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1.
Mitochondrial superoxide (O2.) is an important mediator of ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. The O2. generated in mitochondria also acts as a redox signal triggering cellular apoptosis. The enzyme succinate ubiquinone reductase (SQR or complex II) is one of the major mitochondrial components hosting regulatory thiols. Here the intrinsic protein S-glutathionylation (PrSSG) at the 70-kDa FAD-binding subunit of SQR was detected in rat heart and in isolated SQR using an anti-GSH monoclonal antibody. When rats were subjected to 30 min of coronary ligation followed by 24 h of reperfusion, the electron transfer activity (ETA) of SQR in post-ischemic myocardium was significantly decreased by 41.5 +/- 2.9%. The PrSSGs of SQR-70 kDa were partially or completely eliminated in post-ischemic myocardium obtained from in vivo regional I/R hearts or isolated global I/R hearts, respectively. These results were further confirmed by using isolated succinate cytochrome c reductase (complex II + complex III). In the presence of succinate, O2. was generated and oxidized the SQR portion of SCR, leading to a 60-70% decrease in its ETA. The gel band of the S-glutathionylated SQR 70-kDa polypeptide was cut out and digested with trypsin, and the digests were subjected to liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry analysis. One cysteine residue, Cys(90), was involved in S-glutathionylation. These results indicate that the glutathione-binding domain, (77)AAFGLSEAGFNTACVTK(93) (where underline indicates Cys(90)), is susceptible to redox change induced by oxidative stress. Furthermore, in vitro S-glutathionylation of purified SQR resulted in enhanced SQR-derived electron transfer efficiency and decreased formation of the 70-kDa-derived protein thiyl radical induced by O2. . Thus, the decreasing S-glutathionylation and ETA in mitochondrial complex II are marked during myocardial ischemia/reperfusion. This redox-triggered impairment of complex II occurs in the post-ischemic heart and should be useful to identify disease pathogenesis related to reactive oxygen species-induced mitochondrial dysfunction.  相似文献   

2.
Bacillus cereus KCTC 3674 excretes several kinds of extracellular proteases into the growth medium. Two proteases with molecular masses of approximately 36-kDa and 38-kDa, as shown by SDS-PAGE, were purified from the culture broth. The 38-kDa protease was purified from B. cereus cultivated at 37 degrees C, and the 36-kDa protease was obtained from the B. cereus cultivated at 20 degrees C. The 38-kDa protease was identified as an extracellular neutral (metallo-) protease and was further characterized. The 36-kDa protease was shown to be a novel enzyme based on its N-terminal amino acid sequence, its identification as a metallo-enzyme that was strongly inhibited by EDTA and o-phenanthroline, its hemolysis properties, and its optimal pH and temperature for activity of 8.0 and 70 degrees C, respectively.  相似文献   

