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1.
The cell wall of Bacillus subtilis is capable of binding different kinds of metal ions. The wall-ion complex appears to be dependent on both phosphoryl from teichoic acid and carboxylate from peptidoglycan. In the present study, cationized ferritin (CF) was used as a probe for charge distribution on the wall of B. subtilis 168. Detergent-extracted cell walls bound CF only on the outer wall face. Completed cell poles bound CF, but septa did not. When the walls were permitted to autolyze briefly, binding of CF occurred on both faces. In contrast, limited hydrolysis of the walls by egg white lysozyme resulted in the penetration of CF into the wall matrix. When walls were made teichoic acid-free, CF-binding asymmetry was preserved, suggesting that carboxyl groups were oriented toward the surface. Walls with carboxylates chemically neutralized also retained charge asymmetry. Phosphate-free and carboxyl-modified walls bound CF only poorly or not at all. These results indicate that negative charges contributed by both phosphate and carboxyl are responsible for the binding of CF and that the observed asymmetry in the distribution of the label is due to the orientation of teichoic acid and muramyl peptides toward the outside of the cell wall, above the plane of the glycan strands.  相似文献   

2.
Major sites of metal binding in Bacillus licheniformis walls.   总被引:6,自引:2,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Isolated and purified walls of Bacillus licheniformis NCTC 6346 his contained peptidoglycan, teichoic acid, and teichuronic acid (0.36 mumol of diaminopimelic acid, 0.85 mumol of organic phosphorus, and 0.43 mumol of glucuronic acid per mg [dry weight] of walls, respectively). The walls also contained a total of 0.208 mumol of metal per mg. When these walls were subjected to metal-binding conditions (T. J. Beveridge and R. G. E. Murray, J. Bacteriol. 127:1502-1518, 1976) for nine metals, the amount of bound metal above background ranged from 0.910 mumol of Na to 0.031 mumol of Au per mg of walls. Most were in the 0.500-mumol mg-1 range. Electron-scattering profiles from unstained thin sections indicated that the metal was dispersed throughout the wall fabric. Mild alkali treatment extracted teichoic acid from the walls (97% based on phosphorus) but left the peptidoglycan and teichuronic acid intact. This treatment reduced their capacity for all metals but Au. Thin sections revealed that the wall thickness had been reduced by one-third, but metal was still dispersed throughout the wall fabric. Trichloroacetic acid treatment of the teichoic acid-less walls removed 95% of the teichuronic acid (based on glucuronic acid) but left the peptidoglycan intact (based on sedimentable diaminopimelic acid). The thickness of these walls was not further reduced, but little binding capacity remained (usually less than 10% of the original binding). The staining of these walls with Au produced a 14.4-nm repeat frequency within the peptidoglycan fabric. Sedimentation velocity experiments with the extracted teichuronic acid in the presence of metal confirmed it to be a potent metal-complexing polymer. These results indicated that teichoic and teichuronic acids are the prime sites of metal binding in B. licheniformis walls.  相似文献   

3.
Methicillin-resistant (MR) Staphylococcus aureus strains have previously been reported to be deficient in surface negative charge; this has been correlated with methicillin resistance and ascribed to a deficiency of teichoic acid at the cell surface (A. W. Hill and A. M. James, Microbios 6:157-167, 1972). Teichoic acid was present in walls of MR organisms as revealed by appreciable phosphate levels and detection of ribitol residues. Phosphate levels in walls from five MR strains (0.54 to 0.77 mumol/mg of wall) were lower than in three unrelated methicillin-sensitive (MS) strains (0.86 to 1.0 mumol/mg of wall). However, two MS strains derived from two of the MR strains had wall phosphate levels very similar to those of the MR strains. No evidence for unusual wall polymers was found. Simple deficiency of wall teichoic acid does not result in methicillin resistance since an independently isolated teichoic acid-deficient strain (0.1 mumol of phosphate per mg of wall) was not methicillin resistant. In studies of biological properties possibly related to wall teichoic acid, it was discovered that walls isolated from MR organisms grown in the presence of methicillin autolyzed more rapidly than those isolated from organisms grown in the absence of the drug. Since methicillin resistance is enhanced by NaCl and suppressed by ethylenediaminetetraacetate, the effects of these compounds on autolysis of isolated walls were studied. NaCl (1.0 M) and ethylenediaminetetraacetate (1.0 mM) inhibited the autolysis of walls isolated from MR and MS strains. An MR strain bound phage 47, 52A, and 3A only slightly less well than their respective propagating strains.  相似文献   

