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 15 毫秒
1.
2.
Quinones are ubiquitous in the environment. They occur naturally but are also in widespread use in human and industrial activities. Quinones alone are relatively benign to bacteria, but in combination with copper, they become toxic by a mechanism that leads to intracellular thiol depletion. Here, it was shown that the yahCDyaiAB operon of Lactococcus lactis IL1403 provides resistance to combined copper/quinone stress. The operon is under the control of CopR, which also regulates expression of the copRZA copper resistance operon as well as other L. lactis genes. Expression of the yahCDyaiAB operon is induced by copper but not by quinones. Two of the proteins encoded by the operon appear to play key roles in alleviating quinone/copper stress: YaiB is a flavoprotein that converts p‐benzoquinones to less toxic hydroquinones, using reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) as reductant; YaiA is a hydroquinone dioxygenase that converts hydroquinone putatively to 4‐hydroxymuconic semialdehyde in an oxygen‐consuming reaction. Hydroquinone and methylhydroquinone are both substrates of YaiA. Deletion of yaiB causes increased sensitivity of L. lactis to quinones and complete growth arrest under combined quinone and copper stress. Copper induction of the yahCDyaiAB operon offers protection to copper/quinone toxicity and could provide a growth advantage to L. lactis in some environments.  相似文献   

3.
In Lactococcus lactis IL1403, 14 genes are under the control of the copper-inducible CopR repressor. This so-called CopR regulon encompasses the CopR regulator, two putative CPx-type copper ATPases, a copper chaperone, and 10 additional genes of unknown function. We addressed here the function of one of these genes, ytjD, which we renamed cinD (copper-induced nitroreductase). Copper, cadmium, and silver induced cinD in vivo, as shown by real-time quantitative PCR. A knockout mutant of cinD was more sensitive to oxidative stress exerted by 4-nitroquinoline-N-oxide and copper. Purified CinD is a flavoprotein and reduced 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol and 4-nitroquinoline-N-oxide with kcat values of 27 and 11 s−1, respectively, using NADH as a reductant. CinD also exhibited significant catalase activity in vitro. The X-ray structure of CinD was resolved at 1.35 Å and resembles those of other nitroreductases. CinD is thus a nitroreductase which can protect L. lactis against oxidative stress that could be exerted by nitroaromatic compounds and copper.Lactococcus lactis IL1403 is a Gram-positive lactic acid bacterium which is used for the manufacture of food and dairy products but also for an increasing number of biotechnological applications. Given the economical importance of this microorganism, it is often used as a model for molecular studies. Its genome has been sequenced (4), and its proteome has been extensively characterized (11). When applied to industrial processes, this bacterium has to face various stress conditions, such as low pH, high temperature, osmotic shock, and metal stress (44). For instance, in traditional cheese making in Switzerland, L. lactis is exposed to copper released from the copper vats.Copper is an essential micronutrient for both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. The two oxidation states of copper, Cu+ and Cu2+, allow its participation in many important biological functions. More than 30 enzymes are known to use copper as a cofactor, such as superoxide dismutase (SOD), cytochrome c oxidase, or lysyl oxidase (20). The redox activity of copper can also lead to the generation of free radicals, which cause cellular damage (42, 43). Recently, alternative copper toxicity mechanisms have been demonstrated in bacteria in which copper interferes with the formation of catalytic iron-sulfur clusters (6, 22). Whatever the mechanism of copper toxicity, maintenance of copper homeostasis by controlling the uptake, accumulation, detoxification, and removal of copper is critical for living organisms.Copper homeostasis in L. lactis has not yet been investigated in great detail but appears to resemble the well-characterized copper homeostatic system of Enterococcus hirae (34). L. lactis possesses a copRZA operon, which provides copper resistance. It encodes the CopA copper export ATPase, the CopR copper-inducible repressor, and the CopZ copper chaperone (23). CopR regulates not only the copRZA operon but also an additional 11 genes. This so-called CopR regulon also includes copB, encoding a second putative copper ATPase; lctO, encoding lactate oxidase; and the ydiDE, yahCD-yaiAB, and ytjDBA operons of unknown function. Of all the genes and operons constituting the CopR regulon, the ytjDBA operon was most strongly induced by copper (23). Based on sequence comparison, the first gene of this operon, ytjD, encodes an oxygen-insensitive nitroreductase, which we renamed cinD for copper-induced nitroreductase.Nitroreductases are called oxygen insensitive when they can catalyze the two-electron reduction of nitro compounds in the presence of oxygen. Such enzymes are widespread in nature and are able to reduce a wide range of substrates, such as furazones, nitroaromatic compounds, flavins, and ferricyanide, using NADH or NADPH as the reductant. They are flavoproteins of 22 to 24 kDa and form homodimers with one flavin mononucleotide cofactor per monomer. Although oxygen-insensitive nitroreductases have been extensively studied, their in vivo function remains largely unknown. The closest relative of CinD, which has functionally been studied, is FRP of Vibrio harveyi, with 29% sequence identity to CinD. FRP is not a typical nitroreductase but appears to function as an NADH flavin oxidoreductase which provides reduced flavin to luciferase (19). The next closest relative of CinD, NfsA of Escherichia coli, with 23% sequence identity, exhibits the broad substrate specificity typical of most nitroreductases (48). The structure of this enzyme has been solved at a resolution of 1.7 Å (17). It closely resembles the structures of other enzymes which belong to the oxygen-insensitive nitroreductase family. NfsA has recently been shown to participate in the degradation of 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (10). This suggests that an important function of nitroreductases could be the metabolism of xenobiotics.We investigated here the structure and function of CinD of L. lactis. CinD was induced by copper, cadmium, and silver and protected L. lactis from oxidative stress exerted by 4-nitroquinoline-N-oxide (NQO). The purified enzyme is a flavoprotein and exhibited nitroreductase activity on NQO and a variety of other substrates, using NADH as the reductant. CinD also possesses catalase activity and is thus able to defend cells against oxidative stress exerted by hydrogen peroxide, xenobiotics, or copper. The three-dimensional structure of CinD was resolved at a 1.35-Å resolution and exhibits a typical nitroreductase structure.  相似文献   

