can become rate limiting; (iii) while previous work has shown that the wild-type GerB and GerK receptors interact in some fashion to cause spore germination in AGFK, there also appears to be an additional component required for AGFK-triggered spore germination; (iv) activation of the GerB receptor with D-alanine or L-asparagine can trigger spore germination independently of the GerK receptor; and (v) it is likely that the different germinant receptors interact directly and/or compete with each other for some additional component needed for initiation of spore germination. We also found that very high levels of overexpression of the gerA or gerK operon (but not the gerB or gerB* operon) in the forespore blocked sporulation shortly after the engulfment stage, although sporulation appeared normal with the lower levels of gerA or gerK overexpression that were used to generate spores for analysis of rates of germination.  相似文献   

7.
Bacillus subtilis spores that germinated poorly with saturating levels of nutrient germinants, termed superdormant spores, were separated from the great majority of dormant spore populations that germinated more rapidly. These purified superdormant spores (1.5 to 3% of spore populations) germinated extremely poorly with the germinants used to isolate them but better with germinants targeting germinant receptors not activated in superdormant spore isolation although not as well as the initial dormant spores. The level of β-galactosidase from a gerA-lacZ fusion in superdormant spores isolated by germination via the GerA germinant receptor was identical to that in the initial dormant spores. Levels of the germination proteins GerD and SpoVAD were also identical in dormant and superdormant spores. However, levels of subunits of a germinant receptor or germinant receptors activated in superdormant spore isolation were 6- to 10-fold lower than those in dormant spores, while levels of subunits of germinant receptors not activated in superdormant spore isolation were only ≤ 2-fold lower. These results indicate that (i) levels of β-galactosidase from lacZ fusions to operons encoding germinant receptors may not be an accurate reflection of actual germinant receptor levels in spores and (ii) a low level of a specific germinant receptor or germinant receptors is a major cause of spore superdormancy.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract To clarify the molecular mechanisms that trigger spore germination of Bacillus subtilis , the location of GerA proteins (GerAA, GerAB and GerAC), which were reported to be putative gene products of a receptor for one of the germinants, l-alanine, was investigated by immunological techniques using anti-GerA peptide antibodies. Four antibodies were raised against the corresponding epitopes, two in GerAA, one in GerAB and the other in GerAC molecules. The binding of all four antibodies to the inner surface of the cortex-less spore coat fragments could be seen by scanning immunoelectron microscopy with colloidal gold particles. The result agreed with the fact, previously reported, that the colloidal gold particles were visualized just inside the spore coat layer by transmission immunoelectron microscopy using another anti-GerAB peptide antibody.  相似文献   

9.
Germination of Bacillus anthracis spores occurs when nutrients such as amino acids or purine nucleosides stimulate specific germinant receptors located in the spore inner membrane. The gerPABCDEF operon has been suggested to play a role in facilitating the interaction between germinants and their receptors in spores of Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus cereus. B. anthracis mutants containing deletions in each of the six genes belonging to the orthologue of the gerPABCDEF operon, or deletion of the entire operon, were tested for their ability to germinate. Deletion of the entire gerP operon resulted in a significant delay in germination in response to nutrient germinants. These spores eventually germinated to levels equivalent to wild-type, suggesting that an additional entry point for nutrient germinants may exist. Deletions of each individual gene resulted in a similar phenotype, with the exception of ΔgerPF, which showed no obvious defect. The removal of two additional gerPF-like orthologues was necessary to achieve the germination defect observed for the other mutants. Upon physical removal of the spore coat, the mutant lacking the full gerP operon no longer exhibited a germination defect, suggesting that the GerP proteins play a role in spore coat permeability. Additionally, each of the gerP mutants exhibited a severe defect in calcium-dipicolinic acid (Ca-DPA)–dependent germination, suggesting a role for the GerP proteins in this process. Collectively, these data implicate all GerP proteins in the early stages of spore germination.  相似文献   

