Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (43)
- Doctoral Thesis (42)
Has Fulltext
- yes (85)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (85)
Keywords
- - (38)
- Streptococcus pneumoniae (7)
- Saccharomyces cerevisiae (6)
- Arxula adeninivorans (5)
- Enzym (4)
- Hefe (4)
- proteomics (4)
- Biochemische Analyse (3)
- Pneumokokken (3)
- Virulenz (3)
Institute
- Institut für Mikrobiologie - Abteilung für Genetik & Biochemie (85) (remove)
Publisher
- Frontiers Media S.A. (20)
- MDPI (14)
- S. Karger AG (3)
- American Society for Microbiology (ASM) (1)
- Nature Publishing Group (1)
- Public Library of Science (PLoS) (1)
- Wiley (1)
Die chronische Herzinsuffizienz (HI) bezeichnet das Unvermögen des Herzens, die vom Körper benötigte Blutmenge bedarfsgerecht zu befördern und stellt in der Allgemeinbevölkerung das Endstadium vieler Herzerkrankungen dar. Trotz großer Fortschritte in der medikamentösen Therapie ist die Prognose der HI auch heute noch schlecht. Der progrediente Verlauf erstreckt sich von einer kompensierten Herzhypertrophie mit aufrechterhaltener Pumpfunktion bis hin zu einer massiven Ventrikeldilatation mit stark eingeschränkter Herzfunktion und weist dementsprechend eine schlechte Prognose auf. Die zellulären Veränderungen auf Protein- und Genexpressionsebene während der Progression einer HI sind sehr komplex und trotz ausgiebiger wissenschaftlicher Arbeiten nicht ausreichend geklärt. Dabei ist es von entscheidender Bedeutung, in welcher Phase der Erkrankung spezifische Änderungen in der Genregulation entstehen und inwiefern sich diese auf den Phänotyp auswirken. Auf Grund dessen beschäftigt sich die vorliegende Arbeit mit den zeitabhängigen Veränderungen auf mRNA-und Proteinebene während der Progression der HI. Um alle Stadien beginnend von einer subklinischen Organschädigung bis hin zur Ausbildung einer HI experimentell untersuchen zu können, wurde zunächst ein Mausmodell etabliert, welches durch eine chronische Nachlasterhöhung mittels Einengung des Aortenlumens eine Myokardschädigung durch eine arterielle Hypertonie simuliert (transverse aortic constriction, TAC). Die Herzfunktion der Mäuse wurde an den postoperativen Tagen 4, 14, 21, 28, 42, und 56 durch Messungen im Kleintier-MRT (Magnetresonanztomografie) evaluiert. Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich die linksventrikuläre Ejektionsfraktion (LVEF) TAC-operierter Mäuse vom postoperativen Tag 4 zu 14 verschlechtert, bis Tag 42 auf einem konstanten Niveau hält und bis Tag 56 nochmals stark absinkt. Im Gegensatz dazu zeigten Sham-operierte Mäuse über den gesamten Zeitraum eine stabile LVEF. Ein vergleichbarer stufenartiger Verlauf konnte bei den Parametern der linksventrikulären Masse und den endsystolischen bzw. enddiastolischen Volumina beobachtet werden. Zusätzlich konnte durch histologische Untersuchungen zu den verschiedenen postoperativen Zeitpunkten eine verstärkte Fibrosierung des Herzgewebes nach der TAC-OP aufgezeigt werden. Für die longitudinalen Transkriptom- und Proteomuntersuchungen wurden die Herzen (jeweils linke und rechte Ventrikel) nach den MRT-Messungen entnommen, gruppen- und zeitpunktspezifisch gepoolt und einer Microarray- bzw. massenspektrometrischen Analyse unterzogen. Auf Transkriptomebene zeigten sich vor allem an den Tagen 4 und 56 starke TAC-induzierte Veränderungen im Expressionsmuster, wohingegen der Zeitraum zwischen 14 und 42 Tagen weniger differenziell exprimierte Gene aufwies. Der Verlauf der Erkrankung konnte anhand bereits bekannter Hypertrophie- und HI-marker sehr gut charakterisiert werden. So zeigten Nppa (ANP) und Nppb (BNP) im linken Ventrikel bereits kurz nach Aortenstenose stark erhöhte Expressionslevel, die über die gesamte Versuchsdauer erhalten blieben. Weiterhin wurde die Expression von Genen reguliert, die an kardialen Remodelingprozessen maßgeblich beteiligt sind, wie beispielsweise Acta1 (a-Aktin), Myh7 (b-Myosin Heavy Chain) und Postn (Periostin). Im Vergleich beider Ventrikel zeigte der rechte Ventrikel bezüglich der Anzahl der regulierten Gene als auch bei der Expression HI-assoziierter Gene eine verzögerte und weniger stark ausgeprägte Reaktion. In den linken Ventrikeln wurden vor allem die Gene reguliert, deren Genprodukte der extrazelluären Matrix angehören. Eine Validierung der Microarray-Ergebnisse mittels realtime-PCR konnte die Richtigkeit der Analysemethode sehr präzise bestätigen. Da diese anhand ausgewählter Gene auf Einzeltierebene durchgeführt wurde, konnte zusätzlich auf Korrelation zwischen mRNA-Expression und den kardialen Funktionsparametern getestet werden. Wie erwartet spiegelten die Epressionslevel der HI-assozierten Markergene Nppa (ANP), Nppb (BNP) und Myh7 (b-Myosin Heavy Chain) die progressive Verschlechterung der Herzfunktion wider. Zusätzlich konnten durch die Validierung und Korrelationsanalysen weitere interessante Kandidatengene, wie beispielsweise Sfrp2 (Secreted frizzled-related protein 2) und Wisp2 (WNT1-inducible signaling pathway protein 2) für weiterführende Studien identifiziert werden. Auch auf Proteomebene konnten vergleichbare Ergebnisse erzielt werden. Auch hier zeigte der linke Ventrikel eine deutlich ausgeprägtere Reaktion auf die Drucküberlastung, der rechte Ventrikel antwortete deutlich schwächer und verzögert. Änderungen im Proteinmuster nach TAC waren in den linken Ventrikeln vor allem an den Tagen 14, 21 und 28 stark ausgeprägt. Ingenuity Pathway Analysen der veränderten Proteine weisen auf Veränderungen im Kalzium-, Rho A- und PKA-Signaling vor allem zu den frühen Zeitpunkten hin, wohingegen zu späteren Zeitpunkten hauptsächlich metabolische Prozesse betroffen waren.
Die Hefe Saccharomyces cerevisiae reagiert auf die sich ständig ändernden Umweltbedingungen durch eine präzise Regulation der Genexpression. Möglich wird dies durch ein komplexes Netzwerk aus spezifischen Regulatoren und pleiotropen Faktoren. Aktivatorproteine binden an Aktivierungssequenzen (UAS-Elemente) in ihren Zielpromotoren und rekrutieren basale Transkriptionsfaktoren sowie Coaktiva¬toren. Dadurch erhöhen sich Wahrscheinlichkeit und Häufigkeit der Transkriptions¬initiation und die DNA im Promotorbereich wird durch die Aktivität von Komplexen der Chromatinremodellierung und -modifizierung für die Transkriptionsmaschinerie zugänglich gemacht. Dagegen binden spezifische Repressor¬proteine an ihre Regula¬tionssequenzen (URS-Elemente) oder an Aktivatorproteine, inhibieren deren Wirkung oder rekrutieren Histondeacetylase-Komplexe wie den Sin3-Corepressor, die eine Verdichtung des Chromatins bewirken. Der Sin3-Corepressorkomplex ist an einer Vielzahl von Regulationsprozessen beteiligt. In Hefe existieren zwei Sin3-Varianten, die als Rpd3L bzw. Rpd3S bezeichnet werden und sich in ihrer Zusammensetzung unterscheiden. Neben Sin3 als zentralem Gerüst¬protein in beiden Komplexen sind im Rpd3L strukturelle Untereinheiten wie Sds3, Sap30 und Pho23 sowie die Histondeacetylase (HDAC) Rpd3 als enzymatische Komponenten enthal¬ten. Durch Funktionsanalysen von Mutanten einzelner Unterein¬heiten wurde festge¬stellt, dass zusätzlich zu Rpd3 weitere HDACs an der Repression ICRE-abhängiger Gene der Phospholipid-biosynthese Gene beteiligt sind. Interaktionsstudien zeigten, dass auch die HDACs Hda1 und Hos1 an Sin3 binden. Die Bindung erfolgt über drei sogenannte HDAC-Interaktionsdomänen (HID1-3), wobei Hda1 und Hos1 an HID2 und HID3 binden, Rpd3 dagegen an HID1 und HID3. In dieser Arbeit konnte gezeigt werden, dass die HDACs direkt an ihre jeweiligen HIDs binden. Außerdem inter¬agieren Hda1 und Hos1 auch in vivo mit Sin3. Die HID1 wurde auf die Aminosäuren 801-950 verkürzt und es wurde nachge¬wiesen, dass eine funktionsfähige katalyti¬sche Domäne von Rpd3 nicht für die Wechselwirkung mit Sin3 notwendig ist. Außerdem wurden die Interaktionsdomänen von Sds3 und Sin3 kartiert. Die erhaltenen Befunde ergänzen die Daten zu Protein-Protein-Inter¬aktionen im Sin3-Corepressorkomplex und komplettieren funktionelle Aspekte der HDAC-Rekrutierung. Eine weitere Zielstellung dieser Arbeit war die Erstellung eines Interaktionsnetzwerks zwischen spezifischen Aktivatoren und allgemeinen Faktoren der Transkription. Eukaryotische Aktivatorproteine sind modular aufgebaut und besitzen voneinander separierbare Funktionsdomänen. Die Erkennung und Bindung von UAS-Elementen in den Zielpromotoren erfolgt über die DNA-Bindedomäne (DBD), während Tran¬skriptions¬¬aktivierungs¬domänen (TADs) basale Transkriptionsfaktoren und Co¬aktiva¬toren rekrutieren und somit die aktivierende Wirkung vermitteln. Im Gegensatz zu den DBDs folgen TADs meist keinen durch Sequenzanalysen vorhersagbaren Strukturmotiven und müssen manuell eingegrenzt werden. Für die Kartierung funktioneller TADs wurden Längenvarianten von über 30 Aktiva-toren aus verschiedenen Familien DNA-bindender Proteine an die Gal4DBD fusioniert und auf ihre Fähigkeit überprüft, ein UASGAL-abhängiges Reportergen zu aktivieren. Dabei konnten 15 neue TADs eingegrenzt werden. Weiterhin wurden die bisher nicht charakterisierten Zinkcluster¬proteine Yjl206c, Yer184c, Yll054c und Ylr278c als Aktivatoren bestätigt. Dadurch stand eine Samm¬lung aus 20 bekannten und neukartierten TADs zur Verfügung, die nach Konstruktion von GST-Fusionen für in vitro-Interaktionsexperimente mit Unter¬einheiten des Mediators, des TFIID- und des SWI/SNF-Komplexes eingesetzt wurden. Es konnten direkte Wechselwirkungen von Aktivatoren (u. a. Aft2, Aro80, Mac1 und Zap1) mit den TFIID-Komponenten TBP, Taf1, Taf4 und Taf5 detektiert werden. Die Bindung an Taf1 erfolgte im Bereich von aa 1-250, der zwei Aktivator¬interaktions-domänen (AID) enthält und in vorangegangenen Experimenten auch mit Ino2 und Adr1 interagierte. Die Rap1-Bindedomäne (RBD) von Taf4 (aa 253-344) interagierte auch mit Mac1, Aft2 und Ino2. Daher wurde dieser Bereich als allgemeine AID klassifiziert. Für die Aktivatorinteraktion essentielle Aminosäuren konnten allerdings nicht identi¬fiziert werden. 17 von 20 TADs interagierten direkt mit der Mediator-Untereinheit Med15, während für Med17 10 Kontakte zu Aktivatoren detektiert wurden, was die Relevanz des Mediators für die Aktivatorfunktion unterstreicht. Die katalytische Untereinheit des SWI/SNF-Komplexes Swi2 zeigte ähnlich viele TAD-Interaktionen wie Med15. Der N-terminale Bereich von Swi2 (aa 1-450) stellte sich als ausreichend für die Bindung der Aktivatoren heraus und enthält demnach eine oder mehrere AIDs. Damit konnte das Interaktionsnetzwerk zwischen Aktivatoren und allgemeinen transkriptionalen Cofaktoren substantiell erweitert werden.
Die Transkription von Genen der Phospholipidbiosynthese in S. cerevisiae wird durch ein ICRE (inositol/choline responsive element) genanntes UAS-Element aktiviert, welches durch die Phospholipid-Vorstufen Inositol und Cholin (IC) gesteuert wird. ICRE-Motive werden durch ein Heterodimer der bHLH-Proteine Ino2 und Ino4 erkannt, wobei Ino2 über zwei Transkriptionsaktivierungsdomänen (TAD) die Expression vermittelt, während Ino4 dem Kernimport des Komplexes dient. Negativer Regulator ist Opi1, der mit Ino2 interagiert. SUA7 (TFIIB) wird durch die Interaktion mit Ino2 an den Promotor rekrutiert. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden Untersuchungen durchgeführt, um ein Heterodimer aus heterolog exprimiertem Ino2 und Ino4 über chromatographische Methoden zu reinigen. Es wurde eine affinitätschromatographische Strategie entwickelt, die es gestattet, epitopmarkiertes Ino2 und Ino4 von einem Großteil der Fremdproteine abzutrennen. Mit größeren Zellmengen könnte es künftig gelingen, ein Ino2/Ino4-Heterodimer zu reinigen und es nach Kristallisierung zusammen mit einem ICRE-Motiv einer Röntgenstrukturanalyse zugänglich zu machen. Unter Verwendung genomischer Sequenzdaten von S. cerevisiae wurden in dieser Arbeit weitere Gene identifiziert, die ICRE-Motive in ihrer Promotorregion tragen, aber keine offensichtliche Rolle bei der Phospholipidbiosynthese spielen. Untersuchungen zeigten, dass die ICRE-tragenden Gene FAR8, RSF1, YEL073C und URA8 relativ stark, die Gene ARG4, ERG20, GPD2 und VHT1 nur moderat durch IC beeinflusst werden. Für das in S. cerevisiae stark IC-abhängige INO1 Gen (50-fache Derepression bei IC-Mangel) wurde gezeigt, dass drei distinkte ICRE-Motive für diese Regulation verantwortlich sind. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit wurden mit Transkriptomanalysen anderer Gruppen verglichen und die Aussagekraft von in silico-Recherchen bewertet. Candida albicans ist eine opportunistisch pathogene Hefe. Auch C. albicans ist in der Lage, Inositol, Cholin und Fettsäuren de novo zu synthetisieren. Ein Funktionshomolog zu INO1, das CaINO1, vermag eine entsprechende Nullmutation in S. cerevisiae zu komplementieren. Ebenso wurden in C. albicans die Gene CaCHO1, CaFAS1 und CaFAS2 für die Synthese von Cholin bzw. Fettsäuren identifiziert. Ferner besitzt C. albicans das dem Opi1-Protein strukturell und funktionell ähnelnde CaOpi1, welches ebenfalls in der Lage ist, eine IC-abhängige Genregulation in S. cerevisiae zu vermitteln. Die in silico Identifikation potentieller C. albicans Orthologer zu INO2 sowie zu INO4 gab Anlass zu der Annahme, dass die Regulation der Phospholipidbiosynthese in S. cerevisiae und C. albicans konserviert vorliegt. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde ein unkonventionelles Intron im mutmaßlichen CaINO4 Gen identifiziert und durch RT-PCR eine intronfreie cDNA des CaINO4 Gens erhalten. Mit den Produkten der mu tmaßlichen Gene CaINO2 und CaINO4 wurden Protein/DNA- und Protein/Protein-Interaktionen untersucht und mit der Situation in S. cerevisiae verglichen. CaIno2 und CaIno4 sind in der Lage zu heterodimerisieren und an ICRE-Motive aus S. cerevisiae zu binden, jedoch konnte keine Bindung an den CaINO1 Promotor gezeigt werden. Weiterhin ist das Heterodimer der C. albicans-Proteine in der Lage, einer S. cerevisiae ino2 ino4 Doppelmutante ein Wachstum auf IC-freiem Medium zu ermöglichen. Keines der Gene kann jedoch allein die jeweils entsprechende ino2 oder ino4 Einfachmutation komplementieren. Weder CaIno2 noch CaIno4 interagieren mit CaOpi1, hingegen interagiert CaIno2 mit Opi1, ebenso CaOpi1 mit Ino2. Ferner interagiert CaIno2 wie auch CaIno4 mit CaSua7, nicht jedoch mit Sua7. Es konnte keine Interaktion zwischen Ino2 bzw. Ino4 mit CaIno4 bzw. CaIno2 festgestellt werden, ebensowenig eine Homodimerisierung der Proteine. Ähnlich wie Ino2 enthält auch CaIno2 zwei Transkriptionsaktivi erungsdomänen an entsprechenden Positionen und vergleichbarer Aktivierungsleistung. Es gelang im Rahmen dieser Arbeit nicht, homozygote Mutationen der Gene CaINO2 und CaINO4 durch Gendisruption in die diploide Hefe C. albicans einzuführen, es konnten lediglich heteroallele Mutanten hergestellt werden. Dieser Befund ist ein Hinweis auf eine Rolle von CaIno2 und CaIno4 bei der Aktivierung essentieller Gene in C. albicans. Daher wurde mit Genaktivierungstests nach der CaIno2/CaIno4-Konsensusbindesequenz gesucht und diese dann verwendet, um potentielle Zielgene in silico zu identifizieren. Als Konsensussequenz wurde das Motiv BWTCASRTG erhalten. Dieses Motiv wurde weder vor CaINO1, CaFAS1 oder CaCHO1 gefunden, jedoch zeigte sich eine deutliche Häufung des UAS-Elements vor mitochondrialen Genen, vor Genen der Ergosterolbiosynthese und besonders vor einer Vielzahl von Genen ribosomaler Proteine. Es kann aus diesen Daten gefolgert werden, dass CaIno2 und CaIno4 für die Aktivierung anderer, vermutlich essentieller Zielgene erforderlich sind als ihre Orthologen aus S. cerevisiae, während CaINO1 durch bisher unbekannte Faktoren reguliert wird.