3.
Membrane-bound succinate dehydrogenases (succinate:quinone reductases, SQR) and fumarate reductases (quinol:fumarate reductases, QFR) couple the oxidation of succinate to fumarate to the reduction of quinone to quinol and also catalyse the reverse reaction. SQR (respiratory complex II) is involved in aerobic metabolism as part of the citric acid cycle and of the aerobic respiratory chain. QFR is involved in anaerobic respiration with fumarate as the terminal electron acceptor, and is part of an electron transport chain catalysing the oxidation of various donor substrates by fumarate. QFR and SQR complexes are collectively referred to as succinate:quinone oxidoreductases (EC 1.3.5.1), have very similar compositions and are predicted to share similar structures. The complexes consist of two hydrophilic and one or two hydrophobic, membrane-integrated subunits. The larger hydrophilic subunit A carries covalently bound flavin adenine dinucleotide and subunit B contains three iron-sulphur centres. QFR of Wolinella succinogenes and SQR of Bacillus subtilis contain only one hydrophobic subunit (C) with two haem b groups. In contrast, SQR and QFR of Escherichia coli contain two hydrophobic subunits (C and D) which bind either one (SQR) or no haem b group (QFR). The structure of W. succinogenes QFR has been determined at 2.2 A resolution by X-ray crystallography (C.R.D. Lancaster, A. Kr?ger, M. Auer, H. Michel, Nature 402 (1999) 377-385). Based on this structure of the three protein subunits and the arrangement of the six prosthetic groups, a pathway of electron transfer from the quinol-oxidising dihaem cytochrome b to the site of fumarate reduction and a mechanism of fumarate reduction was proposed. The W. succinogenes QFR structure is different from that of the haem-less QFR of E. coli, described at 3.3 A resolution (T.M. Iverson, C. Luna-Chavez, G. Cecchini, D.C. Rees, Science 284 (1999) 1961-1966), mainly with respect to the structure of the membrane-embedded subunits and the relative orientations of soluble and membrane-embedded subunits. Also, similarities and differences between QFR transmembrane helix IV and transmembrane helix F of bacteriorhodopsin and their implications are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
A novel bo3-type quinol oxidase was highly purified from Bacillus cereus PYM1, a spontaneous mutant unable to synthesize heme A and therefore spectroscopically detectable cytochromes aa3 and caa3. The purified enzyme contained 12.4 nmol of heme O and 11.5 nmol of heme B mg-1 protein. The enzyme was composed of two subunits with an Mr of 51,000 and 30,000, respectively. Both subunits were immunoreactive to antibodies raised against the B cereus aa3 oxidase. Moreover, amino-terminal sequence analysis of the 30-kDa subunit revealed that the first 19 residues were identical to those from the 30-kDa subunit of the B. cereus aa3 oxidase. The purified bo3 oxidase failed to oxidize ferrrocytochrome c (neither yeast nor horse) but oxidized tetrachlorohydroquinol with an apparent Km of 498 microM, a Vmax of 21 micromol of O2 min-1mg-1, and a calculated turnover of 55 s-1. The quinol oxidase activity with tetrachlorohydroquinol was inhibited by potassium cyanide and 2-n-heptyl 4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide with an I50 of 24 and 300 microM, respectively. Our results demonstrate that the bo3 oxidase of this mutant is not the product of a new operon but instead is a cytochrome aa3 apoprotein encoded by the qox operon of the aa3 oxidase of B. cereus wild type promiscuously assembled with hemes B and O replacing heme A, producing a novel bo3 cytochrome. This is the first reported example of an enzymatically active promiscuous oxidase resulting from the simultaneous substitution of its original hemes in the high and low spin sites.  相似文献   

5.
Succinate:menaquinone-7 oxidoreductase (complex II) of the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis consists of equimolar amounts of three polypeptides; a 65-kDa FAD-containing polypeptide, a 28-kDa iron-sulfur cluster containing polypeptide, and a 23-kDa membrane-spanning cytochrome b558 polypeptide. The enzyme complex was overproduced 2-3-fold in membranes of B. subtilis cells containing the sdhCAB operon on a low copy number plasmid and was purified in the presence of detergent. The cytochrome b558 subunit alone was similarly overexpressed in a complex II deficient mutant and partially purified. Isolated complex II catalyzed the reduction of various quinones and also quinol oxidation. Both activities were efficiently albeit not completely blocked by 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide. Chemical analysis demonstrated two protoheme IX per complex II. One heme component was found to have an Em,7.4 of +65 mV and an EPR gmax signal at 3.68, to be fully reducible by succinate, and showed a symmetrical alpha-band absorption peak at 555 nm at 77 K. The other heme component was found to have an Em,7.4 of -95 mV and an EPR gmax signal at 3.42, was not reducible by succinate under steady-state conditions, and showed in the reduced state an apparent split alpha-band absorption peak with maxima at 553 and 558 nm at 77 K. Potentiometric titrations of partially purified cytochrome b558 subunit demonstrated that the isolated cytochrome b558 also contains two hemes. Some of the properties, i.e., the alpha-band light absorption peak at 77 K, the line shapes of the EPR gmax signals, and reactivity with carbon monoxide were observed to be different in B. subtilis cytochrome b558 isolated and in complex II. This suggests that the bound flavoprotein and iron-sulfur protein subunits protect or affect the heme environment in the assembled complex.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract Flagellar antigen of Bacillus cereus H.1 was purified and tested for serodiagnostic antigen by ELISA. The antibody against the flagellar antigen of B. cereus H.1 reacted not only with the homologous specific antigen but also reacted with the flagellar antigens of 23 strains of B. cereus . This common flagellar antigen of B. cereus was found to be due to 61-kDa protein by SDS-PAGE and immunoblot assay. Monoclonal antibody H15A5 against common antigenic epitope of B. cereus also reacted with flagellar antigens of 21 strains of Bacillus thuringiensis by ELISA. This monoclonal antibody reacted with the 61-kDa protein of the flagella of B. cereus H.1 and H.2 and B. thuringiensis Kurstaki HD1, Alesti and Aizawai juroi by immunoblot analysis. These results indicated that the common antigenic epitope of the 61-kDa protein existed in the flagella both of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis .  相似文献   

