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71.
To detect anoxygenic bacteria containing either type 1 or type 2 photosynthetic reaction centers in a single PCR, we designed a degenerate primer set based on the bchY gene. The new primers were validated in silico using the GenBank nucleotide database as well as by PCR on pure strains and environmental DNA.Anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria are diverse and important members of microbial communities (11, 13, 17, 20). There are five bacterial phyla containing anoxygenic phototrophs: Proteobacteria (purple bacteria), Chlorobi (green sulfur bacteria), Chloroflexi (green nonsulfur bacteria), Acidobacteria (“Candidatus Chloracidobacterium thermophilum” [7]), and Firmicutes (heliobacteria). While Heliobacterium modesticaldum, Chlorobi, and “Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum” have a type 1 reaction center (RC1) similar to photosystem I in Cyanobacteria and higher plants, Chloroflexi and Proteobacteria possess a type 2 reaction center (RC2) similar to photosystem II of oxygenic phototrophs (7, 16).Primers based on pufM, the gene encoding the M subunit of RC2, have been widely used to detect phototrophic purple bacteria (1, 4, 12, 19). However, phototrophic bacteria that do not possess RC2 are not retrieved when pufM is used as the target. Achenbach and coworkers (1) developed primers targeting rRNA genes of Chlorobi, Chloroflexi, and heliobacteria, while Alexander and coworkers (2) have developed primers to specifically detect green sulfur bacteria (Chlorobi) by using 16S rRNA and fmoA as gene targets and applied these primers in environmental studies (3). No currently available primer set can simultaneously target phototrophs containing either RC1 or RC2.Since it is well established that both RC1- and RC2-containing anoxygenic phototrophs synthesize bacteriochlorophylls (BChls), we searched for a universal anoxygenic photosynthesis gene marker among all enzymes involved in BChl biosynthetic pathways. All known pathways for chlorophyll and BChl biosynthesis branch from the heme biosynthesis pathway at protoporphyrin IX and continue to chlorophyllide a (Chlide a) through the same intermediates (9). Chlide a is the branching point that separates chlorophyll and BChl biosynthetic pathways. Moreover, pathways for the synthesis of different BChls are also split at this stage: chlorophyllide oxidoreductase converts Chlide a to 3-vinyl-bacteriophyllide a, which is the precursor for BChls a, b, and g, while a yet unknown enzyme reduces Chlide a to 3-vinyl-bacteriophyllide d, a precursor for antenna BChls c, d, and e in Chlorobium spp. (9). Since 3-vinyl-bacteriophyllide a is the last common intermediate in the synthesis of BChl a and BChl g, and the latter is the only BChl in heliobacteria (14, 15), chlorophyllide oxidoreductase is the only enzyme that is (i) present in anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria and not in oxygenic phototrophs and (ii) common to all known anoxygenic phototrophic bacterial species (with the exception of “Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum,” where the pathway for BChl synthesis is not yet known). Analyzing multiple alignments of the subunits of chlorophyllide oxidoreductase, we found that only the Y subunit (encoded by the BchY gene) had two conserved regions distinguishing this protein from its closest homologs; therefore, the bchY gene was chosen as a universal marker for anoxygenic photosynthesis.Due to likely codon variations coding identical amino acid sequences in different genomes (19), degenerate BchY primers were designed by reverse translation of two conserved regions of the BchY alignment (Fig. (Fig.1):1): bchY_fwd (5′-CCNCARACNATGTGYCCNGCNTTYGG-3′ [26 bases; 2,048 variants; corresponding amino acid sequence, PQTMCPAFG]) and bchY_rev (5′-GGRTCNRCNGGRAANATYTCNCC-3′ [23 bases; 4,096 variants; corresponding amino acid sequence, GE{I/M}FP{A/ V}DP]). Each primer had no more than two bases deviating from known bchY sequences in the GenBank nr database (except for H. modesticaldum) as well as to environmental BchY variants in the GenBank env_nr database. None of these deviations were located in the 3′ ends of the primers (see Tables S2 and S3 in the supplemental material). These primers, therefore, were predicted to amplify a wide diversity of bchY genes under nonstringent PCR conditions (50 to 52°C annealing temperature). The lengths of the expected PCR products were either 480 bp (for green sulfur, green nonsulfur bacteria, and heliobacteria) or 510 bp (for purple bacteria).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Multiple-amino-acid alignment of BchY proteins. Sequence abbreviations: R.den, Roseobacter denitrificans (gi|110677524); R.gel, Rubrivivax gelatinosus (gi|29893484); R.cap, Rhodobacter capsulatus (gi|114868); C.lit, Congregibacter litoralis KT 71 (gi|88706663); H.hal, Halorhodospira halophila (gi|121998388); C.aur, Chloroflexus aurantiacus (gi|163849328); C.tep, Chlorobium tepidum (gi|66576270); and H.mod, Heliobacterium modesticaldum (gi|167629410).In order to check primer specificity in silico, a screening procedure was developed. Putative primer sites (tags) for both the bchY_fwd and the bchY_rev primers were gathered from the GenBank nucleotide collection (nt) by BLAST with relaxed search conditions; the tags having mismatches at the 3′ end or more than five overall mismatches from their primer were filtered out, and the remaining tags were mapped to their sequences mimicking PCR primer annealing. Fragments ranging from 300 to 700 bp (virtual “PCR products”) were retrieved from GenBank and annotated (see Table S4 in the supplemental material). All bchY genes present in the GenBank nt database were virtually “amplified,” pointing to the robustness of the primers and our in silico PCR analysis. On the other hand, all nonspecific “amplicons” have major deviations from the primer sequences and would likely not be amplified by a real PCR. The same screening procedure was performed against the GenBank environmental nucleotide collection (env_nt) (see Table S5 in the supplemental material), and as in the case with the nt database, only bchY fragments were virtually “amplified.”The BchY primer set was validated using five key control organisms, including the RC2-containing the purple sulfur bacterium Allochromatium vinosum and the purple nonsulfur bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus as well as the RC1-containing green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium limicola, green nonsulfur bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus, and the heliobacterium H. modesticaldum. Amplifications yielded the predicted products of 510 bp from the purple bacteria and 480 bp from the green sulfur and nonsulfur bacteria and H. modesticaldum. Negative-control Escherichia coli and Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 did not yield amplification products when the bchY primers were used.The designed BchY primer set successfully amplified bchY genes from DNA obtained from both marine (East Mediterranean Sea) and freshwater (Lake Kinneret) environments (see Table S6 in the supplemental material for best BLASTX hits for selected sequenced fragments). These habitats were chosen for testing due to the previously reported wide diversity of their anoxygenic phototrophs (8, 10, 18, 19). A phylogenetic tree of bchY gene fragments amplified from both freshwater and marine DNA samples is shown in Fig. Fig.22.Open in a separate windowFIG. 2.BchY phylogenetic tree based on a maximum likelihood tree to which short sequences were added by ARB parsimony. The branches that appeared on the original maximum likelihood tree are shown with thicker lines. Bootstrap values greater than 50% are indicated next to the branches. Sequences obtained in this study are shown in bold. For reasons of clarity, not all BchY sequences retrieved are shown in the tree. For cases in which a BchY fragment was found in more than three clones, the numbers of clones are given in parentheses. Clones m21_2 and m21_3 are identical to the bchY gene of Hoeflea phototrophica strain DFL-43 (6); the m20_2 clone was identical to the bchY gene of Dinoroseobacter shibae (5).Our study underlines the utility of the bchY gene as a molecular marker for revealing genetic heterogeneity in phototrophic microbial populations. Using both wide-scale bioinformatic analysis and PCR on control strains and naturally occurring microbial community DNA, we have confirmed the specificity and coverage of the proposed degenerate BchY primers.  相似文献   
72.
73.