Urm1: A Non-Canonical UBL
(2021)
Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) is a harmless resident of the human nasopharyngeal cavity, and, in general, every individual is likely to be colonized asymptomatically at least once during life. However, under certain conditions, the bacterium can spread to other tissues and organs causing local, non-invasive infections but also lifethreatening, invasive diseases. Pneumococcal carriage and infection is a highly regulated interplay between pathogen- and host-specific factors and the intimate contact of S. pneumoniae with the surface of the nasopharynx is the crucial step in pneumococcal pathogenesis. Pneumococcal adherence to the respiratory epithelium is mediated by surface-exposed adhesins. These adhesins engage host cell receptors either directly or indirectly by recognizing glycoproteins of the extracellular matrix (ECM) including structural components, such as collagens, laminins, and fibronectins, as well as plasma-derived ECM modulators, like vitronectin and Factor H. Pneumococcal surface protein C (PspC) is a surface-exposed protein and important virulence factor of S. pneumoniae. The multifunctional PspC protein promotes pneumococcal adherence to host cells by interacting with the secretory component of the human polymeric Immunoglobulin receptor of respiratory cells. In addition, PspC facilitates pneumococcal immune evasion by recruiting the complement inhibitor proteins C4b-binding protein (C4BP) and Factor H. Moreover, Factor H bound to the pneumococcal surface promotes bacterial adhesion to human epithelial and endothelial cells. S. pneumoniae also interacts with the human glycoprotein vitronectin. In plasma, monomeric vitronectin regulates thrombosis, fibrinolysis and the terminal complement cascade, while it additionally mediates cell-matrix interactions, cell adhesion and migration in the ECM. It was shown that multimeric, ECM-associated vitronectin facilitates pneumococcal adherence to respiratory epithelial cells. In addition, the interaction of pneumococci with vitronectin promotes their uptake by mucosal epithelial cells via the engagement of the integrin αvβ3 receptor and activation of intracellular signaling pathways culminating in cytoskeletal rearrangements. This study aims to identify and characterize the surface-exposed protein(s) that mediate binding of pneumococci to vitronectin and to elucidate the impact of vitronectin on pneumococcal pathogenesis beyond its function as molecular bridge between pneumococcus and host. Flow cytometric, immunosorbent and surface plasmon resonance experiments revealed that PspC is a vitronectin-binding protein of S. pneumoniae. The specificity of the interaction with vitronectin was confirmed using recombinant PspC proteins and Lactococcus lactis heterologously expressing PspC on their surface. Factor H did not hinder vitronectinbinding to PspC indicating that vitronectin recognizes the central part of PspC. Secretory IgA inhibited but not completely prevented vitronectin-binding to PspC, strongly suggesting that vitronectin binds near, but not directly to, the SC-binding region within the R domain(s) of PspC. In addition, PspC proteins comprising two R domains bound with higher affinity to vitronectin than PspC containing only one R domain, indicating that two interconnected R domains are required for efficient vitronectin-binding. Despite the sequential and structural differences to classical PspC, the PspC-like protein Hic specifically interacted with vitronectin with similar affinity than PspC containing two linked R domains. Binding studies confirmed that Factor H interacts with the very N-terminal region of Hic showing high sequence homology to classical PspC proteins, while vitronectin recognizes an adjacent region in the N-terminal region of Hic. The studied PspC proteins bound to both soluble and immobilized vitronectin, and the C-terminal heparin-binding domain (HBD3) was identified as PspC-binding motif in soluble vitronectin. However, in its immobilized form, vitronectin likely exposes additional binding sites for PspC since a region N-terminally to the identified HBD3 conferred binding of PspC. Vitronectin inhibits the terminal complement pathway, thereby preventing proinflammatory immune reactions and tissue damage. In general, pneumococci are protected from opsonization and MAC-dependent lysis by their capsule. However, pneumococci in close contact to human cells can become susceptible to complement attack due to reduced amounts of capsule. In addition, they can be severely affected by TCC-induced inflammatory responses. Vitronectin bound to PspC significantly inhibited the formation of terminal complement complexes. Thus, the interaction of PspC with vitronectin might aid in immune evasion of S. pneumoniae by inhibiting complement-mediated lysis and/or suppressing proinflammatory events. In conclusion, the results revealed the multifunctional PspC and Hic as vitronectin-binding proteins and proposed a novel role for the specific interaction of S. pneumoniae with vitronectin in regulating the complement cascade, beside its function as molecular bridge to the respiratory epithelium.
Bacteria are exposed to oxidative stress as an unavoidable consequence of their aerobic lifestyle. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are generated in the stepwise one-electron reduction of molecular oxygen during the respiration. Pathogens encounter ROS during the oxidative burst of macrophages as part of the host immune defense. Besides ROS, bacteria also have to cope with reactive chlorine, electrophilic and nitrogen species (RCS, RES, RNS). To cope with these reactive species, bacteria have evolved different defense and repair mechanisms. To maintain the reduced state of the cytoplasm, they utilize low molecular weight (LMW) thiols. LMW thiols are small thiol-containing compounds that can undergo post-translational thiolmodifications with protein thiols, termed as S-thiolations. S-thiolations function as major redox regulatory and thiol-protection mechanism under oxidative stress conditions. In eukaryotes and Gram-negative bacteria, the tripeptide glutathione (GSH) functions as major LMW thiol, which is present in millimolar concentrations. The Actinomycetes, such as Mycobacterium and Corynebacterium species do not produce GSH and utilize instead mycothiol (MSH) as their alternative LMW thiol. In Firmicutes, including Bacillus and Staphylococcus species, bacillithiol (BSH) functions as the major LMW thiol. LMW thiols protect protein thiols against the irreversible overoxidation of cystein residues to sulfinic and sulfonic acids. In addition, LMW thiols contribute to the virulence and survival of pathogens, function in metal homeostasis and serve as enzyme cofactors for detoxification of xenobiotics and antibiotics. In this doctoral thesis, we aimed to investigate the roles of MSH and BSH in redox regulation of main metabolic enzymes under oxidative stress in the pathogens Corynebacterium diphtheriae and Staphylococcus aureus. Previous redox proteomics studies identified the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase GapDH and the aldehyde dehydrogenase AldA as S-thiolated in S. aureus and C. diphtheriae. Thus, we aimed to study the redox regulation of the metabolic enzyme GapDH in C. diphtheriae in response to NaOCl and H2O2 stress by S-mycothiolation, which is described in chapter 1. Moreover, we studied the involvement of the mycoredoxin-1 (Mrx1) and thioredoxin (Trx) pathways in reactivation of S-mycothiolated GapDH in vitro. Using shotgun proteomics, 26 S-mycothiolated proteins were identified under NaOCl stress in C. diphtheriae. These are involved in energy metabolism (Ndh, GlpD) and in the biosynthesis of amino acids (ThrA, LeuB), purines (PurA) and cell wall metabolites (GlmS). The glycolytic GapDH was identified as conserved target for S-thiolation across Gram-positive bacteria. GapDH was the most abundant protein, contributing with 0.75 % to the total cystein proteome. Moreover, GapDH is a conserved target for redox regulation and S-glutathionylation in response to oxidative stress in several prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. Treatment of GapDH with NaOCl and H2O2 in the absence of MSH resulted in irreversible enzyme inactivation due to overoxidation. Pretreatment of GapDH with MSH prior to H2O2 or NaOCl exposure resulted in reversible inactivation due to S-mycothiolation of the active site Cys153. Since S-mycothiolation is faster compared to overoxidation, S-mycothiolation efficiently protects the GapDH active site against overoxidation. The activity of S-mycothiolated GapDH could be restored by both, the Mrx1 and Trx pathway in vitro. Interestingly, the recovery of Smycothiolated GapDH by Mrx1 was faster compared to its reduction by the Trx pathway. In previous studies, the reactivation of S-mycothiolated Mpx and MrsA by the mycoredoxin pathway occurred also faster compared to the Trx pathway, which is consistent with our results. We were further interested to analyze the redox regulation of the glyceraldehyde-3phosphate dehydrogenase Gap of S. aureus under NaOCl and H2O2 stress, which is described in chapter 2. Using the quantitative redox proteomic approach OxICAT, 58 NaOCl-sensitive cystein residues with >10% thiol oxidation under NaOCl stress were identified. Gap and AldA showed the highest oxidation increase of 29% under NaOCl stress at their active site cystein residues. Using shotgun proteomics, five S-bacillithiolated proteins were identified, including Gap, AldA, GuaB, RpmJ and PpaC. Gap contributed with 4 % as most abundant cystein protein to the total cystein proteome. Our activity assays demonstrated that Gap of S. aureus is highly sensitive to overoxidation by H2O2 and NaOCl in vitro in the absence of BSH. The active site Cys151 of Gap was oxidized to the BSH mixed disulfide under H2O2 and NaOCl stress in the presence of BSH in vitro, which resulted in the reversible Gap inactivation. Moreover, inactivation of Gap by NaOCl and H2O2 due to S-bacillithiolation was faster compared to overoxidation, indicating that S-bacillithiolation protects the Gap active site against overoxidation in vitro. We further showed that the bacilliredoxin Brx catalyzes the reduction of S-bacillithiolated Gap in vitro. Molecular docking of BSH into the Gap active site revealed that S-bacillithiolation does not require major structural changes. Apart from Gap, the aldehyde dehydrogenase AldA was identified as S-bacillithiolated at its active site Cys279 under NaOCl stress in S. aureus previously. Thus, the expression, function, redox regulation and structural changes of AldA were analysed under NaOCl and aldehyde stress in S. aureus as summarized in chapter 3. AldA was S-bacillithiolated in the presence of H2O2 and BSH as demonstrated in BSH-specific Western blots in vitro. The expression of aldA was previously shown to be regulated by the alternative sigma factor SigmaB in S. aureus. Transcription of aldA was strongly increased in a SigmaB-independent manner under formaldehyde, NaOCl and diamide stress in S. aureus. Using an aldA deletion mutant, we demonstrated that aldA is required for growth and survival under NaOCl stress in S. aureus. The purified AldA enzyme was shown to catalyze the oxidation of various aldehyde substrates, including formaldehyde, methylglyoxal, glycolaldehyde and acetaldehyde in vitro. In addition, the function of the conserved Cys279 for AldA activity was investigated in vivo and in vitro. The purified AldAC279S mutant was shown to be inactive for aldehyde oxidation in vitro. Moreover, the aldAC279S mutant was very sensitive under NaOCl stress in vivo, and this phenotype could be reversed using the aldA complemented strain. These experiments demonstrate the function of Cys279 for AldA activity both in vitro and in vivo. AldA activity assays showed that AldA is sensitive to overoxidation and irreversible inactivation by H2O2 alone in vitro. In the presence of BSH, AldA is protected against overoxidation by reversible Sbacillithiolation in vitro. Molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulations revealed that BSH occupies two different positions in the Cys279 active site, which depend on the NAD+ cofactor. In the apoenzyme, BSH forms the disulfide with Cys279 in the “resting” state position, while Cys279 is S-bacillithiolated in the “attacking” state position in the holoenzyme in the presence of the NAD+ cofactor.
The leading hypothesis of why organisms age is the “Free Radical Theory of Aging”, which states that the accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), such as superoxide (O2•-) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), causes protein, lipid and DNA damage and leads to the observed age-related decline of cells and tissues. A major obstacle in analyzing the role of oxidative stress in aging organisms is the inability to precisely localize and quantify the oxidants, to identify proteins and pathways that might be affected, and ultimately, to correlate changes in oxidant levels with the lifespan of the organism. To directly monitor the onset and extent of oxidative stress during the lifespan of Caenorhabditis elegans, we utilized the fluorescent H2O2 sensor protein HyPer, which enabled us to quantify endogenous peroxide levels in different tissues of living animals in real time. We made the surprising observation that wildtype C. elegans is exposed to very high peroxide levels during development. Peroxide levels drop rapidly as the animals mature, and low peroxide levels then prevail throughout the reproductive age, after which an age-accompanying increase of peroxide level is observed. These results were in excellent agreement with findings obtained by using the highly quantitative redox proteomic technique OxICAT, which monitors the oxidation status of redox-sensitive proteins as read-out for onset, localization, and protein targets of oxidative stress. By using OxICAT, we detected increased protein thiol oxidation during the development of C. elegans and in aging animals. Many processes in C. elegans might potentially contribute to the elevated peroxide levels observed during development, including cuticle formation, apoptosis, proliferation, gametogenesis, or ROS signaling. The finding that all investigated C. elegans mutants regardless of their lifespan are exposed to high developmental peroxide levels argues for ROS accumulation to be a universal and necessary event. Yet, recovery from the early oxidative boost might determine the subsequent adult lifespan, as we found that long-lived daf-2 mutants transition faster to reducing conditions than short-lived daf-16 mutants, which retain higher peroxide levels throughout their mature life. These results suggest that changes in the cellular oxidant homeostasis, encountered at a very early stage in life, might determine subsequent redox levels and potentially the lifespan of organisms. Manipulation of developmental oxidant levels using glucose restriction or a short bolus of superoxide caused a disruption in developmental growth, a delay in reproduction, and a shortened lifespan. These results suggest that developmental oxidant levels are fine-tuned and optimized. Future experiments are aimed to investigate the sources of developmental hydrogen peroxide, and to elucidate whether active down-regulation of antioxidant enzymes during the larval period might foster peroxide accumulation. Preliminary results indicate that this might indeed be the case for peroxiredoxin 2, whose expression was significantly lower during development than at later stages in life. Finally, we investigated whether the observed variances in the developmental peroxide levels of individual worms within a synchronized wildtype population might be responsible for the observed significant variances in lifespan, and hence could serve as a predictor for adult lifespan. Preliminary results revealed that neither too low nor too high peroxide levels during development are beneficial for the lifespan of wildtype worms, suggesting that ROS level during development might be optimized for maximized lifespan. Future experiments aim to reveal the processes that are affected by ROS and which might influence the individual’s lifespan early in life.
Proteasomes comprise a family of proteasomal complexes essential for maintaining protein homeostasis. Accordingly, proteasomes represent promising therapeutic targets in multiple human diseases. Several proteasome inhibitors are approved for treating hematological cancers. However, their side effects impede their efficacy and broader therapeutic applications. Therefore, understanding the biology of the different proteasome complexes present in the cell is crucial for developing tailor-made inhibitors against specific proteasome complexes. Here, we will discuss the structure, biology, and function of the alternative Proteasome Activator 200 (PA200), also known as PSME4, and summarize the current evidence for its dysregulation in different human diseases. We hereby aim to stimulate research on this enigmatic proteasome regulator that has the potential to serve as a therapeutic target in cancer.
Invasion of the bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes into human host cells requires specialized surface molecules for attachment and induction of phagocytosis. However, efficient invasion is also dependent on factors with house-keeping functions, such as SecA2-dependent secretion of autolysins for post-divisional segregation of daughter cells. Mutations in this pathway prevent degradation of peptidoglycan cross-walls, so that long cell chains are formed that cannot be phagocytosed. The extreme chaining of such mutants manifests as rough colony phenotype. One rough clone was isolated from a transposon library with a transposon insertion in the uncharacterized lmo0720 gene (lftS) together with a spontaneous point mutation in the secA2 gene. We separated both mutations and demonstrated that this point mutation in the intramolecular regulator 2 domain of SecA2 was sufficient to inactivate the protein. In contrast, lftS deletion did not cause a ΔsecA2-like phenotype. lftS is located in an operon with lftR (lmo0719), encoding a PadR-like transcriptional regulator, and lftR deletion affected growth, invasion and day-light dependent coordination of swarming. Inactivation of lftS partially suppressed these phenotypes, suggesting a functional relationship between LftR and LftS. However, the invasion defect of the ΔlftR mutant was only marginally suppressed by lftS removal. LftR regulates expression of the lmo0979–0980 (lieAB) operon, encoding a putative multidrug resistance transporter and lieAB transcription was strongly upregulated in the absence of LftR. Deletion of lieAB in the ΔlftR background restores wild type-like invasion levels. Hence, we conclude that tight transcriptional repression of the lieAB operon is essential for efficient listerial host cell invasion.