4.
Isolated cell walls of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae were treated by either chemical (alkali and acid) or enzymatic (protease, mannanase or beta-glucuronidase) processes to yield partially purified products. These products were partially characterized by infrared analysis. They were subsequently reacted with heavy metal cation solutions and the quantity of metal accumulated by the cell wall material determined. The Cu(2+) ion (0.24, 0.36, 1.12, and 0.60 mumol/mg) was accumulated to a greater extent than either Co(2+) (0.13, 0.32, 0.43, and 0.32 mumol/mg) or Cd(2+) (0.17, 0.34, 0.39, and 0.32 mumol/mg) by yeast cell walls, glucan, mannan, and chitin, respectively The isolated components each accumulated greater quantities of the cations than the intact cell wall. Removal of the protein component of the yeast cell walls by Pronase caused a 29.5% decrease in metal accumulation by yeast cell walls per mass, indicating the protein is a heavy metal accumulating component. The data indicate that the outer mannan-protein layer of the yeast cell wall is more important than the inner glucan-chitin layer in heavy metal action accumulation. (c) 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Cell walls of Bacillus subtilis were treated with several chemical fixatives which are commonly used preparatory to electron microscopy; i.e., osmium tetroxide, formaldehyde, acrolein, crotonaldehyde, and glutaraldehyde. Dimensional analysis was performed on thin sections of fixed walls from plastic embeddings and, by means of the statistical technique of multiple comparisons, significant differences were found between wall thicknesses from the various fixations. These differences varied with the fixation time and the type of fixative used in the reaction. When compared to embedded walls which had been stained before fixation, the overall effect was a reduction in wall thickness which was attributed to fixative action and not to the embedding or staining processes. The reduction of wall thickness was even more apparent when dimensions of fixed walls were compared to published dimensions of both frozen sections and freeze-etch profiles. Since these fixatives bind to reactive sites within the wall fabric, a change in electrochemical charge density is effected which can be monitored in terms of heavy-metal-binding capacity. Most monoaldehyde fixatives and osmium tetroxide render the wall as reactive, or less reactive, to uranyl acetate as unfixed walls, whereas glutaraldehyde can significantly increase the binding capacity.  相似文献   

6.
The fungal cell wall viewed through the electron microscope appears transparent when fixed by the conventional osmium tetroxide method. However, ruthenium tetroxide post-fixing has revealed new details in the ultrastructure of Penicillium sp. hyphae and Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast. Most significant was the demonstration of two or three opaque diverse electron dense layers on the cell wall of each species. Two additional features were detected. Penicillium septa presented a three-layered appearance and budding S. cerevisiae yeast cell walls showed inner filiform cell wall protrusions into the cytoplasm. The combined use of osmium tetroxide and ruthenium tetroxide is recommended for post-fixing in electron microscopy studies of fungi.  相似文献   

7.
In thin sections of wheat rachis and stem, embedded in Spurr's resin, prefixed with glutaraldehyde and postfixed with osmium, large amounts of barley thionins were localized in cell walls with anti-thionin-protein A/gold. Reduced binding to thionin was detected in cell walls penetrated by Fusarium culmorum, suggesting that cell wall thionins were degraded by the fungus.  相似文献   