10.
The isolation and characterization of 29 new germination (Ger) mutants of Bacillus subtilis 168 is described. These were classified, along with previously described mutants, into seven groups according to map location. The mutations in 26 GerA mutants mapped between cysB and thr; detailed mapping of two of these has located them very close to citG. These mutants were deficient in germination in alanine, but responded to the germinative combination of asparagine, glucose, fructose and KCl. One GerB mutant mapped on the origin-proximal side of hisA; it was normal in germination in alanine, but deficient in termination in a mixture of asparagine, glucose, fructose and KCl. Two GerC mutants were linked to lys, but were separable from a temperature-sensitive growth deficiency mapping between lys and trp. The GerC mutants had a similar germination phenotype to the GerA mutants. Three GerD mutants did not germinate in either of the above germinants or in Penassay Broth. They were located on the side of ery distal to cysA. The GerE mutant, which did not germinate in any of the three germinants, was located very close to citF and possessed an altered spore coat. The two GerF mutants were defective in germination in all three germinants and mapped on the origin proximal-side of hisA, but much closer to his than did the GerB mutant. A phosphoglycerate kinase-negative mutant altered in germination mapped between cysB and hisA (GerG). These mutants have established a minimum of seven locations important to germination, and will be useful in the development and appraisal of theories of spore germination.  相似文献   

11.
Yeast two-hybrid and Far Western analyses were used to detect interactions between Bacillus subtilis spores' nutrient germinant receptor proteins and proteins encoded by the spoVA operon, all of which are involved in spore germination and located in the spores' inner membrane. These analyses indicated that two subunits of the GerA nutrient germinant receptor interact, consistent with previous genetic data, and that some GerA proteins interact with SpoVAD and some with SpoVAE. SpoVA proteins appear to be involved in the release of the spore's dipicolinic acid during spore germination, an event triggered by the binding of nutrient germinants to their receptors. Consequently, these new findings suggest that nutrient germinant receptors physically contact SpoVA proteins, and presumably this is a route for signal transduction during spore germination.  相似文献   

12.
Spalding TA  Burstein ES 《Life sciences》2001,68(22-23):2511-2516
Mutations that increase constitutive activity and alter ligand binding have been used to investigate the structure and mechanism of activation of muscarinic receptors. These data are reviewed with reference to the recently published three-dimensional structure of rhodopsin. Residues in TM3 and TM6 where amino acid substitutions increased constitutive activity align with residues within the core of the receptor. A nucleus of these residues is located immediately below the predicted binding site of acetylcholine. The i2 loop where mutations also increase constitutive activity was found to loop away from the i3 loop, which has been found to modulate G-protein coupling specificity.  相似文献   

13.
Aims: Our aim was to assess the diversity of the nutrient germination response of Bacillus cereus spores. Methods and Results: B. cereus spore germination was monitored by decrease in optical density using a Bioscreen C analyser in response to the major germinant substances inosine and l -alanine. Spores of a set of 12 strains taken to illustrate the diversity of the B. cereus group showed ranging germination capacities. Two strains never germinated in the presence of l -alanine, at any of the germinant concentrations tested. Both the extent and rate of spore germination were affected by low pH and high NaCl concentration, but differently according to the strain. Conclusions: A broad diversity was observed in nutrient-triggered spore germination among the members of the B. cereus group. Spore germination of some strains occurred at low concentrations of inosine or l -alanine, suggesting high receptor sensitivity to germinants. The activity of these receptors was also affected by pH or high NaCl concentration. Significance and Impact of the Study: The greater ability of some strains to germinate in response to l -alanine and inosine is one criterion among others for B. cereus strain selection in food processing or storage studies, before confirmation in complex food or laboratory media. The diversity in response to germinants found among the B. cereus strains suggests a differential expression and (or) absence of some germination genes involved in the response, mainly to l -alanine.  相似文献   

14.
Spores of a Bacillus subtilis strain with a gerD deletion mutation (Delta gerD) responded much slower than wild-type spores to nutrient germinants, although they did ultimately germinate, outgrow, and form colonies. Spores lacking GerD and nutrient germinant receptors also germinated slowly with nutrients, as did Delta gerD spores in which nutrient receptors were overexpressed. The germination defect of Delta gerD spores was not suppressed by many changes in the sporulation or germination conditions. Germination of Delta gerD spores was also slower than that of wild-type spores with a pressure of 150 MPa, which triggers spore germination through nutrient receptors. Ectopic expression of gerD suppressed the slow germination of Delta gerD spores with nutrients, but overexpression of GerD did not increase rates of spore germination. Loss of GerD had no effect on spore germination induced by agents that do not act through nutrient receptors, including a 1:1 chelate of Ca2+ and dipicolinic acid, dodecylamine, lysozyme in hypertonic medium, a pressure of 500 MPa, and spontaneous germination of spores that lack all nutrient receptors. Deletion of GerD's putative signal peptide or change of its likely diacylglycerylated cysteine residue to alanine reduced GerD function. The latter findings suggest that GerD is located in a spore membrane, most likely the inner membrane, where the nutrient receptors are located. All these data suggest that, while GerD is not essential for nutrient germination, this protein has an important role in spores' rapid response to nutrient germinants, by either direct interaction with nutrient receptors or some signal transduction essential for germination.  相似文献   

