10 research outputs found

    Phenylalanine-Rich Peptides Potently Bind ESAT6, a Virulence Determinant of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and Concurrently Affect the Pathogen's Growth

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    BACKGROUND:The secretory proteins of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis) have been known to be involved in the virulence, pathogenesis as well as proliferation of the pathogen. Among this set, many proteins have been hypothesized to play a critical role at the genesis of the onset of infection, the primary site of which is invariably the human lung. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:During our efforts to isolate potential binding partners of key secretory proteins of M. tuberculosis from a human lung protein library, we isolated peptides that strongly bound the virulence determinant protein Esat6. All peptides were less than fifty amino acids in length and the binding was confirmed by in vivo as well as in vitro studies. Curiously, we found all three binders to be unusually rich in phenylalanine, with one of the three peptides a short fragment of the human cytochrome c oxidase-3 (Cox-3). The most accessible of the three binders, named Hcl1, was shown also to bind to the Mycobacterium smegmatis (M. smegmatis) Esat6 homologue. Expression of hcl1 in M. tuberculosis H37Rv led to considerable reduction in growth. Microarray analysis showed that Hcl1 affects a host of key cellular pathways in M. tuberculosis. In a macrophage infection model, the sets expressing hcl1 were shown to clear off M. tuberculosis in much greater numbers than those infected macrophages wherein the M. tuberculosis was not expressing the peptide. Transmission electron microscopy studies of hcl1 expressing M. tuberculosis showed prominent expulsion of cellular material into the matrix, hinting at cell wall damage. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:While the debilitating effects of Hcl1 on M. tuberculosis are unrelated and not because of the peptide's binding to Esat6-as the latter is not an essential protein of M. tuberculosis-nonetheless, further studies with this peptide, as well as a closer inspection of the microarray data may shed important light on the suitability of such small phenylalanine-rich peptides as potential drug-like molecules against this pathogen

    Loss of kinase activity in Mycobacterium tuberculosis multidomain protein Rv1364c

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    The alternative sigma factors are regulated by a phosphorylation-mediated signal transduction cascade involving anti-sigma factors and anti-anti-sigma factors. The proteins regulating Mycobacterium tuberculosis sigma factor F (SigF), anti-SigF and anti-anti-SigF have been identified, but the factors catalyzing phosphorylation-dephosphorylation have not been well established. We identified a distinct pathogenic species-specific multidomain protein, Rv1364c, in which the components of the entire signal transduction cascade for SigF regulation appear to be encoded in a single polypeptide. Sequence analysis of M. tuberculosis Rv1364c resulted in the prediction of various domains, namely a phosphatase (RsbU) domain, an anti-SigF (RsbW) domain, and an anti-anti-SigF (RsbV) domain. We report that the RsbU domain of Rv1364c bears all the conserved features of the PP2C-type serine/threonine phosphatase family, whereas its RsbW domain has certain substitutions and deletions in regions important for ATP binding. Another anti-SigF protein in M. tuberculosis, UsfX (Rv3287c), shows even more unfavorable substitutions in the kinase domain. Biochemical assay with the purified RsbW domain of Rv1364c and UsfX showed the loss of ability of autophosphorylation and phosphotransfer to cognate anti-anti-SigF proteins or artificial substrates. Both the Rv1364c RsbW domain and UsfX protein display very weak binding with fluorescent ATP analogs, despite showing functional interactions characteristic of anti-SigF proteins. In view of conservation of specific interactions with cognate sigma and anti-anti-sigma factor, the loss of kinase activity of Rv1364c and UsfX appears to form a missing link in the phosphorylation-dependent interaction involved in SigF regulation in Mycobacterium

    Serine threonine protein kinases of mycobacterial genus: phylogeny to function

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    Serine/threonine protein kinases (STPKs) are known to act as sensors of environmental signals that thereby regulate developmental changes and host pathogen interactions. In this study, we carried out comparative genome analysis of six completely sequenced pathogenic and nonpathogenic mycobacterial species to systematically characterize the STPK complement of mycobacterium. Our analysis revealed that while Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains have 11 conserved kinases, this number varies from 4 to 24 in other mycobacterial species. pknA, an essential STPK encoding gene, was found to be truncated in the initial analysis of M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis (Map) and M. tuberculosis C genomes. However, resequencing of pknA gene in Map confirmed that the truncation was due to a sequencing error. The conservation of division and cell wall gene cluster involved in cell envelope biosynthesis and cell division, in the vicinity of pknL locus, implicates a possible role of PknL in cell division and envelop biosynthesis. We identified a cyclophilin domain as part of a mycobacterial kinase in Map that suggests a plausible regulation of cyclophilins by phosphorylation. The co-inheritance of pknA, pknB, pknG, and pknL loci across genomes and some unique repertoire of pathogen-specific kinases such as pknI and pknJ of Mtb complex suggest similitude and divergence between pathogenic and nonpathogenic signaling. This study would add another dimension toward identification of physiological substrates and thereby function, while resolving the existing complexities in signaling network between the two domains of life, pathogen and nonpathogen