8.
The composition and concentrations of cell wall polysaccharides and phenolic compounds were analyzed in mature stems of several Miscanthus genotypes, in comparison with switchgrass and reed (Arundo donax), and biomass characteristics were correlated with cell wall saccharification efficiency. The highest cellulose content was found in cell walls of M. sinensis‘Grosse Fontaine’ (55%) and in A. donax (47%) and lowest (about 32%) in M. sinensis‘Adagio’. There was little variation in lignin contents across M. sinensis samples (all about 22–24% of cell wall), however, Miscanthus×giganteus (M × g) cell walls contained about 28% lignin, reed – 23% and switchgrass – 26%. The highest ratios of cellulose/lignin and cellulose/xylan were in M. sinensis‘Grosse Fontaine’ across all samples tested. About the same total content of ester‐bound phenolics was found in different Miscanthus genotypes (23–27 μg/mg cell wall), while reed cell walls contained 17 μg/mg cell wall and switchgrass contained a lower amount of ester‐bound phenolics, about 15 μg/mg cell wall. Coumaric acid was a major phenolic compound ester‐bound to cell walls in plants analyzed and the ratio of coumaric acid/ferulic acid varied from 2.1 to 4.3, with the highest ratio being in M × g samples. Concentration of ether‐bound hydroxycinnamic acids varied greatly (about two‐three‐fold) within Miscanthus genotypes and was also the highest in M × g cell walls, but at a concentration lower than ester‐bound hydroxycinnamic acids. We identified four different forms of diferulic acid esters bound to Miscanthus cell walls and their concentration and proportion varied in genotypes analyzed with the 5‐5‐coupled dimer being the predominant type of diferulate in most samples tested. The contents of lignin and ether‐bound phenolics in the cell wall were the major determinants of the biomass degradation caused by enzymatic hydrolysis.  相似文献   

9.
A 10-hr starvation of Streptococcus faecalis ATCC 9790 for the amino acids methionine and threonine results in cells which are resistant to autolysis and which contain greatly reduced quantities of both active and latent (proteinase activable) forms of the autolytic enzyme (an N-acetyl-muramide glycanhydrolase). Cell walls were isolated from cells harvested at various times during the recovery from such starvation and were assayed for active and latent forms of the autolysin. Within 10 min of recovery the latent enzyme began to increase. Only after 30 to 60 min did the active enzyme begin to increase; after a similar lag, the cells' proneness to lysis markedly increased. The intracellular localization of both forms of the autolysin was examined, using as an experimental tool the ability of added cell wall to bind autolysin. (14)C-lysine-labeled, inactivated cell walls were added to exponential-phase cells, which were then disrupted, and the mixed wall population was isolated. Measurement of the (14)C release during wall autolysis indicated that the active enzyme in the cells was not available for binding to the added (14)C-labeled walls and was therefore wall-bound in vivo. In contrast, up to 85% of latent autolysin activity was found to have been efficiently bound to the added (14)C walls. The results obtained suggest (i) cellular autolysis is a reflection of the level of active enzyme and not of latent enzyme, and (ii) autolysin is synthesized and mainly located in the cytoplasm as an inactive latent precursor (proenzyme) which is transported to sites on the cell wall associated with wall biosynthesis, where it becomes activated.  相似文献   

