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1.
OprM, the outer membrane component of the MexAB-OprM multidrug efflux pump of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, has been assumed to facilitate the export of antibiotics across the outer membrane of this organism. Here we purified to homogeneity the OprM protein, reconstituted it into liposome membranes, and tested its channel activity by using the liposome swelling assay. It was demonstrated that OprM is a channel-forming protein and exhibits the channel property that amino acids diffuse more efficiently than saccharides. However, antibiotics showed no significant diffusion through the OprM channel in the liposome membrane, suggesting that OprM functions as a gated channel. We reasoned that the protease treatment may cause the disturbance of the gate structure of OprM. Hence, we treated OprM reconstituted in the membranes with alpha-chymotrypsin and examined its solute permeability. The results demonstrated that the protease treatment caused the opening of an OprM channel through which antibiotics were able to diffuse. To elucidate which cleavage is intimately related to the opening, we constructed mutant OprM proteins where the amino acid at the cleavage site was replaced with another amino acid. By examining the channel activity of these mutant proteins, it was shown that the proteolysis at tyrosine 185 and tyrosine 196 of OprM caused the channel opening. Furthermore, these residues were shown to face into the periplasmic space and interact with other component(s). We considered the possible opening mechanism of the OprM channel based on the structure of TolC, a homologue of OprM.  相似文献   

2.
The outer membrane subunit OprM of the multicomponent efflux pump of Pseudomonas aeruginosa has been assumed to form a transmembrane xenobiotic exit channel across the outer membrane. We challenged this hypothesis to clarify the underlying ambiguity by manipulating the amino-terminal signal sequence of the OprM protein of the MexAB-OprM efflux pump in P. aeruginosa. [(3)H]Palmitate uptake experiments revealed that OprM is a lipoprotein. The following lines of evidence unequivocally established that the OprM protein functioned at the periplasmic space. (i) The OprM protein, in which a signal sequence including Cys-18 was replaced with that of periplasmic azurin, appeared in the periplasmic space but not in the outer membrane fraction, and the protein fully functioned as the pump subunit. (ii) The hybrid OprM containing the N-terminal transmembrane segment of the inner membrane protein, MexF, appeared exclusively in the inner membrane fraction. The hybrid protein containing 186 or 331 amino acid residues of MexF was fully active for the antibiotic extrusion, but a 42-residue protein was totally inactive. (iii) The mutant OprM, in which the N-terminal cysteine residue was replaced with another amino acid, appeared unmodified with fatty acid and was fractionated in both the periplasmic space and the inner membrane fraction but not in the outer membrane fraction. The Cys-18-modified OprM functioned for the antibiotic extrusion indistinguishably from that in the wild-type strain. We concluded, based on these results, that the OprM protein was anchored in the outer membrane via fatty acid(s) attached to the N-terminal cysteine residue and that the entire polypeptide moiety was exposed to the periplasmic space.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Brief exposure of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to a temperature of 10 degrees C or lower caused a significant leakage of the periplasmic beta-lactamase into the medium. The extent of leakage increased as the incubation temperature was lowered to 4 degrees C and reached a maximum at 0 degrees C. Cells grown in the presence of beta-lactamase inducers were unsuitable for the permeability assay. It was found that the diffusion rates of beta-lactams through the outer membrane of P. aeruginosa were much lower than those previously reported, as assayed under refined conditions. The diffusion rates of beta-lactams in one of the mutants tested were an order of magnitude lower than those of the other strains, despite the fact that the outer membrane protein profile of the strain appeared to be indistinguishable from those of the others. These results suggest that beta-lactam antibiotics diffuse through the outer membrane of P. aeruginosa, at least partly, through a non-porin pathway.  相似文献   

5.
A mutant of Pseudomonas aeruginosa severely deficient in outer membrane protein F levels was isolated by screening heavily mutagenized strains for membrane protein alterations on sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. To provide a basis for phenotypic comparison, three independent spontaneous revertants with normal protein F levels were isolated. Neither the protein F-deficient mutant nor its revertants had gross surface alterations as judged by their sensitivities to 31 phages with diverse receptors and their low degrees of leakage of periplasmic beta-lactamase into the supernatant. Outer membrane permeability was measured in whole cells by examining the rates of hydrolysis of a chromogenic beta-lactam, nitrocefin, by periplasmic RP1-encoded beta-lactamase. It was found that the outer membrane permeabilities of wild-type and protein F revertant strains were similar, but low when compared with those of Escherichia coli and an antibiotic-supersusceptible mutant Z61 of P. aeruginosa. The loss of protein F caused a further significant decrease in outer membrane permeability. The results suggest that protein F is a pore-forming protein in vivo and that only a small proportion, as few as 1 in 400, of the protein F molecules form active functional channels in vivo.  相似文献   