Lichens represent self-supporting symbioses, which occur in a wide range of terrestrial habitats and which contribute significantly to mineral cycling and energy flow at a global scale. Lichens usually grow much slower than higher plants. Nevertheless, lichens can contribute substantially to biomass production. This review focuses on the lichen symbiosis in general and especially on the model species Lobaria pulmonaria L. Hoffm., which is a large foliose lichen that occurs worldwide on tree trunks in undisturbed forests with long ecological continuity. In comparison to many other lichens, L. pulmonaria is less tolerant to desiccation and highly sensitive to air pollution. The name-giving mycobiont (belonging to the Ascomycota), provides a protective layer covering a layer of the green-algal photobiont (Dictyochloropsis reticulata) and interspersed cyanobacterial cell clusters (Nostoc spec.). Recently performed metaproteome analyses confirm the partition of functions in lichen partnerships. The ample functional diversity of the mycobiont contrasts the predominant function of the photobiont in production (and secretion) of energy-rich carbohydrates, and the cyanobiont’s contribution by nitrogen fixation. In addition, high throughput and state-of-the-art metagenomics and community fingerprinting, metatranscriptomics, and MS-based metaproteomics identify the bacterial community present on L. pulmonaria as a surprisingly abundant and structurally integrated element of the lichen symbiosis. Comparative metaproteome analyses of lichens from different sampling sites suggest the presence of a relatively stable core microbiome and a sampling site-specific portion of the microbiome. Moreover, these studies indicate how the microbiota may contribute to the symbiotic system, to improve its health, growth and fitness.
Regulated ATP-dependent proteolysis is a common feature of developmental processes and plays also a crucial role during environmental perturbations such as stress and starvation. The Bacillus subtilis MgsR regulator controls a subregulon within the stress- and stationary phase σB regulon. After ethanol exposition and a short time-window of activity, MgsR is ClpXP-dependently degraded with a half-life of approximately 6 min. Surprisingly, a protein interaction analysis with MgsR revealed an association with the McsB arginine kinase and an in vivo degradation assay confirmed a strong impact of McsB on MgsR degradation. In vitro phosphorylation experiments with arginine (R) by lysine (K) substitutions in McsB and its activator McsA unraveled all R residues, which are essentially needed for the arginine kinase reaction. Subsequently, site directed mutagenesis of the MgsR substrate was used to substitute all arginine residues with glutamate (R-E) to mimic arginine phosphorylation and to test their influence on MgsR degradation in vivo. It turned out, that especially the R33E and R94/95E residues (RRPI motif), the latter are adjacently located to the two redox-sensitive cysteines in a 3D model, have the potential to accelerate MgsR degradation. These results imply that selective arginine phosphorylation may have favorable effects for Clp dependent degradation of short-living regulatory proteins. We speculate that in addition to its kinase activity and adaptor function for the ClpC ATPase, McsB might also serve as a proteolytic adaptor for the ClpX ATPase in the degradation mechanism of MgsR.
The influence of regulatory proteins on the physiology and virulence of Streptococcus pneumoniae
(2015)
In conclusion, this work identifies the regulator ArgR2 as activator of the S. pneumoniae TIGR4 arginine deiminase system and arginine-ornithine transporter ArcD, which is needed for uptake of the essential amino acid arginine. Although ArgR2 activates ArcD expression and uptake of arginine is required to maintain pneumococcal fitness, the deficiency of ArgR2 increases TIGR4 virulence under in vivo conditions, suggesting that other factors regulated by ArgR2 counterbalance the reduced uptake of arginine by ArcD. Thus this works illustrates that the physiological homeostasis of pneumococci is complex and that ArgR2 plays a key role in maintaining bacterial fitness. Moreover, Rex was identified as a regulator of housekeeping genes including genes encoding glycolytic enzymes. In vitro studies and gene expression analyses suggested that the regulator Rex does not have an influence on the physiology of S. pneumoniae. However, a co-infection experiment demonstrated that Rex is involved in maintaining pneumococcal fitness and robustness under in vivo conditions.
Allicin (diallyl thiosulfinate) is the major thiol-reactive organosulfur compound produced by garlic plants (Allium sativum) upon tissue damage. Allicin exerts its strong antimicrobial activity against bacteria and fungi via S-thioallylation of protein thiols and low molecular weight thiols. Here, we investigated the effect of allicin on SARS-CoV-2 infected Vero E6 and Calu-3 cells. Toxicity tests revealed that Calu-3 cells showed greater allicin tolerance, probably due to >4-fold higher GSH levels compared to the very sensitive Vero E6 cells. Exposure of infected Vero E6 and Calu-3 cells to biocompatible allicin doses led to a ∼60–70% decrease of viral RNA and infectious viral particles. Label-free quantitative proteomics was used to investigate the changes in the Calu-3 proteome after SARS-CoV-2 infection and the effect of allicin on the host-virus proteome. SARS-CoV-2 infection of Calu-3 cells caused a strong induction of the antiviral interferon-stimulated gene (ISG) signature, including several antiviral effectors, such as cGAS, Mx1, IFIT, IFIH, IFI16, IFI44, OAS, and ISG15, pathways of vesicular transport, tight junctions (KIF5A/B/C, OSBPL2, CLTCL1, and ARHGAP17) and ubiquitin modification (UBE2L3/5), as well as reprogramming of host metabolism, transcription and translation. Allicin treatment of infected Calu-3 cells reduced the expression of IFN signaling pathways and ISG effectors and reverted several host pathways to levels of uninfected cells. Allicin further reduced the abundance of the structural viral proteins N, M, S and ORF3 in the host-virus proteome. In conclusion, our data demonstrate the antiviral and immunomodulatory activity of biocompatible doses of allicin in SARS-CoV-2-infected cell cultures. Future drug research should be directed to exploit the thiol-reactivity of allicin derivatives with increased stability and lower human cell toxicity as antiviral lead compounds.
Das Genus Pestivirus gehört zur Familie der Flaviviridae und enthält eine Reihe von tierpathogenen Erregern, welche (fast) ausschließlich Paarhufer befallen. Das bei Pestiviren vorkommende Strukturprotein ERNS ist einzigartig in der Familie Flaviviridae, es finden sich keine homologen Proteine in den anderen Genera dieser Familie. ERNS ist ein sehr ungewöhnliches Protein, da es für ein virales Strukturprotein verschiedene untypische Eigenschaften aufweist. Neben einer intrinsischen RNase-Aktivität findet sich am C Terminus eine sehr ungewöhnliche Signalpeptidase-Spaltstelle. Während die RNase Aktivität einen wichtigen Virulenzfaktor darstellt, sorgt die ungewöhnliche Spaltstelle mutmaßlich für die verlangsamte Prozessierung des ERNS-E1-Vorläuferproteins. Inwieweit die verlangsamte Spaltung des Vorläuferproteins für das Virus wichtig sein könnte, ist bis dato noch ungeklärt. Auch ist die Ausbildung von Dimeren wichtig für die Virulenz von ERNS. Darüber hinaus erfolgt eine partielle Sekretion von ERNS in den extrazellulären Raum, während ein Großteil in der Zelle verbleibt. Zusätzlich verfügt ERNS über eine untypische Membranverankerung, die durch eine lange, C-terminale amphipathische Helix vermittelt wird. Innerhalb dieser amphipathischen Helix findet sich eine Reihe geladener Aminosäuren, deren Lokalisation und Anordnung zu zwei spiegelsymmetrisch komplementären Gruppen bei Pestiviren konserviert ist. Es stellte sich die Frage, welche biologische Relevanz dieses Muster an geladenen Aminosäuren haben könnte. Ausgehend von der vorgeschlagenen Ausbildung eines „Charge Zippers“ – durch Rückfaltung und Ausbildung von Salzbrücken zwischen den komplementären Ladungen –, wurden mittels transienten Expressionsexperimenten die sechs hoch konservierten Ladungen im „Inneren“ des möglichen „Reißverschlusses“ untersucht, und es zeigte sich, dass der postulierte Charge-Zipper-Mechanismus bei ERNS vermutlich keine Rolle spielt. Für einige der betrachteten Aminosäuren konnten Hinweise erhalten werden, dass sie eine Rolle bei der Prozessierung, der Retention und bei der Dimerisierung von ERNS spielen. Vor allem ein Austausch der Ladung an der Position 194 im ERNS zeigte einen signifikanten Einfluss auf die Prozessierung und Retention von ERNS. Auch bei der Dimerisierung stach diese Position hervor, da entgegen anderer Mutationen ein Austausch hier zu einer vermehrten Dimerbildung führte. Weiterführend wurden diese Mutationen in rekombinante Viren eingeführt, und es zeigte sich, dass vor allem die spezifischen Ladungen an den Positionen 184 und 191 im ERNS wichtig für die effiziente Virusvermehrung sind. Ladungsaustausche an diesen Positionen sorgten für nicht lebensfähige Virusmutanten, während Alaninsubstitutionen im Lauf von Passagen zur ursprünglichen Ladung revertierten. Diese Ergebnisse zeigen die elementare Bedeutung der Ladungen für die Generierung von infektiösen Viren. Die molekularen Mechanismen, in denen diese Reste von Bedeutung sind, müssen in weiteren Arbeiten noch aufgeklärt werden.
Epithelial cells are an important line of defense within the lung. Disruption of the epithelial barrier by pathogens enables the systemic dissemination of bacteria or viruses within the host leading to severe diseases with fatal outcomes. Thus, the lung epithelium can be damaged by seasonal and pandemic influenza A viruses. Influenza A virus infection induced dysregulation of the immune system is beneficial for the dissemination of bacteria to the lower respiratory tract, causing bacterial and viral co-infection. Host cells regulate protein homeostasis and the response to different perturbances, for instance provoked by infections, by post translational modification of proteins. Aside from protein phosphorylation, ubiquitination of proteins is an essential regulatory tool in virtually every cellular process such as protein homeostasis, host immune response, cell morphology, and in clearing of cytosolic pathogens. Here, we analyzed the proteome and ubiquitinome of A549 alveolar lung epithelial cells in response to infection by either Streptococcus pneumoniae D39Δcps or influenza A virus H1N1 as well as bacterial and viral co-infection. Pneumococcal infection induced alterations in the ubiquitination of proteins involved in the organization of the actin cytoskeleton and Rho GTPases, but had minor effects on the abundance of host proteins. H1N1 infection results in an anti-viral state of A549 cells. Finally, co-infection resembled the imprints of both infecting pathogens with a minor increase in the observed alterations in protein and ubiquitination abundance.
Bloodstream infections caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae induce strong inflammatory and procoagulant cellular responses and affect the endothelial barrier of the vascular system. Bacterial virulence determinants, such as the cytotoxic pore-forming pneumolysin, increase the endothelial barrier permeability by inducing cell apoptosis and cell damage. As life-threatening consequences, disseminated intravascular coagulation followed by consumption coagulopathy and low blood pressure is described. With the aim to decipher the role of pneumolysin in endothelial damage and leakage of the vascular barrier in more detail, we established a chamber-separation cell migration assay (CSMA) used to illustrate endothelial wound healing upon bacterial infections. We used chambered inlets for cell cultivation, which, after removal, provide a cell-free area of 500 μm in diameter as a defined gap in primary endothelial cell layers. During the process of wound healing, the size of the cell-free area is decreasing due to cell migration and proliferation, which we quantitatively determined by microscopic live cell monitoring. In addition, differential immunofluorescence staining combined with confocal microscopy was used to morphologically characterize the effect of bacterial attachment on cell migration and the velocity of gap closure. In all assays, the presence of wild-type pneumococci significantly inhibited endothelial gap closure. Remarkably, even in the presence of pneumolysin-deficient pneumococci, cell migration was significantly retarded. Moreover, the inhibitory effect of pneumococci on the proportion of cell proliferation versus cell migration within the process of endothelial gap closure was assessed by implementation of a fluorescence-conjugated nucleoside analogon. We further combined the endothelial CSMA with a microfluidic pump system, which for the first time enabled the microscopic visualization and monitoring of endothelial gap closure in the presence of circulating bacteria at defined vascular shear stress values for up to 48 h. In accordance with our CSMA results under static conditions, the gap remained cell free in the presence of circulating pneumococci in flow. Hence, our combined endothelial cultivation technique represents a complex in vitro system, which mimics the vascular physiology as close as possible by providing essential parameters of the blood flow to gain new insights into the effect of pneumococcal infection on endothelial barrier integrity in flow.
Glutathione (GSH) was initially identified and characterized for its redox properties andlater for its contributions to detoxification reactions. Over the past decade, however, the essentialcontributions of glutathione to cellular iron metabolism have come more and more into focus. GSH isindispensable in mitochondrial iron-sulfur (FeS) cluster biosynthesis, primarily by co-ligating FeSclusters as a cofactor of the CGFS-type (class II) glutaredoxins (Grxs). GSH is required for the exportof the yet to be defined FeS precursor from the mitochondria to the cytosol. In the cytosol, it is anessential cofactor, again of the multi-domain CGFS-type Grxs, master players in cellular iron and FeStrafficking. In this review, we summarize the recent advances and progress in this field. The mosturgent open questions are discussed, such as the role of GSH in the export of FeS precursors frommitochondria, the physiological roles of the CGFS-type Grx interactions with BolA-like proteins andthe cluster transfer between Grxs and recipient proteins
Re-Establishment Techniques and Transplantations of Charophytes to Support Threatened Species
(2021)
Re-establishment of submerged macrophytes and especially charophyte vegetation is a common aim in lake management. If revegetation does not happen spontaneously, transplantations may be a suitable option. Only rarely have transplantations been used as a tool to support threatened submerged macrophytes and, to a much lesser extent, charophytes. Such actions have to consider species-specific life strategies. K-strategists mainly inhabit permanent habitats, are perennial, have low fertility and poor dispersal ability, but are strong competitors and often form dense vegetation. R-strategists are annual species, inhabit shallow water and/or temporary habitats, and are richly fertile. They disperse easily but are weak competitors. While K-strategists easily can be planted as green biomass taken from another site, rare R-strategists often must be reproduced in cultures before they can be planted on-site. In Sweden, several charophyte species are extremely rare and fail to (re)establish, though apparently suitable habitats are available. Limited dispersal and/or lack of diaspore reservoirs are probable explanations. Transplantations are planned to secure the occurrences of these species in the country. This contribution reviews the knowledge on life forms, dispersal, establishment, and transplantations of submerged macrophytes with focus on charophytes and gives recommendations for the Swedish project.