7.
从浙江省金华市花生地土样中筛选、分离纯化得到1株产聚-β-羟基丁酸编号为PX-95的芽胞杆菌,PHB产量为135.81 mg/L。根据形态特征、生理生化特征初步鉴定为芽胞杆菌属蜡样芽胞杆菌群,16S rDNA序列分析显示PX-95菌株与苏云金芽胞杆菌以及蜡样芽胞杆菌均具有高度同源性,最后采用扩增gyrB(DNA促旋酶B亚单位)基因的方法将其鉴定为苏云金芽胞杆菌(Bacillus thuringiensis)。  相似文献   

8.
Two monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) against Bacillus cereus were produced. The MAbs (8D3 and 9B7) were selected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for their reactivity with B. cereus vegetative cells. They reacted with B. cereus vegetative cells while failing to recognize B. cereus spores. Immunoblotting revealed that MAb 8D3 recognized a 22-kDa antigen, while MAb 9B7 recognized two antigens with molecular masses of approximately 58 and 62 kDa. The use of MAbs 8D3 and 9B7 in combination to develop an immunological method for the detection of B. cereus vegetative cells in foods was investigated.  相似文献   

9.
The prevalence of the hemolytic enterotoxin complex HBL was determined in all species of the Bacillus cereus group with the exception of Bacillus anthracis. hblA, encoding the binding subunit B, was detected by PCR and Southern analysis and was confirmed by partial sequencing of 18 strains. The sequences formed two clusters, one including B. cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis strains and the other one consisting of Bacillus mycoides, Bacillus pseudomycoides, and Bacillus weihenstephanensis strains. From eight B. thuringiensis strains, the enterotoxin gene hblA could be amplified. Seven of them also expressed the complete HBL complex as determined with specific antibodies against the L(1), L(2), and B components. Eleven of 16 B. mycoides strains, all 3 B. pseudomyoides strains, 9 of 15 B. weihenstephanensis strains, and 10 of 23 B. cereus strains carried hblA. While HBL was not expressed in the B. pseudomycoides strains, the molecular assays were in accordance with the immunological assays for the majority of the remaining strains. In summary, the hemolytic enterotoxin HBL seems to be broadly distributed among strains of the B. cereus group and relates neither to a certain species nor to a specific environment. The consequences of this finding for food safety considerations need to be evaluated.  相似文献   