10.
Saadat D  Harrison DH 《Biochemistry》2000,39(11):2950-2960
The crystal structure of the transition-state analogue 2-phosphoglycolate (2PG) bound to methylglyoxal synthase (MGS) is presented at a resolution of 2.0 A. This structure is very similar to the previously determined structure of MGS complexed to formate and phosphate. Since 2PG is a competitive inhibitor of both MGS and triosephosphate isomerase (TIM), the carboxylate groups of each bound 2PG from this structure and the structure of 2PG bound to TIM were used to align and compare the active sites despite differences in their protein folds. The distances between the functional groups of Asp 71, His 98, His 19, and the carboxylate oxygens of the 2PG molecule in MGS are similar to the corresponding distances between the functional groups of Glu 165, His 95, Lys 13, and the carboxylate oxygens of the 2PG molecule in TIM. However, these spatial relationships are enantiomorphic to each other. Consistent with the known stereochemical data, the catalytic base Asp 71 is positioned on the opposite face of the 2PG-carboxylate plane as Glu 165 of TIM. Both His 98 of MGS and His 95 of TIM are in the plane of the carboxylate of 2PG, suggesting that these two residues are homologous in function. While His 19 of MGS and Lys 13 of TIM appear on the opposite face of the 2PG carboxylate plane, their relative location to the 2PG molecule is quite different, suggesting that they probably have different functions. Most remarkably, unlike the coplanar structure found in the 2PG molecule bound to TIM, the torsion angle around the C1-C2 bond of 2PG bound to MGS brings the phosphoryl moiety out of the molecule's carboxylate plane, facilitating elimination. Further, the superimposition of this structure with the structure of MGS bound to formate and phosphate suggests a model for the enzyme bound to the first transition state.  相似文献   

11.
Cell walls from exponential-phase cultures of Streptococcus faecalis ATCC 9790 contain an autolysin (a beta-N-acetylmuramide glycanhydrolase, E.C. 3.2.1.17) which has been isolated from trypsin-speeded wall autolysates. The autolysin, which was excluded from Bio-Gel P-60, was further fractionated by diethylaminoethyl (DEAE)-cellulose chromatography or filtration on Bio-Gel P-200. After DEAE-cellulose chromatography, which removed most of the wall polysaccharide, autolysin activity was extremely labile and was rapidly lost at -20 C, even in the presence of albumin. The P-60-excluded enzyme was rapidly bound by walls at both 37 C (50% bound in about 1 min) and 0 C (50% bound in less than 4 min). Wall-bound autolysin could not be removed by 1.0 m ammonium acetate (pH 6.9). Autolysin was also bound by walls that had been extracted with 10% trichloroacetic acid or treated with 0.01 n periodate, suggesting that the nonpeptidoglycan wall polymers are not important for binding. Wall-bound autolysin was more stable than the soluble enzyme to proteinase digestion, acetone (40%), 8 m urea (at 0 C), or to inactivation at 56 C. Two bacterial neutral proteinases (which do not hydrolyze ester bonds) activated latent wall-bound autolysin, suggesting that activation results from the cleavage of one or more peptide bonds. The group A streptococcal proteinase activated latent autolysin but differed from the other proteinases in that it did not inactivate soluble autolysin. The results suggest that the autolysin is not covalently linked to the wall. The high affinity of the walls for the autolysin appears to be responsible for the firm, not easily reversed binding.  相似文献   

