27 research outputs found

    Imaging mass spectrometry of intraspecies metabolic exchange revealed the cannibalistic factors of Bacillus subtilis

    Get PDF
    During bacterial cannibalism, a differentiated subpopulation harvests nutrients from their genetically identical siblings to allow continued growth in nutrient-limited conditions. Hypothesis-driven imaging mass spectrometry (IMS) was used to identify metabolites active in a Bacillus subtilis cannibalism system in which sporulating cells lyse nonsporulating siblings. Two candidate molecules with sequences matching the products of skfA and sdpC, genes for the proposed cannibalistic factors sporulation killing factor (SKF) and sporulation delaying protein (SDP), respectively, were identified and the structures of the final products elucidated. SKF is a cyclic 26-amino acid (aa) peptide that is posttranslationally modified with one disulfide and one cysteine thioether bridged to the α-position of a methionine, a posttranslational modification not previously described in biology. SDP is a 42-residue peptide with one disulfide bridge. In spot test assays on solid medium, overproduced SKF and SDP enact a cannibalistic killing effect with SDP having higher potency. However, only purified SDP affected B. subtilis cells in liquid media in fluorescence microscopy and growth assays. Specifically, SDP treatment delayed growth in a concentration-dependent manner, caused increases in cell permeability, and ultimately caused cell lysis accompanied by the production of membrane tubules and spheres. Similarly, SDP but not SKF was able to inhibit the growth of the pathogens Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis with comparable IC(50) to vancomycin. This investigation, with the identification of SKF and SDP structures, highlights the strength of IMS in investigations of metabolic exchange of microbial colonies and also demonstrates IMS as a promising approach to discover novel biologically active molecules

    Characterization of CA-MRSA TCH1516 exposed to nafcillin in bacteriological and physiological media

    Get PDF
    Design Type(s)replicate design • transcription profiling design • sequence analysis objectiveMeasurement Type(s)transcription profiling assay • cellular morphology • exo-metabolome • growthTechnology Type(s)RNA sequencing • fluorescence microscopy • liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry • high performance liquid chromatography • Optical Density MeasurementFactor Type(s)culture medium • biological replicate • experimental conditionSample Characteristic(s)Staphylococcus aureus • culturing environment Machine-accessible metadata file describing the reported data (ISA-Tab format

    Sharing and community curation of mass spectrometry data with Global Natural Products Social Molecular Networking

    Get PDF
    The potential of the diverse chemistries present in natural products (NP) for biotechnology and medicine remains untapped because NP databases are not searchable with raw data and the NP community has no way to share data other than in published papers. Although mass spectrometry techniques are well-suited to high-throughput characterization of natural products, there is a pressing need for an infrastructure to enable sharing and curation of data. We present Global Natural Products Social molecular networking (GNPS, http://gnps.ucsd.edu), an open-access knowledge base for community wide organization and sharing of raw, processed or identified tandem mass (MS/MS) spectrometry data. In GNPS crowdsourced curation of freely available community-wide reference MS libraries will underpin improved annotations. Data-driven social-networking should facilitate identification of spectra and foster collaborations. We also introduce the concept of ‘living data’ through continuous reanalysis of deposited data

    Antimicrobial mechanism of action determination via cytological profiling in Bacillus subtilis

    No full text
    The appearance of multi-drug resistant microbes and the decrease in the number of new antibiotics to treat them coming through the clinical pipeline has created a great need for development of novel antibiotics. Although breakthroughs in sequencing technologies, mass spectrometry, and bioinformatics have revealed an almost unlimited potential for new compounds with antibiotic activity, there still remains a major bottleneck in the determination of mechanism of action (MOA) for these potential antibiotics. Thus although many new antimicrobial compounds are being isolated and structurally characterized, we lack MOA information for most. Determining the MOA is critical for understanding which new molecules will have the greatest potential as an antibiotic safe for clinical use. Current techniques to identify MOA are lengthy, low-throughput and require a large amount of compound. We have developed a rapid and precise method to determine the MOA of compounds in Bacillus subtilis utilizing fluorescence microscopy and viability data, termed cytological profiling. We also developed microculture techniques that allow testing of compounds utilizing less than a microgram of material. This method was used to demonstrate that the cannibalistic toxin sporulation delaying protein (SDP) kills the cell via PMF collapse, which was confirmed by PMF assays, and we have applied the technique to other natural products. All natural products and control antibiotics have shown a distinctive pattern in cell architecture that is unique to their MOA. Further development of cytological profiling by screening of a large library of control compounds, complemented by cytological profiling data obtained from E. coli, and paired with development of automated image analysis and microscopy technologies will make cytological profiling a high-throughput and accurate method of MOA determination sensitive enough to be used at sub-MIC levels and to identify the MOA of natural products prior to purification through screening of crude extract

    Ty3 Capsid Mutations Reveal Early And Late Functions Of The Amino-Terminal Domain

    No full text
    The Ty3 retrotransposon assembles into 50-nm virus-like particles that occur in large intracellular clusters in the case of wild-type (wt) Ty3. Within these particles, maturation of the Gag3 and Gag3-Pol3 polyproteins by Ty3 protease produces the structural proteins capsid (CA), spacer, and nucleocapsid. Secondary and tertiary structure predictions showed that, like retroviral CA, Ty3 CA contains a large amount of helical structure arranged in amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal bundles. Twenty-six mutants in which alanines were substituted for native residues were used to study CA subdomain functions. Transposition was measured, and particle morphogenesis and localization were characterized by analysis of protein processing, cDNA production, genomic RNA protection, and sedimentation and by fluorescence and electron microscopy. These measures defined five groups of mutants. Proteins from each group could be sedimented in a large complex. Mutations in the amino-terminal domain reduced the formation of fluorescent Ty3 protein foci. In at least one major homology region mutant, Ty3 protein concentrated in foci but no wt clusters of particles were observed. One mutation in the carboxyl-terminal domain shifted assembly from spherical particles to long filaments. Two mutants formed foci separate from P bodies, the proposed sites of assembly, and formed defective particles. P-body association was therefore found to be not necessary for assembly but correlated with the production of functional particles. One mutation in the amino terminus blocked transposition after cDNA synthesis. Our data suggest that Ty3 proteins are concentrated first, assembly associated with P bodies occurs, and particle morphogenesis concludes with a post-reverse transcription, CA-dependent step. Particle formation was generally resistant to localized substitutions, possibly indicating that multiple domains are involved. Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved
    corecore