10.
Genome features of the Bacillus cereus group genomes (representative strains of Bacillus cereus, Bacillus anthracis and Bacillus thuringiensis sub spp. israelensis) were analyzed and compared with the Bacillus subtilis genome. A core set of 1381 protein families among the four Bacillus genomes, with an additional set of 933 families common to the B. cereus group, was identified. Differences in signal transduction pathways, membrane transporters, cell surface structures, cell wall, and S-layer proteins suggesting differences in their phenotype were identified. The B. cereus group has signal transduction systems including a tyrosine kinase related to two-component system histidine kinases from B. subtilis. A model for regulation of the stress responsive sigma factor sigmaB in the B. cereus group different from the well studied regulation in B. subtilis has been proposed. Despite a high degree of chromosomal synteny among these genomes, significant differences in cell wall and spore coat proteins that contribute to the survival and adaptation in specific hosts has been identified.  相似文献   

11.
Malaria parasites in human hosts depend on glycolysis for most of their energy production, and the mitochondrion of the intraerythrocytic form is acristate. Although the genes for all tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle members are found in the parasite genome, the presence of a functional TCA cycle in the intraerythrocytic stage is still controversial. To elucidate the physiological role of Plasmodium falciparum mitochondrial complex II (succinate-ubiquinone reductase (SQR) or succinate dehydrogenase (SDH)) in the TCA cycle, the gene for the flavoprotein subunit (Fp) of the enzyme, pfsdha (P.falciparum gene for SDH subunit A, PlasmoDB ID: PF3D7_1034400) was disrupted. SDH is a well-known marker enzyme for mitochondria. In the pfsdha disruptants, Fp mRNA and polypeptides were decreased, and neither SQR nor SDH activity of complex II was detected. The suppression of complex II caused growth retardation of the intraerythrocytic forms, suggesting that complex II contributes to intraerythrocytic parasite growth, although it is not essential for survival. The growth retardation in the pfsdha disruptant was rescued by the addition of succinate, but not by fumarate. This indicates that complex II functions as a quinol-fumarate reductase (QFR) to form succinate from fumarate in the intraerythrocytic parasite.  相似文献   

12.
Many short (<400 bp) interspersed sequence repeats exist in bacteria, yet little is known about their origins, mode of generation, or possible function. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of 18 different previously identified repeated DNA elements, bcr1-bcr18 (?kstad OA, Hegna I, Lindback T, Rishovd AL, Kolst? AB. 1999. Genome organization is not conserved between Bacillus cereus and Bacillus subtilis. Microbiology. 145:621-631.; Tourasse NJ, Helgason E, ?kstad OA, Hegna IK, Kolst? AB. 2006. The Bacillus cereus group: novel aspects of population structure and genome dynamics. J Appl Microbiol. 101:579-593.), in 36 sequenced genomes from the Bacillus cereus group of bacteria. This group consists of genetically closely related species with variable pathogenic specificity toward different hosts and includes among others B. anthracis, B. cereus, and B. thuringiensis. The B. cereus group repeat elements could be classified into three categories with different properties: Group A elements (bcr1-bcr3) exhibited highly variable copy numbers ranging from 4 to 116 copies per strain, showed a nonconserved chromosomal distribution pattern between strains, and displayed several features characteristic of mobile elements. Group B repeats (bcr4-bcr6) were present in 0-10 copies per strain and were associated with strain-specific genes and disruptions of genome synteny, implying a possible contribution to genome rearrangements and/or horizontal gene transfer events. bcr5, in particular, was associated with large gene clusters showing resemblance to integrons. In agreement with their potentially mobile nature or involvement in horizontal transfers, the sequences of the repeats from Groups A and B (bcr1-bcr6) followed a phylogeny different from that of the host strains. Conversely, repeats from Group C (bcr7-bcr18) had a conserved chromosomal location and orthologous gene neighbors in the investigated B. cereus group genomes, and their phylogeny matched that of the host chromosome. Several of the group C repeats exhibited a conserved secondary structure or had parts of the structure conserved, possibly indicating functional RNAs. Accordingly, five of the repeats in group C overlapped regions encoding previously characterized riboswitches. Similarly, other group C repeats could represent novel riboswitches, encode small RNAs, and/or constitute other types of regulatory elements with specific biological functions. The current analysis suggests that the multitude of repeat elements identified in the B. cereus group promote genome dynamics and plasticity and could contribute to the flexible and adaptive life style of these bacteria.  相似文献   