6.
The Pseudomonas aeruginosa outer membrane was isolated with attached peptidoglycan and fractionated with Triton X-100, ethylenediaminetetraacetate, and lysozyme. The data suggest that major outer membrane proteins F, H2, and I are noncovalently associated with the peptidoglycan.  相似文献   

7.
Real-time single-molecule microscopy and spectroscopy were used to monitor single molecules moving in and out of live bacterial cells, Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Ethidium bromide (EtBr) was chosen as the fluorescence probe because it emitted a weak fluorescence in aqueous solution (outside of the cells) and became strongly fluorescent as it entered the cells and intercalated with DNA. Such changes in fluorescence intensity by individual EtBr molecules were measured to determine the influx and efflux rates of EtBr by the cells. The transport rates for EtBr through the energized extrusion pumps of these strains (WT, nalB-1, and DeltaABM) of P. aeruginosa were measured and showed stochastic behavior with the average being (2.86+/-0.12), (2.80+/-0.13), and (2.74+/-0.39) x s(-1), respectively. The transport rates of the three strains were independent of substrate concentration at the single-molecule level. In contrast to bulk (many molecules) measurements, single-molecule detection allowed the influx and efflux kinetics to be observed in low substrate concentrations at the molecular level.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The outer membrane of Pseudomonas aeruginosa acted as a barrier against the penetration of di- (Mr, 342), tri- (Mr, 504) and tetrasaccharides (Mr, 666), whereas the membrane allowed the penetration of pentose (Mr, 150) and methylhexoses (Mr, 194) into the periplasm. When the intact cells of P. aeruginosa were treated with 600 mosM saccharides of various sizes and observed under an electron microscope, saccharides of Mr larger than 342 caused the extensive shrinking of the outer membrane. Whereas the cells treated with the saccharides of Mr less than 194 or with sucrose in the presence of EDTA showed plasmolysis. Determination of the extent of saccharide penetration into the periplasm of the cells treated with 600 mosM sodium chloride or with 600 mosM saccharides of various sizes showed that only pentose and hexoses, so far examined, were penetrable but di-, tri- and tetrasaccharides were impenetrable.  相似文献   

10.
A method is described for the preparation of outer and cytoplasmic membranes of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and the outer membrane proteins characterized. Isolated outer and cytoplasmic membranes differed markedly in the content of 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate (lipopolysaccharide) and phospholipid as well as in the localization of certain enzymes (NADH oxidase, succinate dehydrogenase, D-lactate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase, and phospholipase), and also in the microscopic morphology. The outer membrane preparation showed activity neutralizing a certain bacteriocin or bacteriophages, whereas the cytoplasmic membrane preparation showed no neutralizing activity. The protein composition of membrane preparations from five different strains of P. aeruginosa [P14, M92 (PAO1), PAC1, P15, and M2008 (PAT)] were determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. More than 50 protein bands were detected in the cytoplasmic membrane preparation. The protein compositions of outer membranes from the five different strains were very similar: at least 6 major bands were found (apparent molecular weights: Band D, 50,000; band E, 45,000; band F, 33,000; bands G and H, 21,000; and band I, 8,000). The protein composition of outer membranes was affected by some physiological growth conditions. Some features of major outer membrane proteins were also studied. Band F showed anomalous migration on SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis depending on the solubilizing conditions or pretreatment with TCA. Band I seemed to be a protein analogous to the lipoprotein which had been found in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

11.
This paper describes the overproduction and purification of the C-terminus polyhistidine-tagged outer membrane protein OprM, which is a part of the MexA-MexB-OprM active efflux system of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Renaturation of the protein from inclusion bodies of Escherichia coli was achieved using guanidine-HCl as denaturing agent and n-octylpolyoxyethylene (C8POE) and n-octyltetraoxyethylene (C8E4) as nonionic detergents. The refolded protein was purified by ion-exchange and nickel-affinity chromatography. The final yield was 6 mg of pure histidine-tagged OprM per liter of E. coli culture. Renaturation was monitored by the effects of heating prior to SDS-PAGE, using a typical and exclusive property of outer membrane proteins. Immunoblotting revealed that the recombinant protein is addressed to the outer membrane of E. coli, after maturation by excision of its N-terminal signal sequence. Complementation of an oprM deletion mutant with the plasmid encoded histidine-tagged OprM protein restored antibiotic susceptibilities to wild-type levels, demonstrating functionality of recombinant OprM.  相似文献   