Ziel dieses Projektes war die Entwicklung eines neuen Ansatzes zur Senkung der Harnsäurekonzentration im Blutserum von Patienten mit Hyperurikämie und der damit verbundenen Verringerung der Anzahl von schmerzhaften Gichtanfällen. Dafür sollten Purine in Lebensmitteln mit einem Gemisch aus purinabbauenden Enzymen zu dem gut löslichen Allantoin abgebaut werden. Durch diesen neuen Ansatz ist eine abwechslungsreiche Ernährung von Hyperurikämiepatienten ohne oder mit reduzierter zusätzlicher medikamentöser Behandlung zur Senkung der Harnsäurebildung, Erhöhung der Harnsäureausscheidung bzw. enzymatischen Reduktion von Harnsäure möglich. Die Analyse des Wachstumsverhaltens von Arxula adeninivorans LS3 zeigte die Vermehrung des Zellmaterials in einer Kultivierung mit Adenin als Kohlenstoff- und Stickstoffquelle bzw. mit Hypoxanthin und Harnsäure als alleiniger Stickstoffquelle. Die Fähigkeit des Wachstums mit Adenin, Hypoxanthin oder Harnsäure als alleiniger Stickstoffquelle bestätigte das Vorhandensein des Purinabbauweges in der nicht-konventionellen Hefe A. adeninivorans LS3. Das Guanin-Deaminase-Gen (AGDA) aus A. adeninivorans LS3 kodierte für ein Protein aus 475 Aminosäuren, das in der Zelle als Dimer vorlag (55 kDa je Untereinheit). Das Guanin-Deaminase-Protein (Agdap) zeigte eine Homologie auf Aminosäureebene zwischen 44 und 55 % zu anderen pilzlichen Guanin-Deaminasen. Beim Wachstum auf Medien mit Adenin, Hypoxanthin oder Guanin als alleiniger Stickstoffquelle erfolgten eine Induktion der Genexpression des AGDA-Gens sowie eine intrazelluläre Akkumulation des Guanin-Deaminase-Proteins in der Vakuole wie auch dem Zytoplasma der Hefezelle. Einen weiteren Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit bildete die biochemische Charakterisierung der Uratoxidase. Das Uratoxidase-Gen (AUOX) aus A. adeninivorans LS3 lag auf Chromosom 4 und kodierte für das Uratoxidase-Protein (Auoxp) mit 306 Aminosäuren. Bei dem Auoxp handelte es sich um ein 35 kDa großes Protein, das als Dimer in der Zelle vorlag. Ein Vergleich mit anderen pilzlichen Uratoxidasen ergab eine Homologie von 61 bis 65 % auf der Ebene der Aminosäuresequenz. Das Enzym zeigte konservierte Sequenzmotive, die in den Uratoxidasen einer Vielzahl von Organismen beschrieben wurden. Die AUOX-mRNA-Konzentration stieg bei Wachstum auf Medien mit Harnsäure, Adenin und Hypoxanthin als alleiniger Stickstoffquelle. Die Akkumulation von Auoxp zeigte einen Maximalwert nach achtstündiger Kultivierung im Medium mit Harnsäure und zeitlich verschoben mit den Stickstoffquellen Adenin bzw. Hypoxanthin (nach 12 Stunden). Der biotechnologische Einsatz der purinabbauenden Enzyme der Hefe A. adeninivorans erforderte eine Überexpression der Uratoxidase- bzw. der Guanin-Deaminase-Gene in transgenen A. adeninivorans-Stämmen aufgrund zu niedriger, natürlicher Expressionshöhe im Wildtypstamm LS3. Als Transformations-/Expressionssystem fand das etablierte Xplor®2-Vektorsystem Verwendung. Diese Plattform bietet den Vorteil, dass keine Resistenzgene in die Hefe übertragen werden. Die Hefen wurden mit unterschiedlichen Expressionsmodulen transformiert, um die optimalen Expressionsbedingungen für die Guanin-Deaminase bzw. die Uratoxidase zu ermitteln. Vergleichende Untersuchungen bezüglich der Integrationshäufigkeit, dem Wirtsorganismus (homolog/heterolog) und der optimalen Expression (konstitutiv/induziert) zeigten, dass A. adeninivorans ein geeigneter Organismus für die Expression des Guanin-Deaminase- bzw. Uratoxidase-Gens darstellte. Für weiterführende Analysen erfolgte die nähere Untersuchung der Hefetransformanden mit der höchsten Guanin-Deaminase-Aktivität bzw. der über einen längeren Zeitraum konstant hohen Uratoxidase-Aktivität. Das über den C-terminalen His-Tag gereinigte rekombinante Protein zeigte eine hohe Übereinstimmung der biochemischen Eigenschaften (Substratspektrum, intrazelluläre Lokalisation, usw.) im Vergleich zum endogenen Protein der Hefe A. adeninivorans LS3 (nach induzierter Genexpression). Die rekombinanten Enzyme des Purinabbauweges (Uratoxidase, Guanin-Deaminase, Adenin-Deaminase und Xanthin-Oxidoreduktase) bewirkten nach deren Zugabe zu einem reinen Puringemisch aus Adenin, Guanin, Xanthin, Hypoxanthin und Harnsäure eine Reduktion der Konzentration sämtlicher Purine. Das Gemisch aus purinabbauenden Enzymen der Hefe A. adeninivorans belegte bei ersten Anwendungen in einem Lebensmittel (Rinderbrühe) die abbauende Wirkung auf sämtliche, im Lebensmittel befindlichen, Purine. Es gelang in dieser Arbeit, den Puringehalt eines Lebensmittels mit in transgenen A. adeninivorans-Stämmen hergestellten Proteinen enzymatisch abzubauen.
Certain pathogenic bacteria adopt an intracellular lifestyle and proliferate in eukaryotic host cells. The intracellular niche protects the bacteria from cellular and humoral components of the mammalian immune system, and at the same time, allows the bacteria to gain access to otherwise restricted nutrient sources. Yet, intracellular protection and access to nutrients comes with a price, i.e., the bacteria need to overcome cell-autonomous defense mechanisms, such as the bactericidal endocytic pathway. While a few bacteria rupture the early phagosome and escape into the host cytoplasm, most intracellular pathogens form a distinct, degradation-resistant and replication-permissive membranous compartment. Intracellular bacteria that form unique pathogen vacuoles include Legionella, Mycobacterium, Chlamydia, Simkania, and Salmonella species. In order to understand the formation of these pathogen niches on a global scale and in a comprehensive and quantitative manner, an inventory of compartment-associated host factors is required. To this end, the intact pathogen compartments need to be isolated, purified and biochemically characterized. Here, we review recent progress on the isolation and purification of pathogen-modified vacuoles and membranes, as well as their proteomic characterization by mass spectrometry and different validation approaches. These studies provide the basis for further investigations on the specific mechanisms of pathogen-driven compartment formation.
Escherichia coli has been commonly used as a platform for recombinant protein production and accounts for approximately 30% of current biopharmaceuticals on the market. Nowadays, many recombinant proteins require post-translational modifications which E. coli normally cannot facilitate. Therefore, novel technological advancements are unceasingly being developed to improve the E. coli expression system. In this work, some of the most recently engineered platforms for the production of disulfide bond-containing proteins were used to study the E. coli proteome under heterologous protein production stress. The effects of protein secretion via the Sec and Tat translocation pathways were examined using a comparative LC-MS/MS analysis. The E. coli proteome responds to foreign protein production by activation of several overlapping stress responses with a high degree of interaction. In consequence, a number of important cellular processes such as cellular metabolism, protein transport, redox state of the cytoplasm and membrane structure are altered by the production stress. These changes lead to the reduction of cellular growth and recombinant product yields. Resolving the identified bottlenecks will increase the efficiency of recombinant protein expression processes in E. coli.
Proteomic Adaptation of Clostridioides difficile to Treatment with the Antimicrobial Peptide Nisin
(2021)
Bacterial kidney disease (BKD) is a chronic bacterial disease affecting both wild and farmed salmonids. The causative agent for BKD is the Gram-positive fish pathogen Renibacterium salmoninarum. As treatment and prevention of BKD have proven to be difficult, it is important to know and identify the key bacterial proteins that interact with the host. We used subcellular fractionation to report semi-quantitative data for the cytosolic, membrane, extracellular, and membrane vesicle (MV) proteome of R. salmoninarum. These data can aid as a backbone for more targeted experiments regarding the development of new drugs for the treatment of BKD. Further analysis was focused on the MV proteome, where both major immunosuppressive proteins P57/Msa and P22 and proteins involved in bacterial adhesion were found in high abundance. Interestingly, the P22 protein was relatively enriched only in the extracellular and MV fraction, implicating that MVs may play a role in host–pathogen interaction. Compared to the other subcellular fractions, the MVs were also relatively enriched in lipoproteins and all four cell wall hydrolases belonging to the New Lipoprotein C/Protein of 60 kDa (NlpC/P60) family were detected, suggesting an involvement in the formation of the MVs.
The highly oncogenic alphaherpesvirus Marek’s disease virus (MDV) causes immense economic losses in the poultry industry. The main targets of in vivo MDV infection are primary B and T lymphocytes. The cytolytic infection of B cells leads to depletion of lymphoid cells results in severe immunosuppression. Infected B cells recruit and activate T cells. The close interaction between B cells and T cells enables efficient intercellular transfer of MDV. During infection of T cells, the virus enters a latent state. Infection of T cells can lead to transformation of these cells and formation of lymphoma, which manifest in various visceral organs. This study aimed at the characterization of the proteomes of MDV-infected lymphocytes during the lytic and latent phases of infection.
Previous in vitro studies concerning the MDV pathogenesis and host-virus interactions have been mainly conducted with primary fibroblasts or kidney cells, due to the short lifespan of primary lymphocytes in cell culture. Recently, a cultivation system has been established that extents the lifespan of primary lymphocytes through the addition of cytokines to the growth medium. This allowed the infection of B cells in vitro and to conduct quantitative proteomic analysis of primary lymphocytes. Infection with GFP labelled virus recombinants allowed the isolation of infected cells by FACS for the proteome analysis of MDV infected B lymphocytes. An efficient quantitative proteomic workflow was developed, which consisted of a filter-aided (FASP) digest of the extracted proteins, followed by differential dimethyl chemical labeling of the peptides for quantitative evaluation prior to LC-MALDI TOF/TOF mass spectrometry. Only few alterations of the protein and transcript expression profiles were observed after infection of primary B cells with the very virulent RB-1B and the live-attenuated vaccine strain CVI988/Rispens. Relevant changes in relative protein levels were found for only twelve and six interesting host proteins after RB1B and CVI988 infection, respectively. However, the regulations were confirmed by inspection of the spectra from all experiments. The identified candidates play a role in immune response, translation and inflammatory response.
To confirm the potential infection markers, RNA-seq analysis of three biological replicates of each RB-1B -, CVI988- and mock-infected B cells was performed. Eighty expressed MDV transcripts could be identified, which were associated with lytic infection. The same MDV proteins were identified after infection with RB-1B or CVI988. However, transcriptome and proteome analysis of MDV-infected primary B cells showed only poor correlation. This indicates that the changes in protein expression profiles are mostly due to posttranscriptional events. Infection marker candidates were identified by the RNA-seq analysis, for which the gene expression was altered by MDV infection. Although almost 12,000 transcripts were identified, only few transcript levels changed markedly after MDV infection. The biological processes immune response, apoptotic process, signal transduction, cell migration and response to virus were enriched after MDV infection. The RNA-seq results confirm the observation that alterations of protein levels early after MDV infection are rare.
Most notably, MDV induces transformation of lymphocytes leading to malignant T-cell lymphomas in visceral organs with mortalities of up to 100 %. While several factors involved in MDV tumorigenesis have been identified, the transformation process is not fully understood. Therefore, we set out to fill this knowledge gap using proteome analysis of transformed T-cells ex vivo. In addition, the role of the viral telomerase RNA during transformation was assessed by comparison of tumors that had formed after infection with WT-virus or a telomerase RNA negative mutant. A major obstacle for tumor proteome analyses is the preparation of sufficient amounts of homogenous tumor tissue, as tumors appear with a dispersed morphology in the affected organs. The quantitation of cell types within the tumors indicated varying portions of hepatocytes, connective tissue, and CD3+ lymphocytes even with the same virus strain in different animals. However, the ∆vTR-induced tumors contained lower levels of hepatocytes and higher levels of CD3+ lymphocytes compared to WT tumors in all tested tumor samples. Thus, ∆vTR tumors were chosen for determination of differences in protein expression profiles of tumors and naïve T cells for their lower content of liver cells. We developed a workflow for the proteome analysis of T cell tumors from livers of MDV-infected chickens. Samples included laser capture micro-dissected tissue cuts from tumors and surrounding healthy liver tissue as well as naïve T-cells prepared from thymus. To enable quantitative proteome analysis, samples were digested using the FASP protocol and peptides were isotope-coded by differential dimethyl labeling. To improve proteome analysis peptides were fractionated by preparative isoelectric focusing prior to nano-HPLC MALDI/TOF-TOF mass- spectrometric analysis.
Proteomic analyses of LCM dissected ΔvTR tumor compared to naïve T cells, the main targets of transformation, identified nineteen potential transformation markers but again only minor changes in relative levels were observed. Several of the identified markers could also be verified by RT-qPCR on transcript level. The identified transformation candidates were associated with nucleosome assembly, regulation of transcription, inflammatory response, immune response and oxidation-reduction process.
However, further functional analyses are necessary to fully elucidate the role of the identified markers during MDV infection and transformation.
Background: Plasma-generated compounds (PGCs) such as plasma-processed air (PPA) or plasma-treated water (PTW) offer an increasingly important alternative for the control of microorganisms in hard-to-reach areas found in several industrial applications including the food industry. To this end, we studied the antimicrobial capacity of PTW on the vitality and biofilm formation of Listeria monocytogenes, a common foodborne pathogen.
Results: Using a microwave plasma (MidiPLexc), 10 ml of deionized water was treated for 100, 300, and 900 s (pre-treatment time), after which the bacterial biofilm was exposed to the PTW for 1, 3, and 5 min (post-treatment time) for each pre-treatment time, separately. Colony-forming units (CFU) were significantly reduced by 4.7 log10 ± 0.29 log10, as well as the metabolic activity decreased by 47.9 ± 9.47% and the cell vitality by 69.5 ± 2.1%, compared to the control biofilms. LIVE/DEAD staining and fluorescence microscopy showed a positive correlation between treatment and incubation times, as well as reduction in vitality. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) indicated changes in the structure quality of the bacterial biofilm.
Conclusion: These results indicate a promising antimicrobial impact of plasma-treated water on Listeria monocytogenes, which may lead to more targeted applications of plasma decontamination in the food industry in the future.
The main goal of this contribution was to determine the effect of predation of the often abundant to dominant doliolid Dolioletta gegenbauri (Tunicata, Thaliacea) on the abundance of co-occurring planktonic copepods by feeding on their eggs. Previous oceanographic investigations revealed that doliolids had ingested eggs of small calanoid copepods. The ecological significance of such feeding could not be quantified completely because the environmental abundance of such eggs was not known. In this study, the eggs and nauplii of the neritic calanoid Paracalanus quasimodo (Crustacea, Copepoda) were offered to gonozooids and phorozooids of D. gegenbauri with a 6–6.5 mm length together with three species of phytoplankton; i.e., simulating diet conditions on the shelf. We hypothesized that copepod eggs of a similar size as food particles would be readily ingested whereas small nauplii, which could escape, would hardly be eaten by the doliolids. Our results revealed that doliolids have the potential to control small calanoids by ingesting their eggs at high rates but not their nauplii or later stages. Late copepodid stages and adults of co-occurring calanoid species could cause less mortality because they prey less on such eggs than doliolids of a similar weight. However, certain abundant omnivorous calanoid species with pronounced perception and/or capture abilities can prey successfully on the nauplii of small calanoids.
Infective/bacterial endocarditis is a rare but life-threatening disease with a hospital mortality rate of 22.7% and a 1-year mortality rate of 40%. Therefore, continued research efforts to develop efficient anti-infective implant materials are of the utmost importance. Equally important is the development of test systems that allow the performance of new materials to be comprehensively evaluated. In this study, a novel antibacterial coating based on dalbavancin was tested in comparison to rifampicin/minocycline, and the suitability of a recently developed mouse tail vein model for testing the implant coatings was validated. Small polymeric stent grafts coated with a poly-L-lactic acid (PLLA) layer and incorporated antibiotics were colonized with Staphylococcus (S.) aureus before implantation into the tail vein of mice. The main assessment criteria were the hematogenous spread of the bacteria and the local tissue reaction to the contaminated implant. For this purpose, colony-forming units (CFU) in the blood, spleen and kidneys were determined. Tail cross sections were prepared for histological analysis, and plasma cytokine levels and expression values of inflammation-associated genes were examined. Both antibiotic coatings performed excellently, preventing the onset of infection. The present study expands the range of available methods for testing the anti-infectivity of cardiovascular implants, and the spectrum of agents for effective surface coating.
Multidrug-resistant (MDR) Enterobacterales, including extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL)-producing Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae, not only emerge in healthcare settings but also in other habitats, such as livestock and wildlife. The spread of these pathogens, which often combine resistance with high-level virulence, is a growing problem, as infections have become increasingly difficult to treat. Here, we investigated the occurrence of ESBL-producing E. coli and K. pneumoniae in fecal samples from two black-headed gull colonies breeding on two nature conservation islands in Western Pomerania, Germany. In addition to cloacal samples from adult birds (n = 211) and their nestlings (n = 99) during the 2021 breeding season, collective fecal samples (n = 29) were obtained. All samples were screened for ESBL producers, which were then subjected to whole-genome sequencing. We found a total of 12 ESBL-producing E. coli and K. pneumoniae consisting of 11 E. coli and 1 K. pneumoniae, and including the international high-risk E. coli sequence types (ST)131, ST38, and ST58. Eight of the investigated strains had a MDR genotype and carried a large repertoire of virulence-associated genes, including the pap operon, which is important for urinary tract infections. In addition, we identified many genes associated with adherence, biofilm formation, iron uptake, and toxin production. Finally, our analysis revealed the close phylogenetic relationship of ST38 strains with genomes originating from human sources, underlining their zoonotic and pathogenic character. This study highlights the importance of the One Health approach, and thus the interdependence between human and animal health and their surrounding environment.