4.
5.
6.
Extensive insight into copper homeostasis has recently emerged. The Gram-positive bacterium Enterococcus hirae has been a paradigm for many aspects of the process. The cop operon of E. hirae consists of four genes that encode a repressor, CopY, a copper chaperone, CopZ, and two CPx-type copper ATPases, CopA and CopB. CopA and CopB accomplish copper uptake and export, respectively, and the expression of the cop operon is regulated by copper via the CopY repressor and the CopZ chaperone. The functions of the four Cop proteins have been extensively studied in vivo as well as in vitro and a detailed understanding of the regulation of the cop operon by copper has emerged.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Bacterial response to metals can require complex regulation. We report an overlapping regulation for copper and zinc resistance genes in the denitrifying bacterium, Pseudomonas stutzeri RCH2, by three two‐component regulatory proteins CopR1, CopR2 and CzcR. We conducted genome‐wide evaluations to identify gene targets of two paralogous regulators, CopR1 and CopR2, annotated for copper signaling, and compared the results with the gene targets for CzcR, implicated in zinc signaling. We discovered that the CopRs and CzcR have largely common targets, and crossregulate a core set of P. stutzeri copper and zinc responsive genes. We established that this crossregulation is enabled by a conserved binding motif in the upstream regulatory regions of the target genes. The crossregulation is physiologically relevant as these regulators synergistically and antagonistically target multicopper oxidases, metal efflux and sequestration systems. CopR1 and CopR2 upregulate two cop operons encoding copper tolerance genes, while all three regulators downregulate a putative copper chaperone, Psest_1595. CzcR also upregulated the oprD gene and the CzcIABC Zn2+ efflux system, while CopR1 and CopR2 downregulated these genes. Our study suggests that crossregulation of copper and zinc homeostasis can be advantageous, and in P. stutzeri this is enabled by shared binding motifs for multiple response regulators.  相似文献   