12.
A method is described for the isolation of the cytoplasmic and outer membranes of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO.1. The cytoplasmic membrane exhibits nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide oxidoreductase, lactate dehydrogenase DD-carboxypeptidase and succinate dehydrogenase activities. The outer membrane is rich in 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate and exhibits phospholipase A and DD-carboxypeptidase activity. At least 25 protein species have been detected in the cytoplasmic membrane by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Using the same technique, the outer membrane contains only five protein species of molecular weights, 56,000, 53,000, 38,000, 21,000 and 16,000.  相似文献   

13.
OprM is the outer membrane component of the MexA-MexB-OprM efflux system of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Multiple-sequence alignment of this protein and its homologues identified several regions of high sequence conservation that were targeted for site-directed mutagenesis. Of several deletions which were stably expressed, two, spanning residues G199 to A209 and A278 to N286 of the mature protein, were unable to restore antibiotic resistance in OprM-deficient strains of P. aeruginosa. Still, mutation of several conserved residues within these regions did not adversely affect OprM function. Mutation of the highly conserved N-terminal cysteine residue, site of acylation of this presumed lipoprotein, also did not affect expression or activity of OprM. Similarly, substitution of the OprM lipoprotein signal, including consensus lipoprotein box, with the signal peptide of OprF, the major porin of this organism, failed to impact on expression or activity. Apparently, acylation is not essential for OprM function. A large deletion at the N terminus, from A12 to R98, compromised OprM expression to some extent, although the deletion derivative did retain some activity. Several deletions failed to yield an OprM protein, including one lacking an absolutely conserved LGGGW sequence near the C terminus of the protein. The pattern of permissive and nonpermissive deletions was used to test a topology model for OprM based on the recently published crystal structure of the OprM homologue, TolC (V. Koronakis, A. Sharff, E. Koronakis, B. Luisi, and C. Hughes, Nature 405:914-919, 2000). The data are consistent with OprM monomer existing as a substantially periplasmic protein with four outer membrane-spanning regions.  相似文献   

14.
The tripartite xenobiotic-antibiotic transporter of Pseudomonas aeruginosa consists of the inner membrane transporter (e.g., MexB, MexY), the periplasmic membrane-fusion-protein (e.g., MexA, MexX), and the outer membrane channel protein (e.g., OprM). These subunits were assumed to assemble into a transporter unit during export of the substrates. However, subunit interaction and their specificity in native form remained to be elucidated. To address these important questions, we analyzed the role of the individual subunits for the assembly of MexAB-OprM by pull-down assay tagging only one of the subunits. We found stable MexA-MexB-OprM complex without chemical cross-linking that withstand all purification procedures. Results of bi-partite interactions analysis showed tight association between MexA and OprM in the absence of MexB, whereas the expression systems lacking MexA failed to co-purify MexB or OprM. None of the heterologous subunit combinations such as MexA+MexY(his)+OprM and MexX+MexB(his)+OprM showed interaction. These results implied that the membrane fusion protein is central to the tripartite xenobiotic transporter assembly.  相似文献   

15.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is usually resistant to a wide variety of antibacterial agents, and it has been inferred, on the basis of indirect evidence, that this was due to the low permeability of its outer membrane. We determined the permeability of P. aeruginosa outer membrane directly, by measuring the rates of hydrolysis of cephacetrile, cephaloridine, and various phosphate esters by hydrolytic enzymes located in the periplasm. The permeability to these compounds was about 100-fold lower than in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli K-12. Also, we found that the apparent Km values for active transport of various carbon and energy source compounds were typically higher than 20 microM in P. aeruginosa, in contrast to E. coli in which the values are usually lower than 5 microM. These results also are consistent with the notion that the P. aeruginosa outer membrane indeed has a low permeability to most hydrophilic compounds and that this membrane acts as a rate limiting step in active transport processes with high Vmax values.  相似文献   

16.
Early in vivo experiments revealed that the MexA-MexB dipartite pump unit of Pseudomonas aeruginosa conferred drug resistance to the cells, which expressed OprM, but not to the OprN-bearing cells. While the MexE-MexF unit interplayed with either the outer membrane subunits. Taking advantage of this subunit selectivity, we selected the MexA mutant that gained the ability to interplay with OprN. Four mutants have been isolated and all showed an amino acid substitution (Q116R) in the coiled-coil domain of MexA. The hybrid protein bearing the coiled-coil domain of MexA and the remainder domains from MexE retained the ability to interplay with OprM, but lost the functional interplay with OprN. These results established that the coiled-coil domain of the membrane fusion protein is responsible for selecting the compatible outer membrane subunit.  相似文献   