12.
Various mechanisms are involved in detoxification of heavy metals such as lead (Pb) in plant cells. Most of the Pb taken up by plants accumulates in their roots. However, the detailed properties of Pb complexes in roots remain unclear. We have investigated the properties of Pb deposits in root cell walls of radish (Raphanus sativus L.) seedlings grown on glass beads bed containing Pb pellets, which are the source of Pb-contamination in shooting range soils. Pb deposits were tightly bound to cell walls. Cell wall fragments containing about 50,000 ppm Pb were prepared from the roots. After extracting Pb from the cell wall fragments using HCl, Pb ions were recombined with the Pb-extracted cell wall fragments in a solution containing Pb acetate. When the cell wall fragments were treated with pectinase (E.C. 3.2.1.15) and were chemically modified with 1-ethyl-3-dimethylamino-propylcarboimide, the Pb-rebinding ability of the treated cell wall fragments decreased. When acid-treated cell wall fragments were incubated in a solution containing Pb2+ and excess amounts of a chelating agent, Pb recombined with the cell wall fragments were measured to estimate the affinity between Pb2+ and the cell wall fragments. Our data show that Pb2+ binds to carboxyl groups of cell walls. The source of the carboxyl groups is suggested to be pectic compounds. A stability constant of the Pb-cell wall complex was estimated to be about 108. The role of root cell walls in the mechanism underlying heavy metal tolerance was discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Cell walls isolated from competent streptococci (group H strain Challis) were shown to bind more homologous and heterologous deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) than noncompetent walls. Heat- and alkali-denatured DNA was not bound by either wall preparation. Pretreatment of cell walls with cetyltrimethylammonium bromide sharply increased the binding of DNA but did not increase transformation of whole cells. Pretreatment of the walls with either sodium dodecylsulfate, deoxyribonuclease and ribonuclease, or with crude competence-provoking factor did not affect the binding of DNA. Antiserum prepared against whole competent cells completely blocked transformation and also inhibited DNA binding to competent cell walls. Adsorption of this antiserum with competent Challis cells removed its blocking action for both binding and transformation. Pretreatment of walls with trypsin and Pronase destroyed their ability to bind DNA. Trypsin treatment also blocked transformation in whole cells. The transforming activity of DNA bound to cell walls was found to be protected from deoxyribonuclease action. Significant differences were observed in the arginine, proline, and phenylalanine content of competent and noncompetent walls. With few exceptions, the amino acids released from competent cell walls by trypsin were several-fold greater than from noncompetent walls. The results indicate that (i) two binding sites exist, one in competent cells only and essential for subsequent transformation, and a second, present in all cells, which is not involved in transformation; (ii) both sites are protein in nature; (iii) the transformation site is blocked by antibody; and (iv) the competent cell wall possesses tryptic-sensitive protein not present in the noncompetent wall.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Cell walls of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and S. uvarum were activated by periodate oxidation of vicinal diol groups in cell wall polysaccharides. The aldehyde groups thus generated allow the yeast cells to be covalently bound to modified bead cellulose or macroporous glycidyl methacrylate supports, or to enzymes such as glucose oxidase and catalase.  相似文献   

15.
Nonaqueous titration was used for detection of free amino groups in the polymeric matrix of plant cell walls. The content of amino groups varied in the range 0.54–0.91 and total nitrogen in the range 1.0–4.2 mmol per gram dry mass of cell walls depending on the plant species. However, these data on the high content of free amino groups do not correlate with the present day concept that the nitrogen fraction in charged amino groups in plant cell wall proteins, which are assumed to be mainly amino groups of lysine and arginine residues, is about 10%. It is supposed that most detected free amino groups belong to the hydroxy-amino acids hydroxyproline and tyrosine that can be bound at the hydroxyl group with the carbohydrate part of glycoprotein or another structural cell wall polymer.  相似文献   

16.
Apple polyphenol (procyanidin)–cell wall interactions were investigated and their impact on polysaccharide extractability were determined. Native and oxidised procyanidins with average degrees of polymerisation of 13 and 55 were incubated with cell walls. The effect of polyphenol oxidation was evaluated according to two designs: polyphenols were chemically oxidised either before or during interaction. The extent of procyanidin binding to cell walls was assessed by the weight increase of procyanidin–cell wall complexes as compared to weights of cell walls alone. Pectins and hemicelluloses were subsequently extracted from cell walls and from cell wall–procyanidin adducts using a chelating agent (ammonium oxalate), a pectin lyase treatment and NaOH.Weight increases of complexes ranged from 20% to 29%. Weight gains increased in the following order: native, pre-oxidised, simultaneously oxidised and bound procyanidins, these different fractions were, respectively, bound to cell walls. In presence of native procyanidins, oxalate extracted less pectins, and those pectins had lower degrees of methylation, as compared to cell walls alone. When cell walls were incubated with oxidised and oxidising procyanidins, even less pectins with lower degree of methylation were extracted. Major findings indicated that procyanidins mainly bound to pectins as compared to other cell wall compounds: (1) the procyanidin adsorption to cell walls limited the depolymerisation of pectins supposedly induced by pectin lyase. Thus less pectins were extracted but their degree of methylation increased, indicative of products of lysis of pectin lyase. (2) Hemicelluloses extracted using NaOH (4 M) were more abundant in pectins when oxidised or oxidising procyanidins were complexed rather than non complexed to cell walls.  相似文献   