Streptococcus pneumoniae, more commonly known as the pneumococcus, is a Gram-positive bacterium colonizing the human upper respiratory tract as a commensal. However, these apparently harmless bacteria have also a high virulence potential and are known as the etiologic agent of respiratory and life-threatening invasive diseases. Dissemination of pneumococci from the nasopharynx into the lungs or bloodstream leads to community-acquired pneumonia, septicaemia and meningitis. Pneumococcal diseases are treated with antibiotics and prevented with polysaccharide-based vaccines. However, due to the increase of antibiotic resistance and limitations of the current vaccines, the burden of diseases remains high. Interactions of pneumococci with soluble host proteins or cellular receptors are crucial for adherence, colonization, transmigration of host barriers and immune evasion. The pneumococcal surface-exposed proteins are the main players involved in this host-pathogen interaction. Therefore, combating pneumococcal transmission and infections has emphasized the need for a new generation of immunogenic and highly protective pneumococcal vaccines, based on surface-exposed adhesins virtually expressed by all pneumococcal strains and serotypes. The genomic analysis of S. pneumoniae strains helped to identify pneumococcal virulence factors such as pili, PsrP and PavB, which have been demonstrated to interact with human proteins playing an important role during the pathogenic process of pneumococci, and are currently considered as new potential vaccine candidates against S. pneumoniae. A subclass of pneumococcal strains produces pili that are encoded by the pathogenicity islet pilus islet-1 (rlrA islet) and/or the pilus islet-2. Both types of pili are implicated in bacterial adherence to host cells. A further pathogenicity islet encoded protein is PsrP. The presence of the psrP-secY2A2 islet correlated positively with the ability of pneumococci to cause invasive pneumococcal diseases. Recent studies indicated that PsrP is a protective adhesin interacting with keratin 10 on lung epithelial cells. In this study, the genomic loci of the pneumococcal virulence factors pili, PsrP and PavB were molecularly analyzed and used as molecular markers for molecular epidemiology studies of S. pneumoniae. The genotyping results obtained here showed the impact of the PCV7 immunization of children, started in July 2006, on the distribution of these pneumococcal virulence factors among clinical isolates in Germany. These findings gave more insights into the role of pili, PsrP and PavB in pneumococcal pathogenesis and may strongly support the idea of including these pneumococcal constituents in a broad coverage protein-based vaccine against pneumococcal infections produced by invasive serotypes in the future. The mature PavB protein contains a variable number of repetitive sequences referred to as the Streptococcal Surface Repeats (SSURE). PavB has been demonstrated to interact with fibronectin and plasminogen in a dose-dependent manner and it was identified as a surface-exposed adhesin with immunogenic properties, which contributes to pneumococcal colonization and respiratory airways infections. The complete molecular analysis performed here for PavB, allowed to know more accurately its structure and to estimate the real number of SSURE units in different pneumococcal strains. With these findings, a new primary sequence-based structural model was constructed for the PavB protein and its SSURE domain, and, at least for TIGR4, the complete pavB gene and PavB protein sequences with five SSURE units was reported in the GenBank database of the NCBI website. Due to its immediate neighborhood on the pneumococcal genome with the tcs08 genes, PavB is likely linked with this pneumococcal TCS. Here, a significant reduction of the PavB protein expression was observed in delta-tcs08-mutant strains, which may strongly suggest that the TCS08 does play a role in pneumococcal virulence and metabolisme, as further observed in growth behaviour experiments carried out with the TCS08-deficient mutants, cultured in chemically defined medium. Despite several studies suggest that the molecular mechanism underlying the bacterial signal transduction is very sophisticated, the majority of reports in prokaryotic TCS, including those for S. pneumoniae, are still focused in single cognate pairs. The pneumococcal genome encodes 14 TCSs and an orphan response regulator. It is obvious that TCS pathways are often arranged into complex circuits with extensive cross-regulation at a variety of levels, thereby endowing cells with the ability to perform sophisticated information processing tasks. This study established also the experimental and molecular bases for the construction of a comprehensive genome-wide interaction map of the complex TCS pathways for its application in the gene regulation of pneumococcal virulence factors.
Currently, plastic materials are an integral part of our lives, but their production mostly bases on fossil fuels or derivatives, which resources are decreasing. Extraction and processing of non-renewable resources have also negative impact on environment. One of the most promising and environmentally friendly approaches is use of microorganism. This PhD dissertation presents the non-conventional yeast Arxula adeninivorans as a host for production of bio-based and biodegradable poly(hydroxyalkanoates) plastics poly(hydroxybutyrate) and co-polymer poly(hydroxybutyrate-co-hydroxyvalerate). Additionally, the constructed yeast strain was able to secrete enantiomerically pure (R)-3-hydroxybutyric acid.
The production of PHAs requires three enzymes: β-ketothiolase, acetoacetyl-CoA reductase and PHA synthase. The strategy followed in this project was divided into two parts. While all three enzymes are responsible for intracellular production of PHA polymer, first two only lead to secretion of (R)-3-HB into culture media, which was used in a first stage of work to establish and optimize polymer production. Both, different bacterial strains and yeast A. adeninivorans were taken into account in screening of the genes encoding aforementioned enzymes. Bacterial genes were chemically synthesized using codon optimization pattern and endogenous genes were obtained using PCR and genomic DNA template from A. adeninivorans LS3 wild-type strain. Each gene was cloned into Xplor2 vector between TEF1 constitutive promoter and PHO5 terminator. Vector containing both thiolase and reductase genes was used for A. adeninivorans transformation.
The best combination of heterologous genes was overexpression of β-ketothiolase gene from Clostridium acetobutylicum and acetoacetyl-CoA reductase gene from Cupriavidus necator which led to secretion of 4.84 g L−1 (R)-3-HB, at a rate of 0.023 g L−1 h−1 over 214 h in shaking flask cultivation. Further optimization by fed-batch culturing with glucose as a carbon source did not improve (R)-3-HB secretion, but the rate of production was doubled to 0.043 g L−1 h−1 [3.78 g L−1 of (R)-3-HB at 89 h].
The product of acetoacetyl-CoA reductase is (R)-3-HB-CoA and further removing of CoA moiety is needed for acid secretion into culture media. A. adeninivorans is able to conduct this process without any additional modification but the conversion rate is unknown. Two thioesterases, cytosolic TesBp encoded by TesB gene from E. coli and mitochondrial ATes1p encoded by ATES1 gene from A. adeninivorans, were analysed to enhance secretion process. Additionally, a cytosolic version of ATES1 gene (ATES1cyt) was tested. All three genes were expressed in A. adeninivorans cells under TEF1 constitutive promoter together with thiolase and reductase genes. Despite detected enzymatic activity the yield of (R)-3-HB synthesis and secretion was not increased. Moreover, overexpressed thioesterases negatively influenced cell growth, indicating that they act on other metabolic components. The results provided two sets of information, first, the endogenous secretion system is sufficient for (R)-3-HB production; second, further screening of suitable genes needs to be performed.
Based on optimization of (R)-3-HB synthesis, thiolase gene (thl) from C. acetobutylicum and reductase gene (phaB) from C. necator were chosen to combine with PHA synthase gene (phaC) for creating the PHB-V producing strain. The PHA synthase expression module, containing TEF1 promoter and PHO5 terminator, was cloned into Xplor2 vector together with thiolase and reductase expression modules and used for A. adeninivorans transformation. The engineered strain accumulated up to 7.47% PHB of dcw. During the set of cells passaging A. adeninivorans lost the ability to accumulate polymer with maximal 23.1 % of primary accumulation level. Additionally, use of a vector including hygromycin B antibiotic resistance marker (instead of auxotrophic marker in Xplor2) did not improve polymer accumulation and stability.
To counteract the effect of loss of accumulation stability, phasin gene (phaP1), originated from C. necator, was introduce together with PHA pathway genes. First screening cultivations resulted in stabilizing of polymer production reaching 9.58 % PHB of dcw and only 12.0 % loss of production ability. Further experiments increased PHB content with 19.9% PHB of dcw (3.85 g L-1) after 180 h of cultivation using rich medium. Use of another thiolase gene, the second thiolase from C. necator (bktB), which theoretically should induce production of PHBV copolymer, led to accumulation only 11.4% PHB of dcw after 139 h and no PHV fraction was detected.
Variation of the ratio between flask volume and amount of media influences the level of aeration. Importantly, decrease of aeration level significantly increased polymer synthesis. Additionally, PHB-V copolymer accumulation has been induced by use of different carbon source co-substrates. Use of rich media supplemented with ethanol allow the strain with thl thiolase to accumulate up to 42.9 % PHB of dcw without PHV fraction and with bktB thiolase to 30.5 % PHB of dcw. Nevertheless, despite of lower total amount of polymer, supplementation with 1-propanol allow both strains to accumulate PHB-V copolymer with 7.30 %mol and 22.5 %mol of PHV for thl and bktB strains, respectively.
Optimization based on genetic engineering further enhanced polymer production yield led to exceeding of 50 % PHB-V of dcw. For doubling the gene dosage, PHA synthesizing strains of A. adeninivorans were again transformed with Xplor2 vector containing PHA pathway genes. Resulting strains exhibited twice the level of enzymatic activities of thiolase and reductase compared with strains transformed once with expression vector. In a shaking flask experiment the strain transformed twice with vector containing bktB thiolase reached after 240 h 52.1% PHB-V of dcw (10.8 g L-1) with 12.3 %mol of PHV fraction which is the highest level found in yeast. As another genetic approach, a fusion strain has been created. Two different strains have been established and merged using protoplast fusion technique. Doubling of genetic material resulted in similar level of copolymer produced by Arxula as in former experiments (50.2% of dcw, 10.7 g L-1).
Culture conditions were optimized in controllable cultivation using fed-batch mode. Although optimal oxygen and pH level and continuous carbon source and nitrogen feeding were maintained, final polymer level in % of dry mass was around three times lower than for shaking flask experiment. Nevertheless, efficient growth of Arxula in fed-batch mode led to increase of total copolymer level in g L-1 (16.5 g L-1 compare to 10.8 g L-1 for shaking flasks) showing the feasibility of using Arxula strain for up-scaling production of copolymer.
Acetyl-CoA is a main precursor in synthesis of PHB-V copolymer and change of its pool was investigated. ATP citrate lyase is a cytosolic enzyme converting citrate into oxaloacetate and acetyl-CoA, supporting the biosynthesis of fatty acids. Two genes encoding Acl subunits from Aspergillus nidulans (AnAcl1 and AnAcl2) were again cloned into Xplor2 vector and transformed into A. adeninivorans PHA producing strain. Despite of higher enzymatic activity of AnAclp, accumulation of polymer was around three times higher for control without expression of lyase genes. Expectedly, the strain expressing AnAcl1/2 genes accumulated larger amount of each stearic, palmitic and oleic acid in both standard and fatty acid inducing conditions (lower nitrogen level). Thus, overexpression of AnAcl1/2 genes in A. adeninevorans cells may improve biosynthesis of fatty acids but is ineffective for PHB polymer accumulation.
The aim of the project was use of starch-based media, manufactured as by-products, for polymer production. Genetically engineered Arxula strains were cultivated using these media instead of glucose-based media. Although yeast cells were both able to secrete (R)-3-HB and to accumulate PHB, the yield was lower than for previous media. Additionally, only trace of PHV was found at the end of cultivation time when 1-propanol was supplemented. Obtained results showed that use of cheaper media is a promising approach to decrease production costs but further optimization needs to be performed especially for extended scale of production.
Determination of produced copolymer has been done based on microscopic analysis and studies of physical and chemical properties. Results revealed that Arxula accumulated PHA polymer in cytosolic granules with a similar size range compared to the ones produced by bacteria. The physicochemical study showed that produced polymer exhibited slightly different properties in comparison to bacterial polymer with similar content of PHV, i.e. very-low molecular mass, higher melting and glass transition temperature.
All above results showed that A. adeninivorans is a promising host for PHB-V production. Expression of phasin greatly increased production and stability of polymer, which led to an accumulation level never found before in yeast. Further optimization in higher production scale using cheap starch-based media may establish Arxula strain as a valuable tool for industrial production of PHB-V copolymer.
Animals experience climatic variation in their natural habitats, which may lead to variation in phenotypic responses among populations through local adaptation or phenotypic plasticity. In ectotherm arthropods, the expression of thermoprotective metabolites such as free amino acids, sugars, and polyols, in response to temperature stress, may facilitate temperature tolerance by regulating cellular homeostasis. If populations experience differences in temperatures, individuals may exhibit population-specific metabolite profiles through differential accumulation of metabolites that facilitate thermal tolerance. Such thermoprotective metabolites may originate from the animals themselves or from their associated microbiome, and hence microbial symbionts may contribute to shape the thermal niche of their host. The social spider Stegodyphus dumicola has extremely low genetic diversity, yet it occupies a relatively broad temperature range occurring across multiple climate zones in Southern Africa. We investigated whether the metabolome, including thermoprotective metabolites, differs between populations, and whether population genetic structure or the spider microbiome may explain potential differences. To address these questions, we assessed metabolite profiles, phylogenetic relationships, and microbiomes in three natural populations along a temperature gradient. The spider microbiomes in three genetically distinct populations of S. dumicola showed no significant population-specific pattern, and none of its dominating genera (Borrelia, Diplorickettsia, and Mycoplasma) are known to facilitate thermal tolerance in hosts. These results do not support a role of the microbiome in shaping the thermal niche of S. dumicola. Metabolite profiles of the three spider populations were significantly different. The variation was driven by multiple metabolites that can be linked to temperature stress (e.g., lactate, succinate, or xanthine) and thermal tolerance (e.g., polyols, trehalose, or glycerol): these metabolites had higher relative abundance in spiders from the hottest geographic region. These distinct metabolite profiles are consistent with a potential role of the metabolome in temperature response.
In der Hefe S. cerevisiae erfolgt die Transkriptionsregulation der Strukturgene der Phospholipid-Biosynthese in Abhängigkeit der intrazellulären Konzentration der beiden Phospholipid¬vorstufen Inositol und Cholin (IC). Bei IC-Mangel kommt es zu einer Akkumulation des Signalmoleküls Phosphatidsäure, wodurch der Repressor Opi1 extranukleär am endoplasmatischen Retikulum (ER) verankert wird. Dadurch kann der heterodimere Aktivator Ino2/Ino4 an eine spezifische „upstream activation site” (UAS) in der Promotorregion, die als ICRE-Motiv („inositol/choline-responsive element“) bezeichnet wird, binden und die Initiation der Transkription vermitteln. Die aktivierende Wirkung geht dabei von zwei Transkriptions¬aktivierungsdomänen (TAD) im N-Terminus von Ino2 aus. Da bisher unbekannt war, wie die Ino2-vermittelte Genaktivierung erfolgt, bestand das Ziel dieser Arbeit in der Identifizierung der Coaktivatoren, die direkt an die TADs von Ino2 binden. Ferner sollten die für die Transkriptionsaktivierung wichtigen Wechselwirkungen innerhalb der Coaktivatoren präzise kartiert werden. Es konnte hier mit Hilfe der affinitätschromatographischen Methode des GST-„Pulldown“ gezeigt werden, dass TAD1 und TAD2 von Ino2 mit den generellen Transkriptionsfaktoren TFIID und TFIIA interagieren. Innerhalb des TFIID wurden die Untereinheiten Taf1, Taf4, Taf6, Taf10 und Taf12 in vitro als direkte Ino2-Interaktionspartner identifiziert. Dabei binden alle identifizierten Taf-Proteine an die starke TAD1, Taf10 zusätzlich an die TAD2. Frühere Untersuchungen hatten gezeigt, dass Mutationen innerhalb der TAD1 von Ino2 (D20K, F21R) zu einem vollständigen Verlust der Aktivierungsleistung führen. In dieser Arbeit wurde nachgewiesen, dass die gerichtete Mutation dieser Aminosäuren zu einem vollständigen Interaktionsverlust mit den Taf-Proteinen führt. Mit Hilfe von Interaktionsexperimenten wurden innerhalb von Taf1 zwei distinkte Aktivatorinteraktionsdomänen (AID1: AS 1-100; AID2: AS 182-250) kartiert, die die Bindung an Ino2 vermitteln. Mutationen hydrophober und basischer Aminosäure-Reste innerhalb der Taf1-AID2 hatten einen vollständigen Verlust der Interaktion mit Ino2 zur Folge. Möglicherweise sind also ionische und hydrophobe Wechselwirkungen an der Interaktion von Ino2 und Taf1 beteiligt. Mit Hilfe der Chromatin-Immunopräzipitation (ChIP) erfolgte der Nachweis, dass Taf1 in Abhängigkeit von Ino2 auch in vivo an den ICRE-haltigen Promotoren INO1 und CHO2 vorhanden ist. Im Folgenden wurden auch die Ino2-Interaktionsbereiche innerhalb der Proteine Taf6, Taf10 und Taf12 durch die Generierung sukzessiver GST-Verkürzungen eingegrenzt. Taf10 und Taf12 besitzen wie Taf1 zwei separate AIDs (Taf10: AID1 AS 1-100; AID2 AS 131-176; Taf12: AID1 AS 50-100; AID2 AS 100-178). Untersuchungen mit mutagenisierten Varianten, bei denen wie zuvor im Fall von Taf1 hydrophobe und basische Aminosäuren innerhalb der Taf12 AID2 ausgetauscht wurden, führten lediglich zu einer Verringerung der Bindungsintensität. Dies lässt vermuten, dass mehrere kleine Domänen innerhalb der AID2 existieren, die funktionell redundant sind. Mit Hilfe weiterer ChIP-Experimente konnte auch nachgewiesen werden, dass Taf6 und Taf12 abhängig von Ino2 an den untersuchten Promotoren INO1 und CHO2 vorhanden sind. Die Proteine Taf1 und Taf6 wurden exemplarisch für Genexpressionsstudien ausgewählt, um ihren Einfluss auf die Transkription des Gens INO1 unter in vivo Bedingungen nachzuweisen. Durch vergleichende Northernblot-Hybridisierungen mit temperatursensitiven (ts) taf-Mutanten wurde gezeigt, dass die INO1-Expression unter nichtpermissiven Bedingungen (37°C) auf 7% (taf1ts) bzw. 4% (taf6ts) abfällt. Diese Befunde belegen, dass INO1 zu den Taf-abhängigen Genen zählt. Der generelle Transkriptionsfaktor TFIIA wurde ebenfalls auf eine Interaktion mit Ino2 untersucht. Bekannt war bereits, dass der Aktivator Rap1, der ähnlich wie Ino2 mit mehreren TFIID-Untereinheiten interagiert, auch TFIIA kontaktiert. Durch GST-„Pulldown“-Studien konnte die Untereinheit Toa1 als direkter Ino2-Interaktionspartner identifiziert werden. Dabei zeigte sich, dass Toa1 sowohl mit der TAD1 als auch der TAD2 von Ino2 interagiert und die TAD1 Aminosäuresubstitutionen D20K und F21R zu einem vollständigen Interaktionsverlust führen. In dieser Arbeit konnte somit gezeigt werden, dass die generellen Transkriptionsfaktoren TFIID und TFIIA als Coaktivatoren des für die Transkription der Strukturgene der Phospholipid-Biosynthese essentiellen Aktivators Ino2 fungieren.