    Spo0B of Bacillus anthracis - a protein with pleiotropic functions

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    Spo0B is an important component of the phosphorelay signal transduction pathway, the pathway involved in the initiation of sporulation in Bacillus subtilis. Bioinformatic, phylogenetic and biochemical studies showed that Spo0B of Bacillus anthracis has evolved from citrate/malate kinases. During the course of evolution, Spo0B has retained the characteristic histidine kinase boxes H, N, F, G<SUB>1</SUB> and G<SUB>2</SUB>, and has acquired nucleotide-binding domains, Walker A and Walker B, of ATPases. Owing to the presence of these domains, autophosphorylation and ATPase activity was observed in Spo0B of B. anthracis. Mutational studies showed that among the six histidine residues, His13 of the H-box is involved in the autophosphorylation activity of Spo0B, whereas Lys33 of the Walker A domain is associated with the ATPase activity of the protein. Thermodynamic and binding studies of the binding of Mg-ATP to Spo0B using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) suggested that the binding is driven by favorable entropy changes and that the reaction is exothermic, with an apparent dissociation constant (K<SUB>d</SUB>) equal to 0.02 mM. The value of the dissociation constant (K<SUB>d</SUB> = 0.05 mM) determined by the intrinsic fluorescence of trytophan of Spo0B was similar to that obtained by ITC studies. The purified Spo0B of B. anthracis also showed nucleoside diphosphate kinase-like activity of phosphate transfer from nucleoside triphosphate to nucleoside diphosphate. This is the first evidence for Spo0B of B. anthracis as an enzyme with histidine kinase and ATPase activities, which may have important roles to play in sporulation and pathogenesis

    PknH, a transmembrane Hank's type serine/threonine kinase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis is differentially expressed under stress conditions

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    Serine/threonine protein kinases (STPKs) represent a burgeoning concept in prokaryotic signaling and have been implicated in a range of control mechanisms. This paper describes the enzymatic and molecular characterization of PknH, a mycobacterial STPK. After cloning and expression as a Glutathione-S-transferase fusion protein in E. coli, PknH was found to phosphorylate itself and exogenous substrates like myelin basic protein and histone. The kinase activity of PknH was inhibited by the kinase inhibitors staurosporine and H-7. The results confirmed that PknH is a transmembrane protein and is restricted to members of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex. In addition, transcriptional analysis of pknH in M. tuberculosis under various stress conditions revealed that exposure to low pH and heat shock decreased the level of pknH transcription significantly. This is the first report describing differential expression of a mycobacterial kinase in response to stress conditions which can indicate its ability to regulate cellular events promoting bacterial adaptation to environmental change

    Comparative genomic study of spo0E family genes and elucidation of the role of Spo0E in Bacillus anthracis

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    The propensity of bacterium to sporulate or retain the vegetative form depends on the amount of phosphorylated Spo0A (Spo0A&#8722;P), regulated by Spo0E multigene family of phosphatases (Spo0E, YisI and YnzD). Phylogenetic analysis revealed that Spo0E multigene family of phosphatases (SMFP) descends in two distinct clades of aerobic (Bacillus cluster) and anaerobic (Clostridia cluster) sporulating bacteria. High sequence conservation within species gives a notion that these members could have evolved through lineage and species-specific duplication event. Of the five genes in Bacillus cereus group, three are pathogen specific, and their synteny suggests that these paralogs could be involved in the regulation of amino acid metabolism and its transport. Overexpression of B. subtilis Spo0E, an ortholog of SMFP members in B. anthracis (BAS1251), resulted in sporulation deficient phenotype in B. anthracis. B. anthracis Spo0A&#8722;P binds to a consensus DNA sequence 5'-TGNCGAA-3' ('0A-like box') and loses its DNA binding ability following treatment with B. subtilis Spo0E. Thus, B. subtilis Spo0E acts on B. anthracis Spo0A&#8722;P and, therefore could complement the function of BAS1251. Further, since ‘0A-like box’ are present in the promoter region of abrB gene, a known regulator of anthrax toxin gene expression, cross talk among SMFP members and Spo0A&#8722;P-AbrB could regulate the expression of anthrax toxin genes
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