17.
A small diffusion pore in the outer membrane of Pseudomonas aeruginosa   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The permeability properties of the outer membrane of Pseudomonas aeruginosa were re-examined, since the reported conclusions are conflicting [Decad, M. G. and Nikaido, H. (1976) J. Bacteriol. 128, 325-336; Caulcott, C. A., Brown, M. R. W. and Gonda, I. (1984) FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 21, 119-123]. On the basis of the experimental evidence to be described below we conclude that the exclusion limit of the outer membrane of P. aeruginosa is smaller than the size of uncharged disaccharides but larger than the size of hexose. This conclusion is based on the following evidence. Penetration of monosaccharides into the expanded periplasm was large and that of disaccharides was small, after the cells were plasmolyzed with 600 mosM NaCl. A significant amount of protein was released after osmotic down-shock of cells treated with the hypertonic monosaccharides but not of cells treated with the hypertonic saccharides larger than disaccharides. Centrifuged pellets of cells treated with hypertonic di, tri and tetrasaccharides weighed about 15-20% less than that of cells treated with the isotonic monosaccharide, suggesting that the osmotic pressure was exerted on the outer membrane causing dehydration and shrinking of the cells. By contrast, cells treated with the hypertonic pentose and hexoses weighed about 0.1% and 6% less, respectively, than cells treated with the isotonic saccharide, suggesting that pentose diffused through the outer membrane freely.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract Pseudomonas aeruginosa NCTC6750 and Escherichia coli K12 were used to study permeability of whole, intact cells to a series of labelled oligosaccharides. Stationary phase, oxygen depleted simple salts batch cultures were used. An efflux method was used to compare diffusion from cells of various 3H-labelled sugars (an homologous series based on isomaltitol) with diffusion of [14C]sucrose. Both plasmolysed and unplasmolysed cell suspensions were used. The data are consistent with an E. coli pore exclusion limit of approx. 833 Da for unplasmolysed cells and of about 670 Da for plasmolysed cells. For P. aeruginosa the data indicated a relatively small pore exclusion limit about the same size as sucrose with plasmolysis having little effect. These findings were confirmed with P. aeruginosa PAO1 grown in nutrient broth.  相似文献   

19.
The genome of Pseudomonas aeruginosa encodes tripartite efflux pumps that extrude functionally and structurally dissimilar antibiotics from the bacterial cell. MexAB‐OprM, MexCD‐OprJ, MexEF‐OprN, and MexXY‐OprM are the main tripartite efflux pumps responsible for multidrug resistance in P. aeruginosa. The outer membrane factors OprN, OprJ, and OprM are essential components of functional tripartite efflux pumps. To elucidate the structural basis of multidrug resistance, we determined the crystal structures of OprN and OprJ. These structures revealed several features, including tri‐acylation of the N‐terminal cysteine, a small pore in the β‐barrel domain, and a tightly sealed gate in the α‐barrel domain. Despite the overall similarity of OprN, OprJ, and OprM, a comparison of their structures and electrostatic distributions revealed subtle differences at the periplasmic end of the α‐barrel domain. These results suggested that the overall structures of these outer membrane factors are specifically optimized for particular tripartite efflux pumps. Proteins 2016; 84:759–769. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
The nfxC-type cells of Pseudomonas aeruginosa show resistance to a wide range of structurally and functionally diverse antibiotics, which is a phenomenon that is mainly attributable to the expression of the MexEF-OprN xenobiotic transporter. The MexF, MexE and OprN subunits of this transporter are located on the inner membrane, the periplasm and the outer membrane, respectively, and are assumed to function as an energy-dependent transporter, a bridge connecting the inner and outer membranes and outer membrane channel respectively. The nfxC-type cells showed a single protein band of MexF and OprN, whereas MexE appeared as three distinct bands in an SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretogram. The mutant cells lacking MexF produced undetectable OprN and only a full-size of MexE even though the cells had unimpaired oprN and mexE. Expression of the plasmid-borne MexF in this mutant fully restored OprN and three MexE bands. Another class of mutants producing a full amount of MexF yielded undetectable OprN and two MexE bands lacking the smallest protein species suggesting that the presence of the smallest MexE subunit is required for stabilization of OprN. To identify which part of MexE was needed for stabilization and assembly of OprN, the carboxyl-terminal-truncated MexE tagged with polyhistidine was constructed and protein bands were visualized in the presence of MexF with an antibody raised against polyhistidine or MexE. The results revealed that the proteolytic processing of MexE would occur at carboxyl terminal amino acids between 11 and 16, thereby suggesting that the presence of the C-terminal truncated MexE is essential for stabilization and the proper assembly of OprN. Nucleotide sequencing of mutant mexFs, which produce a wild-type level of MexF but are unable to support the production of the smallest MexE, thereby destabilizing OprN, revealed that all the mutations were located within two large periplasmic domains of MexF between transmembrane segments 1-2 and 7-8. Taking these findings together, we concluded that two large periplasmic domains of MexF interact with MexE thereby promoting programmed processing of MexE, and this complex eventually assists the correct assembly and sorting of OprN.  相似文献   

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