In der Hefe Saccharomyces cerevisiae werden die Strukturgene der Phospholipid-Biosynthese auf Transkriptionsebene in Abhängigkeit der Verfügbarkeit der Phospholipidvorstufen Inositol und Cholin (IC) über ein in der Promotorregion befindliches UAS-Element, genannt ICRE („inositol/choline-responsive element“), reguliert. Bei Mangel an IC kommt es zu einer Anhäufung des Intermediats Phosphatidsäure, wodurch der Repressor Opi1 außerhalb des Zellkerns am endoplasmatischen Reticulum verankert wird. Dadurch kann ein Heterodimer, bestehend aus den bHLH-Proteinen Ino2 und Ino4, an das ICRE-Motiv binden und die transkriptionelle Aktivierung vermitteln. Ist ausreichend IC vorhanden, gelangt der Repressor Opi1 in den Zellkern und bindet an Ino2. Dadurch ist eine Aktivierung nicht mehr möglich. Ferner kontaktiert Opi1 über seine Opi1-Sin3-Interaktionsdomäne (OSID) die Corepressor-Komplexe Sin3 und Cyc8/Tup1, die durch Rekrutierung von Histondeacetylasen (HDACs) zur Chromatinverdichtung und damit zur Genrepression führen. In einer früheren Arbeit wurde beobachtet, dass die regulierte Expression von Genen der Phospholipid-Biosynthese auch durch die Phosphatkonzentration beeinflusst wird. Es konnte festgestellt werden, dass bei Phosphatmangelbedingungen die Expression ICRE-abhängiger Gene auf 10 % reduziert ist. Eine Δopi1-Mutante zeigte dieses Expressionsmuster jedoch nicht mehr. Dieser Befund wies darauf hin, dass Opi1 seine Repressorfunktion sowohl bei IC-Überschuss als auch bei Phosphatmangel ausführt. Ein Protein, welches die Phosphatverfügbarkeit an Opi1 möglicherweise über eine Phosphorylierung vermitteln könnte, ist die cyclinabhängige Proteinkinase Pho85, für die eine in vitro Interaktion mit Opi1 gezeigt wurde. Um diese Hypothese zu überprüfen, wurden mittels gerichteter Mutagenese Aminosäurereste mutmaßlicher Pho85-Phosphorylierungsstellen im Opi1-Protein (S321, T51) gegen das nicht mehr phosphorylierbare Alanin ausgetauscht. Hefestämme, die solche Opi1-Protein-varianten (S321A, T51A) synthetisierten, zeigten jedoch weiterhin einen klaren Einfluss des Phosphatmangels auf die Expression eines ICRE-regulierten Reportergens. Dies lässt darauf schließen, dass die Repression unter Phosphatmangelbedingungen nicht über eine Phosphorylierung von Opi1 durch Pho85 zu Stande kommt. Parallel durchgeführte in vitro-Interaktionsstudien zeigten, dass die Bindung von Pho85 an Opi1 über zwei unabhängig voneinander funktionierende Interaktionsdomänen im Opi1-Protein (aa 30-70 und aa 321-350) erfolgt. Mit Hilfe des „Two-Hybrid“-Systems wurde festgestellt, dass die Opi1-Pho85 Wechselwirkung in vivo phosphatabhängig stattfindet. Die Befunde erlauben die Hypothese, dass Pho85 bei Phosphatüberschuss u. a. die OSID im Opi1 abdeckt, dadurch die Wechsel-wirkung mit Sin3/Cyc8 verhindert und eine gesteigerte Genexpression zulässt. Mittels Chromatin-Immunopräzipitation (ChIP) konnte gezeigt werden, dass Opi1, Co-Repressoren wie Sin3 und Cyc8 als auch die HDACs Hda1 und Hos1 an Promotoren ICRE-regulierter Gene Ino2-abhängig anwesend sind. Des Weiteren wurde festgestellt, dass sich Sin3 unabhängig von Opi1 an ICRE-haltigen Promotoren befindet. Dieses Ergebnis wider-sprach einer früheren Arbeitshypothese, konnte aber durch weitere Versuche, die eine direkte in vitro Interaktion von Sin3 mit dem Ino2-Aktivator zeigten, plausibel in ein neues Rekrutierungsmodell eingefügt werden. Abschließend wurden die am Beispiel von Opi1 gewonnenen Erkenntnisse durch in vitro Interaktionsanalysen diverser spezifischer Repressoren mit den pleiotropen Co-Repressoren Sin3 und Cyc8/Tup1 erweitert. Für zahlreiche Repressoren wurde gefunden, dass sie parallel mit Sin3 und Cyc8 interagieren (u. a. Rox1, Yox1, Dal80 und Mot3). Durch Kartierungsexperimente konnten minimale Repressordomänen charakterisiert werden, die die Interaktion zu Sin3 bzw. Cyc8 vermitteln, und sequenzhomologe Domänenstrukturen analysiert werden. Des Weiteren zeigte sich, dass alle Repressoren, die mit Sin3 wechselwirken, dessen Domänen PAH1 oder PAH2 („paired amphipathic helix“) kontaktieren.
Influence of single amino acid polymorphisms on the in vitro convertibility of goat prion protein
(2010)
Prion diseases or transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) are fatal neurodegenerative disorders which include, among others, scrapie and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). The causative agent is composed mainly of a misfolded isoform of a cellular prion protein (PrPC), denoted prion protein scrapie (PrPSc). Genetically determined PrPC polymorphisms can modulate the convertibility of PrPC to PrPSc and thus lead to prolonged TSE incubation times or even complete resistance of the animal. In sheep, such polymorphisms are located at codons 136, 154 and 171. Several disease-associated amino acid polymorphisms also exist in caprine PrPC. However, due to their large number and the limited number of goats carrying them, it is difficult to assess their specific impact on TSE susceptibility in vivo. The susceptibility can be simulated in vitro by a cell-free conversion assay, in which the conversion efficiency of recombinant PrPC is determined. In this study, twelve caprine PrPC variants (M112T, M137I, L141F, I142M, H143R, N146S, N146D, R151H, R211Q, Q215R, Q222K and wild-type PrPC (denoted INRQ) were produced by using PCR mutagenesis amplification and expressed in E. coli M15 cells and purified on Ni-NTA agarose columns. The renatured PrPC variants had molecular masses of approx. 23 kDa and the expected conformation as determined by CD spectroscopy. These variants were then subjected to a cell-free conversion assay using different BSE and scrapie strains. Cross species (mouse and goat) cell-free conversion studies were performed and specific monoclonal antibodies were used to discriminate the exogenous PrPSc molecules used to seed the reaction and newly converted PrPres. The studies with the mouse-adapted strain Me7 revealed that polymorphisms M137I, H143R and L141F did not influence the conversion of PrPC in a significant manner. However, the reduced conversion rate of the variant I142M (harbouring a methionine at position 142 instead of isoleucine) correlated with longer scrapie incubation times in goats with this polymorphism. The polymorphisms M112T, R151H and Q211R showed also reduced conversion rates in comparison to INRQ, an effect that related well to reduced scrapie susceptibility of such goats in vivo. Polymorphisms N146S, N146D and Q222K were to date extremely rarely found in scrapie affected goats. It was intriguing to see that these amino acid substitutions also abolished the in vitro conversion efficiency completely as did the Q215R polymorphism, which had not yet been associated with scrapie resistance in vivo. Results of cell free conversion studies with mouse adapted BSE prions (BSE/Bl6 strain) correlated well with the results obtained with Me7, although the results with BSE/Bl6 showed more variation. Again it was possible to observe a reduction in the conversion with I142M, R151H and R211Q and no or almost no conversion with N146S, N146D and Q222K and with Q215R respectively. In subsequent experiments, caprine PrPC variants were directly biotinylated so that goat or sheep scrapie as well as cattle, sheep or goat BSE derived PrPSc could be used. In these assays I142M, H143R and R211Q clearly reduced the conversion of PrPC with ovine and caprine scrapie isolates, whereas R151H did not influence the conversion efficiency of biotin-tagged PrPC. Conversion with scrapie isolates showed a marked reduction or no conversion in the case of N146S and N146D which correlated again with the Me7 data and the in vivo observations. In the case of bovine BSE isolates, the cell-free conversion mimicked the species barrier observed in vivo. BSE material from cattle barely converted any caprine PrPC variant into PrPres, whereas BSE from sheep converted all variants including the resistance-associated N146S and N146D, suggesting that the resistance is also prion strain specific. A marked reduction in the conversion rate was also observed with I142M and, less pronounced, with H143R and R211Q corroborating the protective role of these polymorphisms against TSEs. When co-incubated, resistance-associated variants N146D, N146S and Q222K produced a dominant negative effect on the conversion of the susceptible wild-type PrPC genotype (INRQ). In a similar way, the incubation of I142M and H143R also reduced the amount of PrPres in a mixture with INRQ. In conclusion, the cell-free conversion assay results show that the caprine PrP polymorphisms M112T, I142M, R143H, N146S, N146D, R151H, R215Q and Q222K correlated clearly with the in vivo susceptibilities of the goats carrying these polymorphisms. Apart from practical implications, like the possibility of breeding TSE resistant goats, these data indicate that scrapie resistance is modulated by thermodynamic changes affecting PrPC-PrPSc interactions and the formation of conversion intermediates.
Acidobacteria represents one of the most dominant bacterial groups across diverse ecosystems. However, insight into their ecology and physiology has been hampered by difficulties in cultivating members of this phylum. Previous cultivation efforts have suggested an important role of trace elements for the proliferation of Acidobacteria, however, the impact of these metals on their growth and metabolism is not known. In order to gain insight into this relationship, we evaluated the effect of trace element solution SL10 on the growth of two strains (5B5 and WH15) of Acidobacteria belonging to the genus Granulicella and studied the proteomic responses to manganese (Mn). Granulicella species had highest growth with the addition of Mn, as well as higher tolerance to this metal compared to seven other metal salts. Variations in tolerance to metal salt concentrations suggests that Granulicella sp. strains possess different mechanisms to deal with metal ion homeostasis and stress. Furthermore, Granulicella sp. 5B5 might be more adapted to survive in an environment with higher concentration of several metal ions when compared to Granulicella sp. WH15. The proteomic profiles of both strains indicated that Mn was more important in enhancing enzymatic activity than to protein expression regulation. In the genomic analyses, we did not find the most common transcriptional regulation of Mn homeostasis, but we found candidate transporters that could be potentially involved in Mn homeostasis for Granulicella species. The presence of such transporters might be involved in tolerance to higher Mn concentrations, improving the adaptability of bacteria to metal enriched environments, such as the decaying wood-rich Mn environment from which these two Granulicella strains were isolated.
In unserem Alltag sind Polymere weit verbreitet. In Form von funktionellen Polymeren werden sie u.a. als Wirk- oder Effektstoff eingesetzt. Sie bestehen aus einem Träger, an welchen über einen Spacer eine funktionelle Gruppe gebunden ist. Die Spacergruppen beeinflussen die chemischen, physikalischen und biologischen Eigenschaften der Polymere bzw. ermöglichen diese erst. Dadurch stellen sie in der pharmazeutischen Industrie und der medizinischen Chemie Schlüsselbausteine dar.
Auch Monoester von symmetrischen Dicarbonsäuren oder symmetrischen Diolen werden für die Einführung von Spacergruppen verwendet. Sie können durch die Hydrolyse von Diestern oder Dioldiestern chemisch synthetisiert werden. Da diese Reaktion nicht selektiv erfolgt, entstehen Nebenprodukte wie Disäuren oder Diole, die die Ausbeuten schmälern und eine aufwändige Aufarbeitung notwendig machen. Selektive enzymatische Verfahren stellen eine echte Alternative dar, denn eine Trennung des Produkts vom Nebenprodukt ist nicht notwendig. Bisher sind nur wenige Enzyme bekannt und verfügbar, die zur Synthese von Monoestern verwendet werden können.
Ziel dieser Arbeit ist die Entdeckung neuer Lipasen und Carboxylesterasen als Biokatalysatoren zur Synthese von Monoestern, die zudem in ausreichender Verfügbarkeit generiert werden sollen. Als Gendonor und Expressionssystem diente hierfür die Hefe Blastobotrys raffinosifermentans. Die nicht-konventionelle, nicht-pathogene und thermotolerante Hefe B. raffinosifermentans weist ein breites Kohlenstoff- und Stickstoff-Quellen Spektrum auf, was sie für industrielle Anwendungen interessant macht. Aufgrund einer bereits vielfach eingesetzten, effizienten Transformationsmethode wurde die Hefe bereits zur Produktion verschiedener Proteine wie humanem Serumalbumin, Interleukin-6, Phosphatasen mit Phytase-Aktivität, Tannasen und einer Lipase eingesetzt. Die exzellenten Wachstumsparameter garantieren hohe Enzymausbeuten.
Insgesamt wurden in dieser Arbeit 30 putative Lipase- und Carboxylesterase-Gene in ihrem Genom durch Annotationsanalysen identifiziert. Diese Gene wurden isoliert, amplifiziert und in der Hefe selbst überexprimiert. Die Proteinextrakte der erzeugten Stämme wurden anschließend auf Esteraseaktivität getestet, wovon sieben Kandidaten das Substrat p-Nitrophenylbutyrat (pNP-Butyrat) hydrolysierten. Anschließend wurde mittels eines Assays untersucht, ob die Enzyme die Hydrolyse der Substrate Adipinsäurediethylester (DEA), Dimethyl trans-1,4-cyclohexandicarboxylat (DMCH), Terephthalsäurediethylester (DETS) und Decandiol-dimethacrylsäureester (DDMAE) katalysieren. Vier Kandidaten hydrolysierten DEA und DMCH und ein Extrakt eignete sich zur Hydrolyse von DETS. Es folgten eine Testung auf Selektivität mittels Gaschromatographie mit gekoppeltem Flammenionisationsdetektor und eine affinitätschromatographische Reinigung der fünf Proteine. Dabei stellten sich die drei Kandidaten Alip2-6hp, 6h-Best1p und 6h-Best2p, eine putative Lipase und zwei putative Carboxylesterasen, als potenziell geeignete Kandidaten heraus.
Anschließend erfolgte die biochemische Charakterisierung der drei Proteine. Das Temperatur-Optimum der Enzyme lag zwischen 31 °C und 41 °C und das pH-Optimum zwischen 6,6 und 7,0. Die Metallionen Fe2+, Fe3+ und Cu2+ inhibierten alle drei Biokatalysatoren und auch die Zugabe verschiedener Lösungsmittel verringerte ihre Aktivität. Die Untersuchung des Substratspektrums mit p-Nitrophenylestern mit Kettenlängen von C2 bis C18 zeigte eine Präferenz von Alip2-6hp für mittelkettige pNP-Ester mit einem Maximum bei pNP-Caproat und von 6h-Best1p und 6h-Best2p für kurzkettige pNP-Ester mit einem Maximum bei pNP-Acetat. 6h-Best1p und 6h-Best2p zeigen damit das für Carboxylhydrolasen typische Substratspektrum. Da Lipasen üblicherweise langkettige Substrate bevorzugen, wurde die Klassifizierung für Alip2-6hp mittels Tween 20- und Olivenöl-Agarplattentest weiter untersucht. Das positive Ergebnis dieser Untersuchung lässt auf eine Lipase schließen.