Background  

In protein engineering, site-directed mutagenesis methods are used to generate DNA sequences with mutated codons, insertions or deletions. In a widely used method, mutations are generated by PCR using a pair of oligonucleotide primers designed with mismatching nucleotides at the center of the primers. In this method, primer-primer annealing may prevent cloning of mutant cDNAs. To circumvent this problem we developed an alternative procedure that does not use forward-reverse primer pair in the same reaction.  相似文献   
74.
Sensory processing is associated with gamma frequency oscillations (30–80 Hz) in sensory cortices. This raises the question whether gamma oscillations can be directly involved in the representation of time-varying stimuli, including stimuli whose time scale is longer than a gamma cycle. We are interested in the ability of the system to reliably distinguish different stimuli while being robust to stimulus variations such as uniform time-warp. We address this issue with a dynamical model of spiking neurons and study the response to an asymmetric sawtooth input current over a range of shape parameters. These parameters describe how fast the input current rises and falls in time. Our network consists of inhibitory and excitatory populations that are sufficient for generating oscillations in the gamma range. The oscillations period is about one-third of the stimulus duration. Embedded in this network is a subpopulation of excitatory cells that respond to the sawtooth stimulus and a subpopulation of cells that respond to an onset cue. The intrinsic gamma oscillations generate a temporally sparse code for the external stimuli. In this code, an excitatory cell may fire a single spike during a gamma cycle, depending on its tuning properties and on the temporal structure of the specific input; the identity of the stimulus is coded by the list of excitatory cells that fire during each cycle. We quantify the properties of this representation in a series of simulations and show that the sparseness of the code makes it robust to uniform warping of the time scale. We find that resetting of the oscillation phase at stimulus onset is important for a reliable representation of the stimulus and that there is a tradeoff between the resolution of the neural representation of the stimulus and robustness to time-warp.  相似文献   
75.
The root-knot nematode Meloidogyne incognita is an obligate endoparasite of plant roots and stimulates elaborate modifications of selected root vascular cells to form giant cells for feeding. An Arabidopsis thaliana endoglucanase (Atcel1) promoter is activated in giant cells that were formed in Atcel1::UidA transgenic tobacco and Arabidopsis plants. Activity of the full-length Atcel1 promoter was detected in root and shoot elongation zones and in the lateral root primordia. Different 5’ and internal deletions of regions of the 1,673 bp Atcel1 promoter were each fused to the UidA reporter gene and transformed in tobacco, and roots of the transformants were inoculated with M. incognita to assay for GUS expression in giant cells and noninfected plant tissues. Comparison of the Atcel1 promoter deletion constructs showed that the region between −1,673 and −1,171 (fragment 1) was essential for Atcel1 promoter activity in giant cells and roots. Fragment 1 alone, however, was not sufficient for Atcel1 expression in giant cells or roots, suggesting that cis-acting elements in fragment 1 may function in consort with other elements within the Atcel1 promoter. Root-knot nematodes and giant cells developed normally within roots of Arabidopsis that expressed a functional antisense construct to Atcel1, suggesting that a functional redundancy in endoglucanase activity may represent another level of regulatory control of cell wall-modifying activity within nematode feeding cells.  相似文献   
76.