13.
AIMS: To provide new insights into the population and genomic structure of the Bacillus cereus group of bacteria. METHODS AND RESULTS: The genetic relatedness among B. cereus group strains was assessed by multilocus sequence typing (MLST) using an optimized scheme based on seven chromosomal housekeeping genes. A set of 48 strains from different clinical sources was included, and six clonal complexes containing several genetically similar isolates from unrelated patients were identified. Interestingly, several clonal groups contained strains that were isolated from similar human sources. Furthermore, comparative whole genome sequence analysis of 16 strains led to the discovery of novel ubiquitous genome features of the B. cereus group, such as atypical group II introns, IStrons, and hitherto uncharacterized repeated elements. CONCLUSIONS: The B. cereus group constitutes a coherent population unified by the presence of ubiquitous and specific genetic elements which do not show any pattern, either in their sequences or genomic locations, which allows to differentiate between the member species of the group. Nevertheless, the population is very dynamic, as particular lineages of clinical origin can evolve to form clonal complexes. At the genome level, the dynamic behaviour is indicated by the presence of numerous mobile and repeated elements. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The B. cereus group of bacteria comprises species that are of medical and economic importance. The MLST data, along with the primers and protocols used, will be available in a public, web-accessible database (http://mlstoslo.uio.no).  相似文献   

14.
We report the overexpression, purification, and properties of the regulatory protein, GlnR, for glutamine synthetase synthesis of Bacillus cereus. The protein was found to be a dimer with a molecular weight of approximately 30,000, and its subunit molecular weight was 15,000 in agreement with that (15,025) of deduced amino acid sequence of GlnR. The purified GlnR protein bound specifically to the promoter region of the glnRA operon of B. cereus and Bacillus subtilis. The binding of the GlnR protein to the DNA fragment was enhanced by the presence of glutamine synthetase, the product of glnA, of B. cereus or B. subtilis, although the affinity of the GlnR protein for DNA was not affected in the presence of glutamate, glutamine, Mg2+, Mn2+, or ammonia. These results indicate the existence of an interaction between GlnR and glutamine synthetase, and support the hypothesis that the regulation of glnA expression requires both GlnR protein and glutamine synthetase in Bacillus.  相似文献   

15.
Two aa3-type cytochromes were purified from membranes of sporulating Bacillus cereus. One of them, an aa3 complex, was found to be composed of two subunits (51 and 31 kDa), two a hemes and three copper atoms, thus being similar to the cytochrome aa3 previously purified from vegetative B. cereus [García-Horsman, J. A., Barquera, B., González-Halphen, D. & Escamilla, J. E. (1991) Mol. Microbiol. 5, 197-205]. The second isoform, a caa3 complex, was expressed in sporulating cells only, and was found to be composed of two subunits (51 and 37 kDa). The 37-kDa subunit (subunit II) is a heme-c-containing polypeptide as shown by its peroxidase activity in SDS/PAGE gels and by its spectral features. Both subunits of the caa3 complex immunologically cross-reacted with antiserum raised against B. cereus cytochrome aa3, suggesting homology between the two enzymes. Also, the heme-c-containing subunit of the caa3 complex was reactive with anti-(bovine cytochrome c) antiserum, but not with anti-(bovine cytochrome c1) antiserum. In addition to one heme c and two hemes a, the caa3 complex contained three copper atoms. Kinetic comparison of aa3 and caa3 complexes revealed that the latter is slightly more active (k = 150 s-1) and has a lower affinity to yeast cytochrome c (Km = 76 microM) and to oxygen (Km = 2 microM) as compared with cytochrome aa3 (100 s-1, 10 microM, and 5 microM, respectively).  相似文献   