15.
Melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4R) plays an important role in the regulation of food intake and body weight. To determine the molecular basis of human MC4R (hMC4R) responsible for alpha-melanocortin-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) binding, in this study, we utilized both receptor domain exchange and site-directed mutagenesis studies to investigate the molecular determinants of hMC4R responsible for alpha-MSH binding and signaling. alpha-MSH is a potent agonist at hMC4R but not at hMC2R. Cassette substitutions of the second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth transmembrane regions (TM) of the hMC4R with the homologous regions of hMC2R were performed and alpha-MSH binding and signaling were examined. Our results indicate that each chimeric receptor was expressed at the cell surface and the expression levels remain similar to that of the wild-type receptor. The cassette substitutions of the second, fourth, fifth, and sixth TMs of the hMC4R with homologous regions of the hMC2R did not significantly alter alpha-MSH binding affinity and potency except substitution of the TM3 of the hMC4R, suggesting that the conserved residues in TMs of the hMC4R are crucial for alpha-MSH binding and signaling. Further mutagenesis studies indicate that conserved residues Glu(100) in TM2, Asp(122), Asp(126) in TM3 and Trp(258), Phe(261), His(264) in TM6 are involved in alpha-MSH binding and signaling. In conclusion, our results suggest that the conserved residues in the TM2, TM3, and TM6 of the hMC4R are responsible for alpha-MSH binding and signaling.  相似文献   

16.
Bacterial endospores exhibit extreme resistance to most conditions that rapidly kill other life forms, remaining viable in this dormant state for centuries or longer. While the majority of Bacillus subtilis dormant spores germinate rapidly in response to nutrient germinants, a small subpopulation termed superdormant spores are resistant to germination, potentially evading antibiotic and/or decontamination strategies. In an effort to better understand the underlying mechanisms of superdormancy, membrane-associated proteins were isolated from populations of B. subtilis dormant, superdormant, and germinated spores, and the relative abundance of 11 germination-related proteins was determined using multiple-reaction-monitoring liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry assays. GerAC, GerKC, and GerD were significantly less abundant in the membrane fractions obtained from superdormant spores than those derived from dormant spores. The amounts of YpeB, GerD, PrkC, GerAC, and GerKC recovered in membrane fractions decreased significantly during germination. Lipoproteins, as a protein class, decreased during spore germination, while YpeB appeared to be specifically degraded. Some protein abundance differences between membrane fractions of dormant and superdormant spores resemble protein changes that take place during germination, suggesting that the superdormant spore isolation procedure may have resulted in early, non-committal germination-associated changes. In addition to low levels of germinant receptor proteins, a deficiency in the GerD lipoprotein may contribute to heterogeneity of spore germination rates. Understanding the reasons for superdormancy may allow for better spore decontamination procedures.  相似文献   

17.
The chemoattractant receptor-homologous molecule expressed on Th2 cells (CRTH2) is a G protein-coupled receptor that mediates the pro-inflammatory effects of prostaglandin D(2) (PGD(2)) generated in allergic inflammation. The CRTH2 receptor shares greatest sequence similarity with chemoattractant receptors compared with prostanoid receptors. To investigate the structural determinants of CRTH2 ligand binding, we performed site-directed mutagenesis of putative mCRTH2 ligand-binding residues, and we evaluated mutant receptor ligand binding and functional properties. Substitution of alanine at each of three residues in the transmembrane (TM) helical domains (His-106, TM III; Lys-209, TM V; and Glu-268, TM VI) and one in extracellular loop II (Arg-178) decreased PGD(2) binding affinity, suggesting that these residues play a role in binding PGD(2). In contrast, the H106A and E268A mutants bound indomethacin, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, with an affinity similar to the wild-type receptor. HEK293 cells expressing the H106A, K209A, and E268A mutants displayed reduced inhibition of intracellular cAMP and chemotaxis in response to PGD(2), whereas the H106A and E268A mutants had functional responses to indomethacin similar to the wild-type receptor. Binding of PGE(2) by the E268A mutant was enhanced compared with the wild-type receptor, suggesting that Glu-268 plays a role in determining prostanoid ligand selectivity. Replacement of Tyr-261 with phenylalanine did not affect PGD(2) binding but decreased the binding affinity for indomethacin. These results provided the first details of the ligand binding pocket of an eicosanoid-binding chemoattractant receptor.  相似文献   