Background

While protease-activated-receptor 1 (PAR1) plays a central role in tumor progression, little is known about the cell signaling involved.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We show here the impact of PAR1 cellular activities using both an orthotopic mouse mammary xenograft and a colorectal-liver metastasis model in vivo, with biochemical analyses in vitro. Large and highly vascularized tumors were generated by cells over-expressing wt hPar1, Y397Z hPar1, with persistent signaling, or Y381A hPar1 mutant constructs. In contrast, cells over-expressing the truncated form of hPar1, which lacks the cytoplasmic tail, developed small or no tumors, similar to cells expressing empty vector or control untreated cells. Antibody array membranes revealed essential hPar1 partners including Etk/Bmx and Shc. PAR1 activation induces Etk/Bmx and Shc binding to the receptor C-tail to form a complex. Y/A mutations in the PAR1 C-tail did not prevent Shc-PAR1 association, but enhanced the number of liver metastases compared with the already increased metastases obtained with wt hPar1. We found that Etk/Bmx first binds via the PH domain to a region of seven residues, located between C378-S384 in PAR1 C-tail, enabling subsequent Shc association. Importantly, expression of the hPar1-7A mutant form (substituted A, residues 378-384), which is incapable of binding Etk/Bmx, resulted in inhibition of invasion through Matrigel-coated membranes. Similarly, knocking down Etk/Bmx inhibited PAR1-induced MDA-MB-435 cell migration. In addition, intact spheroid morphogenesis of MCF10A cells is markedly disrupted by the ectopic expression of wt hPar1. In contrast, the forced expression of the hPar1-7A mutant results in normal ball-shaped spheroids. Thus, by preventing binding of Etk/Bmx to PAR1 -C-tail, hPar1 oncogenic properties are abrogated.

Conclusions/Significance

This is the first demonstration that a cytoplasmic portion of the PAR1 C-tail functions as a scaffold site. We identify here essential signaling partners, determine the hierarchy of binding and provide a platform for therapeutic vehicles via definition of the critical PAR1 -associating region in the breast cancer signaling niche.  相似文献   
77.

Background

The pathogenesis of Alzheimer''s disease is attributed to misfolding of Amyloid-β (Aβ) peptides. Aβ is generated during amyloidogenic processing of Aβ-precursor protein (APP). Another characteristic of the AD brain is increased phosphorylation of APP amino acid Tyr682. Tyr682 is part of the Y682ENPTY687 motif, a docking site for interaction with cytosolic proteins that regulate APP metabolism and signaling. For example, normal Aβ generation and secretion are dependent upon Tyr682 in vitro. However, physiological functions of Tyr682 are unknown.

Methodology/Principal Findings

To this end, we have generated an APP Y682G knock-in (KI) mouse to help dissect the role of APP Tyr682 in vivo. We have analyzed proteolytic products from both the amyloidogenic and non-amyloidogenic processing of APP and measure a profound shift towards non-amyloidogenic processing in APP KI mice. In addition, we demonstrate the essential nature of amino acid Tyr682 for the APP/Fe65 interaction in vivo.

Conclusions/Significance

Together, these observations point to an essential role of APP intracellular domain for normal APP processing and function in vivo, and provide rationale for further studies into physiological functions associated with this important phosphorylation site.  相似文献   
78.
79.
Rechavi O  Minevich G  Hobert O 《Cell》2011,147(6):1248-1256
Induced expression of the Flock House virus in the soma of C. elegans results in the RNAi-dependent production of virus-derived, small-interfering RNAs (viRNAs), which in turn silence the viral genome. We show here that the viRNA-mediated viral silencing effect is transmitted in a non-Mendelian manner to many ensuing generations. We show that the viral silencing agents, viRNAs, are transgenerationally transmitted in a template-independent manner and work in trans to silence viral genomes present in animals that are deficient in producing their own viRNAs. These results provide evidence for the transgenerational inheritance of an acquired trait, induced by the exposure of animals to a specific, biologically relevant physiological challenge. The ability to inherit such extragenic information may provide adaptive benefits to an animal.  相似文献   
80.
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