16.
The exosporium is the outermost layer of spores of Bacillus cereus and its close relatives Bacillus anthracis and Bacillus thuringiensis. For these pathogens, it represents the surface layer that makes initial contact with the host. To date, only the BclA glycoprotein has been described as a component of the exosporium; this paper defines 10 more tightly associated proteins from the exosporium of B. cereus ATCC 10876, identified by N-terminal sequencing of proteins from purified, washed exosporium. Likely coding sequences were identified from the incomplete genome sequence of B. anthracis or B. cereus ATCC 14579, and the precise corresponding sequence from B. cereus ATCC 10876 was defined by PCR and sequencing. Eight genes encode likely structural components (exsB, exsC, exsD, exsE, exsF, exsG, exsJ, and cotE). Several proteins of the exosporium are related to morphogenetic and outer spore coat proteins of B. subtilis, but most do not have homologues in B. subtilis. ExsE is processed from a larger precursor, and the CotE homologue appears to have been C-terminally truncated. ExsJ contains a domain of GXX collagen-like repeats, like the BclA exosporium protein of B. anthracis. Although most of the exosporium genes are scattered on the genome, bclA and exsF are clustered in a region flanking the rhamnose biosynthesis operon; rhamnose is part of the sugar moiety of spore glycoproteins. Two enzymes, alanine racemase and nucleoside hydrolase, are tightly adsorbed to the exosporium layer; they could metabolize small molecule germinants and may reduce the sensitivity of spores to these, limiting premature germination.  相似文献   