Zur Bestimmung der Selektivität der Enzyme wurde die Hydrolyse von DEA und DMCH zeitlich per GC-FID verfolgt. Nach Derivatisierung der Carboxylgruppen war die quantitative Auswertung zum Gehalt an Monoester, Diester und Disäure möglich. Es ließ sich damit die Hydrolyse von DEA mit 6h-Best1p bestätigen. Bessere Ergebnisse wurden mit Alip2-6hp für das Substrat DMCH erzielt und mit Abstand die schnellste Hydrolyse wurde mit DEA als Substrat erreicht. In gereinigter Form hydrolysierte Alip2-6hp das Substrat DEA selektiv zu MEA, sodass bis zu 96 % Monoester synthetisiert werden konnten. Im Vergleich dazu wird MEA deutlich langsamer hydrolysiert.
Zusätzlich wurden fünf unterschiedliche Formulierungen des Enzyms Alip2-6hp mit dem Substrat DEA getestet: (1) Rohextrakt, (2) freies, gereinigtes Enzym, (3) immobilisiertes, gereinigtes Enzym (Beads) und als Ganzzellkatalysatoren (4) permeabilisierte (Triton-) Zellen und (5) permeabilisierte, immobilisierte (Triton-) Zellen. Die vielversprechendsten Ergebnisse wurden mit isoliertem gereinigtem Enzym erzielt. DEA wurde vollständig und spezifisch zu MEA umgesetzt.
Zur Gewährleistung einer ausreichenden Verfügbarkeit der Enzyme erfolgte die Kultivierung der Überexpressionsstämme im Fermenter im Fed-batch. Der Alip2-6hp produzierende Hefestamm erbrachte Aktivitäten von 674 U L-1, während der 6h-Best2p Überexpressionsstamm 2239 U L-1 produzierte.
MicroRNAs (miRNA) are ubiquitous non-coding RNAs that have a prominent role in cellular regulation. The expression of many miRNAs is often found deregulated in prostate cancer (PCa) and castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Although their expression can be associated with PCa and CRPC, their functions and regulatory activity in cancer development are poorly understood. In this study, we used different proteomics tools to analyze the activity of hsa-miR-3687-3p (miR-3687) and hsa-miR-4417-3p (miR-4417), two miRNAs upregulated in CRPC. PCa and CRPC cell lines were transfected with miR-3687 or miR-4417 to overexpress the miRNAs. Cell lysates were analyzed using 2D gel electrophoresis and proteins were subsequently identified using mass spectrometry (Maldi-MS/MS). A whole cell lysate, without 2D-gel separation, was analyzed by ESI-MS/MS. The expression of deregulated proteins found across both methods was further investigated using Western blotting. Gene ontology and cellular process network analysis determined that miR-3687 and miR-4417 are involved in diverse regulatory mechanisms that support the CRPC phenotype, including metabolism and inflammation. Moreover, both miRNAs are associated with extracellular vesicles, which point toward a secretory mechanism. The tumor protein D52 isoform 1 (TD52-IF1), which regulates neuroendocrine trans-differentiation, was found to be substantially deregulated in androgen-insensitive cells by both miR-3687 and miR-4417. These findings show that these miRNAs potentially support the CRPC by truncating the TD52-IF1 expression after the onset of androgen resistance.
Background: Klebsiella pneumoniae causes severe diseases including sepsis, pneumonia
and wound infections and is differentiated into hypervirulent (hvKp) and classic (cKp) pathotypes.
hvKp isolates are characterized clinically by invasive and multiple site infection and phenotypically
in particular through hypermucoviscosity and increased siderophore production, enabled by the
presence of the respective virulence genes, which are partly carried on plasmids. Methods: Here, we
analyzed two K. pneumoniae isolates of a human patient that caused severe multiple site infection.
By applying both genomic and phenotypic experiments and combining basic science with clinical
approaches, we aimed at characterizing the clinical background as well as the two isolates in-depth.
This also included bioinformatics analysis of a chromosomal virulence plasmid integration event.
Results: Our genomic analysis revealed that the two isolates were clonal and belonged to sequence
type 420, which is not only the first description of this K. pneumoniae subtype in Germany but also
suggests belonging to the hvKp pathotype. The latter was supported by the clinical appearance and
our phenotypic findings revealing increased siderophore production and hypermucoviscosity similar
to an archetypical, hypervirulent K. pneumoniae strain. In addition, our in-depth bioinformatics
analysis suggested the insertion of a hypervirulence plasmid in the bacterial chromosome, mediated
by a new IS5 family sub-group IS903 insertion sequence designated ISKpn74. Conclusion: Our study
contributes not only to the understanding of hvKp and the association between hypervirulence and
clinical outcomes but reveals the chromosomal integration of a virulence plasmid, which might lead
to tremendous public health implications.
Hantaviruses (family Bunyaviridae) are enveloped viruses with a segmented RNA genome of negative polarity. They can cause two different diseases in humans, the hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome in Europe and Asia and the hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome in America. The transmission to humans is mainly indirect by inhalation of aerosolized virus-contaminated rodent excreta. In contrast to the initial assumption that hantaviruses are mainly carried by rodents, during the last years many novel hantaviruses were detected in shrews, moles and recently in bats. These findings raise important questions about the evolutionary history of hantaviruses, their host association and adaptation, the role and frequency of spillover infections and host switch events. This study aims to prove the presence, geographical distribution and host association of the rodent-borne Tula virus (TULV) and the shrew-associated Seewis virus (SWSV) in Central Europe. For this purpose, novel laboratory techniques for molecular and serological hantavirus detection were developed. Initially, a broad-spectrum molecular assay to identify small mammal species from Central Europe was developed. This novel assay is based on PCR amplification using degenerated primers targeting the cytochrome b (cyt b) gene, nucleotide sequence analysis of the amplified cyt b gene portion and followed by pairwise sequence comparison to published sequences using the BLAST function of GenBank. Different small mammal species prevalent in Central Europe could be determined by this new approach, including not only representatives of various Rodentia and Soricomorpha, but also representatives of the orders Erinaceomorpha, Lagomorpha, Carnivora and Chiroptera. For characterization of insectivore-borne hantavirus Thottapalayam virus (TPMV), specific monoclonal antibodies were generated that detect native virus in infected mammalian cells. For the detection of TPMV-specific antibodies, Asian house shrew Suncus murinus immunoglobulin G (IgG)-specific antibodies were produced in laboratory mice and rabbit. Using this anti-shrew IgG and recombinant TPMV nucleocapsid (N) protein, an indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed allowing the detection of TPMV N protein-specific antibodies in immunized and experimentally TPMV infected shrews. A Pan-Hantavirus SYBR-Green RT-qPCR was developed for the search to novel hantaviruses. By this novel RT-qPCR and other conventional RT-PCR approaches, TULV infections were identified for the first time in the Eurasian water vole Arvicola amphibius from different regions in Germany and Switzerland. The phylogenetic analyses of the different partial TULV small (S)-, medium (M)- and large (L)-genome segment sequences from A. amphibius, with those of Microtus arvalis- and M. agrestis-derived TULV lineages, revealed a geographical, but host-independent clustering and may suggest multiple TULV spillover or a potential host switch from M. arvalis or M. agrestis to A. amphibius. In a further comprehensive study, different shrew species (Sorex araneus, S. minutus, S. coronatus, and S. alpinus) were collected in Germany, Czech Republic, and Slovakia and screened by another L-segment-targeting Pan-Hantavirus RT-PCR approach. This screening revealed hantavirus L-segment sequences in a large number of S. araneus and a few S. minutus indicating a broad geographical distribution of this hantavirus. For detailed analyses, S-segment sequences were obtained, from S. araneus and S. minutus. The sequences demonstrated their similarity to SWSV sequences from Hungary, Finland, Austria and Germany. A detailed phylogenetic analysis showed low intra-cluster sequence variability, but high inter-cluster divergence suggesting a long-term SWSV evolution in local shrew populations. In conclusion, the investigations demonstrated a broad geographical distribution and multiple spillover infections of rodent-borne TULV and shrew-borne SWSV in Europe. The finding of putative spillover transmissions described here and in other studies underline the current problem of the hantavirus reservoir host definition. In contrast to the hypothesis of a long-standing hantavirus–rodent (small mammal) host coevolution, the investigations support a more dynamic evolutionary history of hantavirus diversification including spillover infections and host-switch events. In future in vitro and in vivo infection studies as well as field studies has to define factors determining the host specificity of these hantaviruses.
Die ADHs aus Rhodococcus ruber (RrADH) und Lactobacillus brevis (LbADH) wurden erstmals in der Hefe Arxula adeninivorans (Blastobotrys adeninivorans) hergestellt und zur Synthese von enantiomerenreinen 1-Phenylethanol eingesetzt. Die entsprechenden Gene wurden hierfür mit dem starken konstitutiven TEF1-Promotor und dem PHO5-Terminator flankiert und unter Nutzung der etablierten Xplor2®-Transformations-/Expressionsplattform in der Hefe exprimiert. Die erhaltenen selektierten Transformanden wiesen dabei ADH-Aktivitäten von 21 bzw. 320 U g-1 dcw für die Reduktion von Acetophenon zu 1-Phenylethanol in Schüttelkultur auf. RrADH und LbADH sind für die Reduktion von Acetophenon und Acetophenon-Derivaten, alpha-Ketoestern und aliphatischen Ketonen geeignet. Die RrADH synthetisiert (S)-konfigurierte Alkohole und ist NAD+/NADH-abhängig, während die LbADH die Reduktion von Acetophenon zu 1-(R)-Phenylethanol mithilfe des Cofaktors NADPH katalysiert. Rohextrakt des RrADH produzierenden Hefestamms konnte erfolgreich für die Synthese von enantiomerenreinem 1-(S)-Phenylethanol mit einer Ausbeute von 90 % und einem Enantiomerenüberschuss (ee) von >99 % über Substrat-gekoppelte Regeneration mit Isopropanol eingesetzt werden. Die Erhöhung der Ausbeute auf 100 % gelang durch Enzym-gekoppelte Regenerierung des Cofaktors NADH mit der GDH aus Bacillus megaterium (Bm) für RrADH bzw. NADPH mit der BmGDH und G6PDH aus Bacillus pumilus (Bp) für LbADH katalysierte Reaktionen. ADHs und Cofaktor-regenerierende Enzyme wurden simultan durch die konstitutive Coexpression der entsprechenden Gene in A. adeninivorans für die Synthese von enantiomerenreinem 1-Phenylethanol hergestellt. Die Enzymrohextrakte der RrADH-BmGDH, LbADH-BmGDH und LbADH-BpG6PDH produzierenden Hefestämme katalysieren ohne Ausnahme die Synthese des jeweiligen Enantiomers von 1-Phenylethanol mit ee >99 % und Ausbeuten von 100 % für Substratkonzentrationen bis 40 mM. Nach der Extraktion des 1-Phenylethanols liegt dieses chemisch rein vor, sodass aufwendige Aufarbeitungs- und Reinigungsschritte erspart bleiben. GDH bzw. G6PDH sind hervorragend für die Regeneration von NADH und NADPH bzw. ausschließlich letzterem geeignet. Dabei wurden standardmäßig 40 mol 1-Phenylethanol pro Mol NAD+ oder NADP+ erreicht. Auch intakte Hefezellen der rekombinanten ADH und BmGDH bzw. BpG6PDH synthetisierenden Stämme wurden für die Synthese von 1-(S)- bzw. 1-(R)-Phenylethanol verwendet. Nach Permeabilisierung mit Triton X-100 wiesen sie vergleichbare Aktivitäten zu den entsprechenden Rohextrakten auf. Der RrADH-BmGDH produzierende Stamm synthetisiert 1-(S)-Phenylethanol mit einer Aktivität von 20 U g-1 dcw, während die LbADH-BmGDH und LbADH-BpG6PDH Hefestämme sogar 45,6 und 87,9 U g-1 dcw lieferten. Die Ausbeuten und ee waren im Vergleich zu den Rohextrakten ähnlich. Die Erhöhung der Konzentration des Ausgangsstoffs Acetophenon reduzierte unabhängig von den verwendeten Enzymen die erhaltene Ausbeute. Die katalytische Produktivität der Biokatalysatoren wurde durch ihre Wiederverwendung erhöht. Hierfür wurden permeabilisierte Zellen, die einfach aus der Syntheselösung abzentrifugiert werden können, genutzt. Außerdem konnten der Rohextrakt und die Zellen nach ihrem Einschluss in unlösliches Calciumalginat in Form von kleinen Kügelchen aus der Synthese abfiltriert und wiederverwendet werden. Permeabilisierte Zellen und Immobilisate wurden wiederholt für die Reduktion von Acetophenon zu 1-Phenylethanol eingesetzt, wobei immobilisierter Rohextrakt und Zellen für drei bis maximal sechs Synthesezyklen verwendet werden konnten. Immobilisierte und permeabilisierte Zellen sind wesentlich stabiler. Sie können ohne erhebliche Aktivitätsverluste 14 (LbADH-BpG6PDH), 29 (RrADH-BmGDH) bzw. mehr als 50 Mal (LbADH-BmGDH) wiederholt zur Acetophenon-Reduktion eingesetzt werden. Auf ihrer Grundlage wurde ein erster Reaktor für die semi-kontinuierliche Synthese von 1-(R)-Phenylethanol im Labormaßstab konstruiert und in Betrieb genommen. Es konnten 206 mol 1-(R)-Phenylethanol pro Mol NADP+ und 12,78 g 1-(R)-Phenylethanol mit einem ee von 100 % und einer Raum-Zeit-Ausbeute von 9,74 g L-1 d-1 oder 406 g kg-1 dcw d-1 erhalten werden. Weitere Optimierungen der Hefestämme, Reaktionsbedingungen und Reaktionsführung sind zur Erhöhung der Ausbeute und zum Erreichen vergleichbarer Produktivität mit derzeitigen Syntheseprozessen für 1-Phenylethanol nötig. Der ee ist bereits optimal. Zusammenfassend ist A. adeninivorans ein hervorragender Wirt zur Herstellung von ADHs für die Synthese enantiomerenreiner Alkohole wie 1-(S)- und 1-(R)-Phenylethanol. Nach Extraktion liegt das Produkt rein und mit optimalen ee vor. Durch die in dieser Arbeit gezeigten Untersuchungen können bisher chemische Synthesen durch enzymatische Reaktionen unter Einsatz von ADHs, deren Produktion in A. adeninivorans erfolgte, ersetzt werden, was Kosten und natürlichen Ressourcen spart.
Genome-wide responses and regulatory mechanisms to thiol-specific electrophiles in Bacillus subtilis
(2008)
The soil-dwelling bacterium Bacillus subtilis is regarded as model organism for functional genomic research of low GC Gram-positive bacteria. Recently, the group of Haike Antelmann has monitored the expression profile of B. subtilis after exposure to phenolic compounds. Interestingly, proteome and transcriptome analyses showed a strong overlap in the expression profile after exposure to catechol, MHQ that auto-oxidized to quinones and the thiol-reactive electrophile diamide. The response to electrophilic quinones and diamide is governed by a complex network of transcription factors, including Spx, CtsR, PerR, CymR and the novel MarR-type repressors MhqR (YkvE), YodB and YvaP. The regulatory mechanisms of these novel thiol-stress sensors YodB and YvaP are studied as part of this thesis in collaboration with the group of Peter Zuber (Oregon). YodB negatively regulates the expression of the nitroreductase YodC and the azoreductase YocJ (AzoR1) after exposure to electrophilic quinones and diamide. The azoreductase AzoR1 is a paralog of AzoR2 that is under control of MhqR. Both paralogous azoreductases (AzoR1 and AzoR2) have common functions in quinone and azo-compound reduction to protect cells against the thiol reactivity of electrophiles. DNA binding activity of YodB is directly inhibited by thiol-reactive compounds in vitro. Mass spectrometry approaches suggested that YodB is regulated by a thiol-(S)-alkylation mechanism in response to quinones. Mutational analyses revealed that the conserved Cys6 residue of YodB is required for optimal repression in vivo and in vitro. Recent studies further suggest that YodB is redox-regulated by intersubunit disulfide formation in vivo by diamide. In addition to the azoreductases, several thiol-dependent dioxygenases confer resistance to quinones. In collaboration with Kazuo Kobayashi (Nara), the YodB-paralogous MarR/DUF24-family regulator, YvaP was identified as repressor of the catechol-2,3-dioxygenase encoding yfiDE (catDE) operon. DNA binding activity of YvaP was also directly inhibited by quinones and diamide in vitro indicating that also YvaP is regulated via post-translational modifications. Mutational analyses showed that the conserved Cys7 is essential for YvaP regulation in vivo and serves as sensor for thiol-reactive compounds. In addition, also the basic amino acids K19, R20 are essential for YvaP repression in vivo as well as conserved basic arginine and lysine residues located in the DNA binding helix-turn-helix (HTH) motif. Non-reducing PAGE analysis suggests the formation of an intersubunit disulfide bond in a YvaP dimer upon treatment with quinones and diamide in vitro. Besides quinones, also aldehydes are electrophilic compounds which react via the thiol-(S)-alkylation reaction with thiols. Thus, we were also interested in the response of B. subtilis to the toxic electrophiles methylglyoxal (MG) and formaldehyde (FA). We analyzed the changes in the transcriptome and proteome of B. subtilis after exposure to MG and FA. Like quinone compounds, both MG and FA induce the thiol-specific stress response. Metabolomic approaches confirmed that these reactive aldehydes deplete the cellular thiol pool and thus act like quinones as another class of thiol-reactive electrophiles. Additionally, MG and FA also triggered responses to overcome DNA damage. Our studies further revealed the specific induction of two FA detoxification pathways regulated by the MarR/DUF24 family repressor HxlR, and the novel MerR/NmlR-type regulator YraB (AdhR). HxlR positively regulates the hxlAB operon encoding the ribulose monophosphate pathway. AdhR positively regulates an adhA-yraA operon that encodes the thiol-dependent formaldehyde dehydrogenase (AdhA) and the DJ1/PfpI-like cysteine proteinase (YraA), and the yraC gene that encodes a γ-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase. Thus, the AdhR regulon is involved in the detoxification of FA to formate via the formaldehyde dehydrogenase AdhA which catalyzes the cleavage of S-hydroxymethylcysteine adducts. In addition, the cysteine proteinase YraA could be involved in the degradation of S-hydroxymethylcysteine-modified and damaged protein thiols. In collaboration with the group of John Helmann (Ithaca), it was shown that AdhR binds in vitro to a conserved inverted repeat between the -10 and -35 promoter elements upstream of adhA, yraB and yraC. In addition, we showed that the conserved Cys52 of AdhR is essential for aldehyde sensing and activation of adhA-yraA transcription in vivo. Thus, we speculate that redox regulation of AdhR involves thiol-(S)-alkylation of this Cys52 residue by aldehydes as another novel mechanism of bacterial physiology.
