106 research outputs found

    Observations of Sea Turtles and Other Marine Life at the Explosive Removal of Offshore Oil and Gas Structures in the Gulf of Mexico

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    Observers monitored the explosive removal of oil and gas structures in the Gulf of Mexico to protect sea turtles and marine mammals from adverse impacts. More than 7,000 monitoring hours at 131 structure removals were conducted during 1993. Sixteen individual sea turtles were observed including 6 loggerheads, 1 Kemp\u27s ridley, 1 green, and 8 unidentified sea turtles. Aerial surveys were approximately ten times more effective in observing sea turtles than day or night surface surveys

    The ArcA regulon and oxidative stress resistance in Haemophilus influenzae

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    Haemophilus influenzae transits between niches within the human host that are predicted to differ in oxygen levels. The ArcAB two-component signal transduction system controls gene expression in response to respiratory conditions of growth and has been implicated in bacterial pathogenesis, yet the mechanism is not understood. We undertook a genome-scale study to identify genes of the H. influenzae ArcA regulon. Deletion of arcA resulted in increased anaerobic expression of genes of the respiratory chain and of H. influenzae's partial tricarboxylic acid cycle, and decreased anaerobic expression levels of genes of polyamine metabolism, and iron sequestration. Deletion of arcA also conferred a susceptibility to transient exposure to hydrogen peroxide that was greater following anaerobic growth than after aerobic growth. Array data revealed that the dps gene, not previously assigned to the ArcA modulon in bacteria, exhibited decreased expression in the arcA mutant. Deletion of dps resulted in hydrogen peroxide sensitivity and complementation restored resistance, providing insight into the previously uncharacterized mechanism of arcA-mediated H2O2 resistance. The results indicate a role for H. influenzae arcA and dps in pre-emptive defence against transitions from growth in low oxygen environments to aerobic exposure to hydrogen peroxide, an antibacterial oxidant produced by phagocytes during infection

    Comparative nucleotide sequence analysis of growth-rate-regulated gnd alleles from natural isolates of Escherichia coli and from Salmonella typhimurium LT-2.

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    A comparative study of gnd genes from Escherichia coli strains isolated from natural populations and laboratory strains and from Salmonella typhimurium was undertaken. In the accompanying paper (G. J. Barcak and R. E. Wolf, Jr., J. Bacteriol. 170:365-371, 1988), we showed that the growth-rate-dependent regulation of gnd expression was conserved among four natural E. coli isolates and E. coli B/r in a manner qualitatively similar to that of the gene from E. coli K-12. Here, we report the DNA sequence of the 5' regulatory region and the first 125 codons of the structural gene for the five E. coli gnd genes and the gnd gene from S. typhimurium LT-2. The sequences differed from one another by 5% on the average. All sequences defined putative secondary structures of the mRNA leader, which were previously proposed to be important in the regulation of the K-12 gene. In addition, a sequence between codons 69 and 74, which is highly complementary to the ribosome-binding site of the mRNA, was conserved in all the genes. The sequence data are discussed with respect to potential regulatory consequences
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