17.
Three new structures of Escherichia coli succinate-quinone oxidoreductase (SQR) have been solved. One with the specific quinone-binding site (Q-site) inhibitor carboxin present has been solved at 2.4 Å resolution and reveals how carboxin inhibits the Q-site. The other new structures are with the Q-site inhibitor pentachlorophenol and with an empty Q-site. These structures reveal important details unresolved in earlier structures. Comparison of the new SQR structures shows how subtle rearrangements of the quinone-binding site accommodate the different inhibitors. The position of conserved water molecules near the quinone binding pocket leads to a reassessment of possible water-mediated proton uptake networks that complete reduction of ubiquinone. The dicarboxylate-binding site in the soluble domain of SQR is highly similar to that seen in high resolution structures of avian SQR (PDB 2H88) and soluble flavocytochrome c (PDB 1QJD) showing mechanistically significant structural features conserved across prokaryotic and eukaryotic SQRs.Succinate:quinone oxidoreductase (SQR,4 succinate dehydrogenase) and menaquinol:fumarate oxidoreductase (QFR, fumarate reductase), members of the Complex II family, are homologous integral membrane proteins which couple the interconversion of succinate and fumarate with quinone and quinol (14). SQR is a key enzyme in the Krebs cycle, oxidizing succinate to fumarate during aerobic growth and reducing quinone to quinol and, thus, acts as a direct link between the Krebs cycle and the respiratory chain. QFR is found in anaerobic or facultative bacteria and lower eukaryotes, where it couples the oxidation of reduced quinones to the reduction of fumarate (1, 4). Escherichia coli SQR has four subunits, two hydrophilic subunits exposed to the cytoplasm (SdhA and SdhB), which interact with two hydrophobic membrane-intrinsic subunits (SdhC and SdhD) (5). SdhA contains the dicarboxylate-binding site and a covalently bound FAD cofactor which cycles between FAD and FADH2 redox states during succinate oxidation (6). The electrons from succinate oxidation are sequentially transferred via a [2Fe-2S], a [4Fe-4S], and a [3Fe-4S] iron-sulfur cluster relay system in SdhB to a quinone-binding site (QP) located at the interface of the SdhB, SdhC, and SdhD subunits. SdhC and SdhD are both composed of three transmembrane helices and coordinate a low spin b-type heme via His residues contributed by each subunit (7, 8).The first structural information about members of the Complex II family came from x-ray structures of the QFR enzymes from E. coli at 3.3 Å resolution (9) and Wolinella succinogenes at 2.2 Å resolution (10). These structures revealed details of the overall architecture of the subunits, the position of key redox cofactors, the electron transfer pathway, and the quinone-binding sites. At around the same time, the structures of soluble fumarate reductases found in anaerobic and microaerophilic bacteria and structurally homologous to the flavoprotein subunit of Complex II were solved by x-ray crystallography (1). Analysis of these soluble fumarate reductases has proven particularly informative in describing the mechanism of fumarate reduction and succinate oxidation at the dicarboxylate-binding site (1114).Structures of SQRs lagged behind those of the QFRs until the structure of the E. coli enzyme was solved at 2.6 Å (15). This structure, solved in space group R32, revealed that the E. coli enzyme is packed as a trimer. The structures of the SdhA and SdhB subunits were highly similar to those of E. coli and W. succinogenes QFRs, but the transmembrane SdhC and SdhD subunits showed differences compared with their QFR counterparts. The structure revealed the position of the redox sites and the dicarboxylate- and quinone-binding (Q) sites. The heme b molecule was shown to lie away from the electron transfer pathway, suggesting electrons are preferentially transferred from the [3Fe-4S] cluster to ubiquinone, on the grounds of the edge-to-edge distances and redox potentials of the relevant groups. The structure revealed density in the Q-site that was interpreted as ubiquinone, and the position of the binding site was confirmed by the structure of the E. coli enzyme co-crystallized with the Q-site inhibitor 2-(1-methyl-hexyl)-4,6-dinitrophenol (DNP-17, PDB code 1NEN (15)). The E. coli enzyme was subsequently co-crystallized with the Q-site inhibitor Atpenin A5 (AA5) (PDB code 2ACZ (16)). This inhibitor was bound deeper into the quinone-binding site than ubiquinone or DNP-17, suggesting that there are two binding positions for ubiquinone in its binding site. The structure also identified a water-mediated proton pathway, proposed to deliver protons to the quinone-binding site. The first structure of a mitochondrial SQR was from porcine heart at 2.4 Å resolution (PDB code 1ZOY (17). This structure revealed a monomer in the asymmetric unit, suggesting that mitochondrial SQRs were likely to function as monomers. Superposition of the porcine and E. coli SQR structures revealed the high structural similarity of the SdhA and SdhB subunits and the conservation in position of the redox cofactors. Larger divergences were observed in the transmembrane subunits.Further structural information about SQRs was obtained by analysis of structures of avian SQR crystallized with oxaloacetate (2.2 Å resolution, PDB code 1YQ3), with 3-nitropropionate (2.4 Å resolution, PDB code 1YQ4), and with the Q-site inhibitor carboxin (2.1 Å resolution, PDB code 2FBW) (18). These structures revealed important differences in the position of key residues in the dicarboxylate-binding site compared with the E. coli and porcine structures. Arg-297 (equivalent to Arg-298 in porcine and Arg-286 in E. coli SQRs) was ideally located to act as a general base catalyst, accepting a proton during dehydrogenation of succinate, as in the soluble Shewanella flavocytochrome c3 (PDB code 1QJD) (11), suggesting conservation of mechanism between these distantly related enzymes. An unusual cis-serine peptide bond was proposed to position another arginine residue for binding dicarboxylates. Density for the dicarboxylate in 1YQ3 and 2FBW was shown to be distinctly non-planar and could be modeled by the “malate-like intermediate” seen in 1QJD. The nature of the ligand in the dicarboxylate site was further analyzed in a 1.74 Å resolution structure of avian SQR (PDB code 2H88), confirming the high structural similarity of the ligand and binding site residues in the SQR and flavocytochrome c3 structures (11, 12, 14).Despite the structural information described above, there are still unresolved issues regarding the structure and function of SQRs and QFRs. These include the location of conserved waters, which may form a channel involved in protonation of quinone, and the ability of the Q-site to accommodate different quinones and inhibitors. To further address these issues, we pursued structure-function studies of E. coli SQR. We developed alternative crystallization conditions that provided crystals more reproducibly and diffracting to higher resolution. By exchanging the enzyme into decyl-β-d-maltoside (DM) during purification, it was possible to crystallize the enzyme in the orthorhombic P212121 space group. These crystals routinely diffracted in the 3–3.5 Å resolution range. Co-crystallization with the biochemically well characterized Q-site inhibitor carboxin improved diffraction to 2.1–2.8 Å. This structure shows new features related to the dicarboxylate-binding site of E. coli SQR including a rare cis-peptide bond in SdhA, as found in avian SQR (14), which helps shape the geometry of the active site. Comparisons of the structure with those of SQR binding PCP and SQR with an empty Q-site show how subtle rearrangements of the Q-site accommodate the different inhibitors. The orientation of carboxin in the Q-site differs with computational predictions (16) and with that seen in avian SQR (2FBW). The position of conserved water molecules around the Q-site suggests a new water-mediated proton uptake pathway consistent with recent mutational and biophysical studies (19).  相似文献   