Coenzym A ist ein essentieller und ubiquitärer Cofaktor, dessen zentrale Bedeutung für den Stoffwechsel aus der Aktivierung und Übertragung von Acylgruppen resultiert. Der Biosyn-theseweg von Coenzym A (CoA) ausgehend von Pantothenat (Pan) umfasst fünf enzymatische Schritte, die in Pro- und Eukaryoten konserviert sind. Die Hefe S. cere¬visiae ist in der Lage, sowohl eine de novo Pantothenat-Synthese durchzuführen als auch mittels Fen2-Transporter dieses Intermediat aufzunehmen. Die Phosphorylierung von Pan durch die Pantothenat Kinase (PanK) stellt vermutlich den geschwindigkeitsbestimmenden Schritt dar, der in Form einer Inhibition durch das Endprodukt bzw. dessen Derivate erfolgt. Ziel dieser Arbeit sollte es sein, grundlegende Erkenntnisse zu den Enzymen des CoA-Biosyntheseweges, deren Organisation und Regulation in der Hefe zu bekommen. Durch „metabolic engineering“ sollte versucht werden, einen Stamm zu konstruieren, der im Vergleich zu einem Wildtyp einen erhöhten CoA-Gehalt aufweist. Für das Genprodukt von YDR531W in S. cerevisiae konnte aufgrund der Verwertbarkeit von 14C-Pantothenat als Substrat die Vermutung bestätigt werden, dass es sich um eine PanK handelt, so dass dieses Gen die neue Bezeichnung CAB1 („Coenzym A Biosynthese“) erhielt. Es erfolgt eine „Feedback“-Inhibition durch CoA und in stärkerem Maße durch dessen Thioester Acetyl-CoA. Der Einfluss von Malonyl-CoA und Palmitoyl-CoA auf die Aktivität der PanK ist vernachlässigbar. Durch gerichtete Mutagenese konnte eine Acetyl-CoA insensitive deregulierte PanK-Variante CAB1W331R erzeugt werden, die, verglichen mit dem Wildtyp, eine etwa vierfach gesteigerte Aktivität aufweist. Für die vier weiteren Gene YIL083C, YKL088W, YGR277C und YDR196C, die aufgrund von Ähnlichkeiten zu humanen CoA-Genen identifiziert wurden, konnte der Nachweis erbracht werden, dass es sich um CoA-Biosynthesegene handelt. Eine Nullmutation in jedem dieser essentiellen Gene ließ sich durch das entsprechende E. coli Gen, für die der enzymatische Nachweis der Genprodukte vorliegt, heterolog komplementieren. Folgende neue Genbe-zeichnungen wurden aufgrund der Abfolge der Reaktionsschritte vergeben: YIL083C = CAB2 (codiert für die Phosphopantothenyl Cystein Synthetase, PPCS), YKL088W = CAB3 (Phosphopantothenylcystein Decarboxylase, PPCDC), YGR277C = CAB4 (Phosphopante-thein Adenyltransferase, PPAT) und YDR196C = CAB5 (Dephospho-CoA.Kinase, DPCK). Für CAB1, CAB2 und CAB5 war ein moderater Anstieg der Genexpression zu beobachten, wenn Glucose durch Ethanol als C-Quelle ersetzt wurde. Die Abwesenheit von Aminosäuren beeinflusste die Expression der CAB Gene kaum. Mit Hilfe chromatographischer Reinigungsschritte war eine Cofraktionierung der epitopmar-kierten Proteine Cab3 und Cab5 möglich, die einen ersten Hinweis auf die Existenz eines CoA-synthetisierenden Enzymkomplexes (CoA-SPC) lieferten. Dessen durch Gelfiltration bestimmte Größe beträgt ungefähr 327 kDa. In vitro-Interaktionsstudien ergaben, dass Cab1 (PanK) nicht an der Bildung dieses Komplexes beteiligt ist und dass Cab2, Cab3, Cab4 und Cab5 mit Cab3 interagieren. Weiterhin konnten Wechselwirkungen zwischen Cab4 und Cab5 nachgewiesen werden. Durch Konstruktion von Längenvarianten der genannten Proteine wurden die für die Interaktionen jeweils verantwortlichen Proteinabschnitte kartiert. Vermutlich dient Cab3 als zentrales „Gerüstprotein“ des gesamten CoA-SPC-Komplexes. Mit ausschließlich bakteriell synthetisierten Proteinen konnte zumindest für Cab3 gezeigt werden, dass die Interaktionen direkt erfolgen. In einem weiteren Teil dieser Arbeit wurde versucht, durch Überexpression der CoA-Bio-synthesegene die zelluläre CoA-Synthese zu beeinflussen. Mit Hilfe integrativer Plasmide wurden MET25-Promotor-kontrollierte Überexpressionskassetten aller CAB-Gene sukzes¬sive in einen Wildtypstamm eingeführt. Für das Gen der PanK wurde das Wildtyp-Allel CAB1 bzw. die deregulierte Variante CAB1W331R verwendet. Einen Unterschied zwischen den Stämmen konnte für den Acetyl-CoA-, allerdings nicht für den CoA-Gehalt gemessen werden. Überexpressionsstämme mit der regulierten PanK bzw. der deregulierten PanK-Variante enthielten im Vergleich zum Wildtyp die 3-fache bzw. sogar die 6-fache Menge an Acetyl-CoA. Dieser Befund belegt die Schrittmacherfunktion der PanK für den gesamten CoA-Biosyntheseweg.
Die Regulation der Phospholipid-Biosynthesegene in der Hefe Saccharomyces cerevisiae erfolgt über die Verfügbarkeit der Phospholipid-Vorstufen Inositol und Cholin (IC). Bei ICMangelbedingungen wird die Transkription der Strukturgene stimuliert und bei IC-Überschuss im Medium reprimiert. Im Promotorbereich dieser Gene befinden sich spezifische UAS-Elemente („inositol/choline-responsive element“, ICRE-Motive), welche von den Aktivatoren Ino2 und Ino4 gebunden werden. Bei IC-Mangel kommt es zu einer Anhäufung des Intermediats Phosphatidsäure, wodurch der Repressor Opi1 durch die Interaktion mit Scs2 außerhalb des Zellkerns am endoplasmatischen Reticulum gebunden wird. Wenn ausreichend IC im Medium vorhanden ist, kann der Repressor Opi1 in den Zellkern einwandern und den Aktivator Ino2 binden. Ferner kann Opi1 über seine Opi1-Sin3-Interaktionsdomäne (OSID) mit der PAH1 („paired amphipathic helix“) des Corepressors Sin3 interagieren. Ein Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, ausgewählte Aminosäuren in der OSID durch gerichtete Mutagenese gegen Alanin auszutauschen und die erhaltenen Opi1-Varianten auf ihre Repressorfunktion hin zu untersuchen. Die Substitution einzelner Aminosäuren innerhalb der OSID offenbarte die Notwendigkeit der Aminosäuren L56, V59 und V67 für die Opi1-Sin3 Bindung. Die Ergebnisse legten außerdem nahe, dass die Repression nicht allein über Sin3 vermittelt wird. Tatsächlich konnte gezeigt werden, dass die innerhalb der OSID von Opi1 kritischen Aminosäuren der Opi1-Sin3 Bindung (L56, V59 und V67) auch für die Interaktion von Opi1 mit Cyc8 wichtig sind. Dementsprechend rekrutiert Opi1 mit Hilfe der OSID zwei pleiotrope Corepressoren. Sin3 bindet über die PAH1 an die OSID, während die Opi1-Cyc8- Bindung über die TPR-Motive im Cyc8 vermittelt wird. Desweiteren zeigte sich, dass die sin3 cyc8 Doppelmutante synthetisch letal ist. Sin3 ist eine Untereinheit in mehreren Komplexen der Histondeacetylase (HDAC) Rpd3 und fungiert als Plattform für viele Protein-Protein Wechselwirkungen. Innerhalb des Sin3/Rpd3LKomplexes wurde der Einfluss mehrerer Untereinheiten (Pho23, Sap30, Sds3, Ume1 und Dep1) untersucht. Hier zeigte sich, dass Pho23 einen entscheidenden Einfluss auf die Regulation ICRE-abhängiger Gene hat. In den sich anschließenden Interaktionsanalysen konnte eine Bindung von Pho23, Sds3 und Sap30 an Sin3 gezeigt werden. Eine genauere Kartierung der Pho23-Sin3 Bindung zeigte, dass Pho23 über zwei voneinander unabhängige Domänen (Pho23-Sin3-Interaktionsdomäne; PSID1 und PSID2) mit Sin3 wechselwirkt, wobei die Interaktion der PSID1 und der PSID2 mit der HID (HDAC-Interaktionsdomäne) im Sin3 erfolgt. Die katalytische Aktivität innerhalb der Sin3/Rpd3-Komplexe ist durch die HDAC Rpd3 gegeben. Durch Untersuchungen der HDACs der Klasse I (Rpd3, Hos1 und Hos2) bzw. der Klasse II (Hda1 und Hos3) konnte für ICRE-abhängige Genorte gezeigt werden, dass eine rpd3 hda1 hos1 Dreifachmutante ähnlich dereguliert ist wie eine sin3 Mutante. Bei Interaktionsstudien der HDACs Rpd3, Hda1 und Hos1 mit Sin3 konnten neben der bereits bekannten HID im Sin3 (aa 801-1100) zwei neue HIDs (HID2: aa 473-600, HID3: aa 1100- 1210) identifiziert werden. Die Histondeacetylase Rpd3 bindet an die HID1 und an die HID3, während Hda1 und Hos1 jeweils an HID2 und HID3 binden. Interessanterweise stellte sich heraus, dass die Bindedomäne für die Sin3-Bindung innerhalb der Deacetylase-Domäne (DAC) aller drei HDACs liegt. Für Hos1 konnte die Sin3 Bindedomäne auf einen Aminosäurebereich von 236-400 eingegrenzt werden. Für die Hda1- Sin3 Bindung konnten zwei voneinander unabhängig interagierende Bereiche im Hda1 (aa 201-250 und aa 251-300) beschrieben werden. Neben der Deacetylierung wurde der regulative Einfluss einer weiteren kovalenten Histonmodifizierung, nämlich der der Methylierung durch Histonmethyltransferasen (HMT; Set1, Set2 und Dot1) und der Demethylierung durch Histondemethylasen (HDM; Jhd1, Jhd2, Ecm5, Gis1 und Rph1) auf die Genexpression der Phospholipid-Biosynthesegene untersucht. Hier konnte für die HMT Set2 (spezifisch für Lysin-36 im Histon H3) ein großer Einfluss auf die ICRE-abhängige Genexpression gezeigt werden. Desweiteren konnte gezeigt werden, das Set2 direkt an Ino2 bindet. Die Kartierung der Interaktionsdomäne offenbarte, dass die katalytische SET Domäne im Set2 mit der DNA-bindenden bHLHDomäne von Ino2 wechselwirkt.
Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococci) are lancet-shaped, Gram-positive, alpha-hemolytic, facultative anaerobic human specific commensals of the upper and lower respiratory tract. Pneumococci may convert to pathogenic bacteria and spread to the lungs and blood. In different population groups, such as children, the elderly and immunocompromised individuals, pneumococci can cause local infections such as bronchitis, rhinitis, acute sinusitis, and otitis media as well as life-threatening invasive diseases such as community-acquired pneumonia, sepsis and meningitis. Pneumococci are surrounded by a rigid and complex exoskeleton, the peptidoglycan, also referred to as murein sacculus. The peptidoglycan (PNG) protects the cells from rupture by osmotic pressure and maintains their characteristic shape. The PNG is a heteropolymer made up of glycan strands that are cross-linked by short peptides and during growth the existing murein is continuously hydrolyzed by specific lytic enzymes to enable the insertion of new peptidoglycan. Bacterial cell-wall hydrolases are essential for peptidoglycan turnover and crucial to preserve cell shape. The D,D-carboxypeptidase DacA and L,D-carboxypeptidase DacB of Streptococcus pneumoniae function in a sequential manner. This study determined the crystal structure of the surface-exposed lipoprotein DacB, which differs considerably from the DacA structure. DacB contains a Zn2+ ion in its catalytic center located in the middle of a fully exposed, large groove. Two different conformations with differently arranged active site topology were identified. In addition the critical residues for catalysis and substrate specificity were identified. Deficiency in DacA or DacB resulted in a modified peptidoglycan peptide composition and led to an altered cell shape of the dac-mutants. In contrast, lgt-mutant lacking lipoprotein diacylglyceryl transferase activity required for proper lipoprotein maturation retained L,D-carboxypeptidase activity and showed an intact murein sacculus. Furthermore, this study demonstrated the pathophysiological effects of disordered DacA or DacB activities. Real-time bioimaging of intranasally infected mice indicated a substantially attenuated virulence of dacB- and dacAdacB-mutants pneumococci, while loss of function of DacA had no significant effect. In addition, uptake of these mutants by professional phagocytes was enhanced, while their adherence to lung epithelial cells was decreased. The second part of this study focused on the functional and structure determination of the soluble dimeric pneumococcal lipoprotein PccL. Because of its calycin fold and structural homology with the lipocalin YxeF from Bacillus subtilis, PccL was introduced as the first member of the lipocalin protein family in pneumococci and named “PccL” (Pneumococcal calycin fold containing Lipoprotein). Similar to other lipocalins, the distinct beta-barrel, which is open at one end, is significantly conserved in PccL. Moreover, the application of the in vivo acute pneumonia mouse infection model and the in vitro phagocytosis as well as adherence invasion studies revealed considerable differences in colonization and invasive infection between the wild-type D39 and the pccL-mutant. In conclusion, this study characterized the crucial role of pneumococcal carboxypeptidases DacA and DacB for PGN architecture, bacterial shape and pathogenesis. By applying in vivo and in vitro approaches, a close relationship between PGN metabolism and pathophysiological effects was discovered. In addition, the high resolution structure of DacB has been solved and analyzed and a structure model with a resolution of 2.0 Å is provided. Furthermore, analysis of the PGN composition was applied to indicate the impact of an impaired lipoprotein biogenesis pathway on localization and activity of DacB. The major impact of carboxypeptidases on cell shape and virulence proposes DacB as a promising target for the development of novel drugs or due to its surface exposition also as a promising vaccine candidate. PccL is the first pneumococcal lipocalin-like protein and this study indicated its contribution to pneumococcal virulence. However, the mechanism and the mode of action of PccL are still unknown and have to be deciphered in further studies.
The full genome of a Methanomassiliicoccales strain, U3.2.1, was obtained from enrichment cultures of percolation fen peat soil under methanogenic conditions, with methanol and hydrogen as the electron acceptor and donor, respectively. Metagenomic assembly of combined long-read and short-read sequences resulted in a 1.51-Mbp circular genome.