18.
Previously, we characterized the organization of the transmembrane (TM) domain of the Bacillus subtilis chemoreceptor McpB using disulfide crosslinking. Cysteine residues were engineered into serial positions along the two helices through the membrane, TM1 and TM2, as well as double mutants in TM1 and TM2, and the extent of crosslinking determined to characterize the organization of the TM domain. In this study, the organization of the TM domain was studied in the presence and absence of ligand to address what ligand-induced structural changes occur. We found that asparagine caused changes in crosslinking rate on all residues along the TM1-TM1' helical interface, whereas the crosslinking rate for almost all residues along the TM2-TM2' interface did not change. These results indicated that helix TM1 rotated counterclockwise and that TM2 did not move in respect to TM2' in the dimer on binding asparagine. Interestingly, intramolecular crosslinking of paired substitutions in 34/280 and 38/273 were unaffected by asparagine, demonstrating that attractant binding to McpB did not induce a "piston-like" vertical displacement of TM2 as seen for Trg and Tar in Escherichia coli. However, these paired substitutions produced oligomeric forms of receptor in response to ligand. This must be due to a shift of the interface between different receptor dimers, within previously suggested trimers of dimers, or even higher order complexes. Furthermore, the extent of disulfide bond formation in the presence of asparagine was unaffected by the presence of the methyl-modification enzymes, CheB and CheR, or the coupling proteins, CheW and CheV, demonstrating that these proteins must have local structural effects on the cytoplasmic domain that is not translated to the entire receptor. Finally, disulfide bond formation was also unaffected by binding proline to McpC. We conclude that ligand-binding induced a conformational change in the TM domain of McpB dimers as an excitation signal that is likely propagated within the cytoplasmic region of receptors and that subsequent adaptational events do not affect this new TM domain conformation.  相似文献   

19.
Spores of Bacillus species can remain in their dormant and resistant states for years, but exposure to agents such as specific nutrients can cause spores'' return to life within minutes in the process of germination. This process requires a number of spore-specific proteins, most of which are in or associated with the inner spore membrane (IM). These proteins include the (i) germinant receptors (GRs) that respond to nutrient germinants, (ii) GerD protein, which is essential for GR-dependent germination, (iii) SpoVA proteins that form a channel in spores'' IM through which the spore core''s huge depot of dipicolinic acid is released during germination, and (iv) cortex-lytic enzymes (CLEs) that degrade the large peptidoglycan cortex layer, allowing the spore core to take up much water and swell, thus completing spore germination. While much has been learned about nutrient germination, major questions remain unanswered, including the following. (i) How do nutrient germinants penetrate through spores'' outer layers to access GRs in the IM? (ii) What happens during the highly variable and often long lag period between the exposure of spores to nutrient germinants and the commitment of spores to germinate? (iii) What do GRs and GerD do, and how do these proteins interact? (iv) What is the structure of the SpoVA channel in spores'' IM, and how is this channel gated? (v) What is the precise state of the spore IM, which has a number of novel properties even though its lipid composition is very similar to that of growing cells? (vi) How is CLE activity regulated such that these enzymes act only when germination has been initiated? (vii) And finally, how does the germination of spores of clostridia compare with that of spores of bacilli?  相似文献   

20.
Most of the classical physiological effects of the octapeptide angiotensin II (AngII) are produced by activating the AT1 receptor which belongs to the G-protein coupled receptor family (GPCR). Peptidic GPCRs may be functionally divided in three regions: (i) extracellular domains involved in ligand binding; (ii) intracellular domains implicated in agonist-induced coupling to G protein and (iii) seven transmembrane domains (TM) involved in signal transduction. The TM regions of such receptors have peculiar characteristics such as the presence of proline residues. In this project we aimed to investigate the participation of two highly conserved proline residues (Pro82 and Pro162), located in TM II and TM IV, respectively, in AT1 receptor signal transduction. Both mutations did not cause major alterations in AngII affinity. Functional assays indicated that the P162A mutant did not influence the signal transduction. On the other hand, a potent deleterious effect of P82A mutation on signal transduction was observed. We believe that the Pro82 residue is crucial to signal transduction, although it is not possible to say yet if this is due to a direct participation or if due to a structural rearrangement of TM II. In this last hypothesis, the removal of proline residue might be correlated to a removal of a kink, which in turn can be involved in the correct positioning of residues involved in signal transduction.  相似文献   

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