18.
Yuan Y  Gao M  Wu D  Liu P  Wu Y 《PloS one》2012,7(5):e37557
Bacillus thuringiensis is an important entomopathogenic bacterium belongs to the Bacillus cereus group, which also includes B. anthracis and B. cereus. Several genomes of phages originating from this group had been sequenced, but no genome of Siphoviridae phage from B. thuringiensis has been reported. We recently sequenced and analyzed the genome of a novel phage, BtCS33, from a B. thuringiensis strain, subsp. kurstaki CS33, and compared the gneome of this phage to other phages of the B. cereus group. BtCS33 was the first Siphoviridae phage among the sequenced B. thuringiensis phages. It produced small, turbid plaques on bacterial plates and had a narrow host range. BtCS33 possessed a linear, double-stranded DNA genome of 41,992 bp with 57 putative open reading frames (ORFs). It had a typical genome structure consisting of three modules: the "late" region, the "lysogeny-lysis" region and the "early" region. BtCS33 exhibited high similarity with several phages, B. cereus phage Wβ and some variants of Wβ, in genome organization and the amino acid sequences of structural proteins. There were two ORFs, ORF22 and ORF35, in the genome of BtCS33 that were also found in the genomes of B. cereus phage Wβ and may be involved in regulating sporulation of the host cell. Based on these observations and analysis of phylogenetic trees, we deduced that B. thuringiensis phage BtCS33 and B. cereus phage Wβ may have a common distant ancestor.  相似文献   

19.
Quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) offers an alternative method for the detection of bacterial contamination in food. This method provides the quantitation and determination of the number of gene copies. In our study, we established an RT-PCR assay using the LightCycler system to detect and quantify the Bacillus cereus group species, which includes B. cereus, B. anthracis, B. thuringiensis, B. weihenstephanensis, B. mycoides, and B. pseudomycoides. A TaqMan assay was designed to detect a 285-bp fragment of the motB gene encoding the flagellar motor protein, which was specific for the detection of the B. cereus group species, excluding B. pseudomycoides, and the detection of a 217-bp gene fragment of a hypothetical protein specific only for B. pseudomycoides strains. Based on three hydrolysis probes (MotB-FAM-1, MotB-FAM-2, and Bpm-FAM-1), it was possible to differentiate B. weihenstephanensis from the B. cereus group species with nonrhizoid growth and B. pseudomycoides from the whole B. cereus group. The specificity of the assay was confirmed with 119 strains belonging to the Bacillus cereus group species and was performed against 27 other Bacillus and non-Bacillus bacteria. A detection limit was determined for each assay. The assays performed well not only with purified DNA but also with DNA extracted from milk samples artificially contaminated with bacteria that belong to the B. cereus group species. This technique represents an alternative approach to traditional culture methods for the differentiation of B. cereus group species and differentiates B. weihenstephanensis and B. pseudomycoides in one reaction.  相似文献   

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