9.
Copper-resistant strains of Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria, Pseudomonas cichorii, Pseudomonas putida, Pseudomonas fluorescens, and a yellow Pseudomonas sp. were isolated from tomato plants or seeds. In Southern hybridizations, DNA from each strain showed homology with the copper resistance (cop) operon previously cloned from Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato PT23. Homology was associated with plasmid and chromosomal DNA in X. compestris pv. vesicatoria, P. putida, and the yellow Pseudomonas sp. Homology was detected only in the chromosomal DNA of P. cichorii and P. fluorescens. Homology with cop was also detected in chromosomal DNA from copper-sensitive strains of P. cichorii, P. fluorescens, and P. syringae pv. tomato, suggesting that the cop homolog may be indigenous to certain Pseudomonas species and have some function other than copper resistance. No homology was detected in DNA from a copper-sensitive X. campestris pv. vesicatoria strain. Copper-inducible protein products were detected in each copper-resistant bacterium by immunoblot analysis with antibodies raised to the CopB protein from the cop operon. The role of the homologous DNA in copper resistance was confirmed for the X. campestris pv. vesicatoria strain by cloning and transferring the cop homolog to a copper-sensitive strain of X. campestris pv. vesicatoria. The possibility and implications of copper resistance gene exchange between different species and genera of pathogenic and saprophytic bacteria on tomato plants are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Copper-resistant strains of Pseudomonas syringae carrying the cop operon produce periplasmic copper-binding proteins, and this sequestration outside the cytoplasm has been proposed as a resistance mechanism. In this study, strain PS61 of P. syringae carrying the cloned cop operon accumulated more total cellular copper than without the operon. Several other copper-resistant pseudomonads with homology to cop were isolated from plants, and these bacteria also accumulated copper. Two highly resistant species accumulated up to 115 to 120 mg of copper per g (dry weight) of cells. P. putida 08891 was more resistant to several metals than P. syringae pv. tomato PT23, but this increased resistance was not correlated with an increased accumulation of metals other than copper. Several metals were accumulated by both PT23 and P. putida, but when copper was added to induce the cop operon, there was generally no increase of accumulation of the other metals, suggesting that the cop operon does not contribute to accumulation of these other metals. The exceptions were aluminum for PT23 and iron for P. putida, which accumulated to higher levels when copper was added to the cultures. The results of this study support the role of copper sequestration in the copper resistance mechanism of P. syringae and suggest that this mechanism is common to several copper-resistant Pseudomonas species found on plants to which antimicrobial copper compounds are applied for plant disease control.  相似文献   

11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
A copper-sensitive operon repressor protein (CsoR) has been identified in Streptomyces lividans (CsoRSl) and found to regulate copper homeostasis with attomolar affinity for Cu(I). Solution studies reveal apo- and CuI-CsoRSl to be a tetramer assembly, and a 1.7-Å resolution crystal structure of apo-CsoRSl reveals that a significant conformational change is necessary to enable Cu(I) binding. In silico prediction of the CsoR regulon was confirmed in vitro (EMSA) and in vivo (RNA-seq), which highlighted that next to the csoR gene itself, the regulon consists of two Cu(I) efflux systems involving a CopZ-like copper metallochaperone protein and a CopA P1-type ATPase. Although deletion of csoR has only minor effects on S. lividans development when grown under high copper concentrations, mutations of the Cu(I) ligands decrease tolerance to copper as a result of the Cu(I)-CsoR mutants failing to disengage from the DNA targets, thus inhibiting the derepression of the regulon. RNA-seq experiments carried out on samples incubated with exogenous copper and a ΔcsoR strain showed that the set of genes responding to copper stress is much wider than anticipated and largely extends beyond genes targeted by CsoR. This suggests more control levels are operating and directing other regulons in copper homeostasis beside the CsoR regulon.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Copper resistance in Pseudomonas syringae carrying the copABCD operon is associated with accumulation of copper in the periplasm and outer membrane, apparently as a function of the copper-binding activities of the copABC gene products. However, no specific function for copD has been determined. In this study, P. syringae cells containing copCD or copBCD cloned behind the lac promoter were hypersensitive to copper. An increased accumulation of copper was measured in cells containing several combinations of cop genes that included copC and copD. Our data suggest that CopC, a periplasmic copper-binding protein, and CopD, a probable inner membrane protein, may function together in copper uptake.  相似文献   

18.
For development of novel starter strains with improved proteolytic properties, the ability of Lactococcus lactis to produce Lactobacillus helveticus aminopeptidase N (PepN), aminopeptidase C (PepC), X-prolyl dipeptidyl aminopeptidase (PepX), proline iminopeptidase (PepI), prolinase (PepR), and dipeptidase (PepD) was studied by introducing the genes encoding these enzymes into L. lactis MG1363 and its derivatives. According to Northern analyses and enzyme activity measurements, the L. helveticus aminopeptidase genes pepN, pepC, and pepX are expressed under the control of their own promoters in L. lactis. The highest expression level, using a low-copy-number vector, was obtained with the L. helveticus pepN gene, which resulted in a 25-fold increase in PepN activity compared to that of wild-type L. lactis. The L. helveticus pepI gene, residing as a third gene in an operon in its host, was expressed in L. lactis under the control of the L. helveticus pepX promoter. The genetic background of the L. lactis derivatives tested did not affect the expression level of any of the L. helveticus peptidases studied. However, the growth medium used affected both the recombinant peptidase profiles in transformant strains and the resident peptidase activities. The levels of expression of the L. helveticus pepD and pepR clones under the control of their own promoters were below the detection limit in L. lactis. However, substantial amounts of recombinant pepD and PepR activities were obtained in L. lactis when pepD and pepR were expressed under the control of the inducible lactococcal nisA promoter at an optimized nisin concentration.  相似文献   

19.
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