17.
Electron spin resonance linewidth measurements have been made on intact cell walls exchanged with various combinations of Mn2+ and Ca2+. These experiments were performed to find the Mn2+ nearest-neighbor distance and thereby determine whether carboxylate-Mn2+ complexes potentiate ion association at adjacent sites on cell wall polyuronides. Our results show that as the fraction of available binding sites occupied by Mn2+ increased from 2% to 27%, the nearest-neighbor distance parameter decreased only from 14 to 11 Å. These distances are close to polyuronide interanionic spacings. The small change in the distance parameter with concentration is evidence for sequential rather than random binding. Competitive ion-exchange with Ca2+ was found to reduce the Mn2+ spin-spin line broadening at similar total bound Mn2+ concentrations. This is expected only if Ca2+ competes at adjacent sites. The data presented offer strong support for the hypothesis that carboxylate groups near already occupied sites have a greater affinity for divalent cations than other sites along the polyuronide main chain.  相似文献   

18.
Electron microscopy of isolated cell walls of the ancient bacterium Thermus thermophilus revealed that most of the peptidoglycan (PG) surface, apart from the septal region, was shielded against specific alphaPG antibodies. On the other hand, an antiserum raised against S-layer-attached cell wall fragments (alphaSAC) bound to most of the surface except for the septal regions. Treatments with alpha-amylase and pronase E made the entire cell wall surface uniformly accessible to alphaPG and severely decreased the binding of alphaSAC. We concluded that a layer of strongly bound secondary cell wall polymers (SCWPs) covers most of the cell wall surface in this ancient bacterium. A preliminary analysis revealed that such SCWPs constitute 14% of the cell wall and are essentially composed of sugars. Enzyme treatments of the cell walls revealed that SCWP was required in vitro for the binding of the S-layer protein through the S-layer homology (SLH) motif. The csaB gene was necessary for the attachment of the S-layer-outer membrane (OM) complex to the cell wall in growing cells of T. thermophilus. In vitro experiments confirmed that cell walls from a csaB mutant bound to the S-layer with a much lower affinity ( approximately 1/10) than that of the wild type. CsaB was found to be required for pyruvylation of components of the SCWP and for immunodetection with alpha-SAC antiserum. Therefore, the S-layer-OM complex of T. thermophilus binds to the cell wall through the SLH motif of the S-layer protein via a strong interaction with a highly immunogenic pyruvylated component of the SCWP. Immuno-cross-reactive compounds were detected with alphaSAC on cell walls of other Thermus spp. and in the phylogenetically related microorganism Deinococcus radiodurans. These results imply that the interaction between the SLH motif and pyruvylated components of the cell wall arose early during bacterial evolution as an ancestral mechanism for anchoring proteins and outer membranes to the cell walls of primitive bacteria.  相似文献   

19.
《Phytochemistry》1986,25(6):1271-1274
Cytoplasmic and wall bound peroxidases were extracted from successive segments of decreasing growth potential along the mung bean hypocotyl. Active wall bound peroxidases were present in the epidermis and external parenchyma layers at the end of the elongation phase. Two fast migrating anionic isoperoxidases covalently bound to the cell walls increased when the cell walls lost their plasticity. These isoenzymes were characterized by a high affinity for several peroxidase substrates and high thermal stability.  相似文献   

20.
p-Hydroxybenzaldehyde, vanillin and syringaldehyde were released as their sodium salts from graminaceous cell walls by treatment with sodium hydroxide. Treatment of the walls with ‘cellulase’ having both cellulase and hemicellulase activity released the aldehydes in bound form apparently linked at their phenolic groups to the wall polysaccharides. These findings are discussed in relation to tests for lignin using phloroglucinol-HC1 and alkaline nitrobenzene reagents.  相似文献   

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