21 research outputs found

    A synthetic luxCDABE gene cluster optimized for expression in high-GC bacteria

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    The luxCDABE operon of the bioluminescent bacterium Photorhabdus luminescens has proven to be a superb transcriptional reporter. It encodes a luciferase (LuxA and LuxB) and the enzymes that produce its substrate (LuxC, LuxD and LuxE) so cells that express the cluster emit the 490-nm light spontaneously. The sequence of these genes is AT-rich (>69%) and for this and other reasons, they are not expressed efficiently in high-GC bacteria like Streptomyces coelicolor. We therefore constructed a synthetic luxCDABE operon encoding the P. luminescens Lux proteins optimized for expression in high-GC bacteria. We tested the genes using transcriptional fusions to S. coelicolor promoters having well-established expression profiles during this organism's life cycle. The hrdB gene encodes a housekeeping sigma factor; while ramC is important for the formation of the spore-forming cells called aerial hyphae and whiE is required for the production of a grey, spore-associated pigment that is deposited in the walls of developing spores. Using these fusions we demonstrated that our synthetic lux genes are functional in S. coelicolor and that they accurately report complex developmental gene expression patterns. We suggest that this lux operon and our procedure for generating synthetic high-GC genes will be widely useful for research on high-GC bacteria

    Chemical Perturbation of Secondary Metabolism Demonstrates Important Links to Primary Metabolism

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    SummaryBacterially produced secondary metabolites are used as antibiotics, anticancer drugs, and for many other medicinal applications. The mechanisms that limit the production of these molecules in the laboratory are not well understood, and this has impeded the discovery of many important compounds. We have identified small molecules that remodel the yields of secondary metabolites in many actinomycetes and show that one set of theseĀ molecules does so by inhibiting fatty acid biosynthesis. This demonstrates a particularly intimate relationship between this primary metabolic pathway and secondary metabolism and suggests an approach to enhance the yields of metabolites for discovery and biochemical characterization

    Streptomyces: A Screening Tool for Bacterial Cell Division Inhibitors

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    Cell division is essential for spore formation but not for viability in the filamentous streptomycetes bacteria. Failure to complete cell division instead blocks spore formation, a phenotype that can be visualized by the absence of gray (in Streptomyces coelicolor) and green (in Streptomyces venezuelae) spore-associated pigmentation. Despite the lack of essentiality, the streptomycetes divisome is similar to that of other prokaryotes. Therefore, the chemical inhibitors of sporulation in model streptomycetes may interfere with the cell division in rod-shaped bacteria as well. To test this, we investigated 196 compounds that inhibit sporulation in S. coelicolor. We show that 19 of these compounds cause filamentous growth in Bacillus subtilis, consistent with impaired cell division. One of the compounds is a DNA-damaging agent and inhibits cell division by activating the SOS response. The remaining 18 act independently of known stress responses and may therefore act on the divisome or on divisome positioning and stability. Three of the compounds (Fil-1, Fil-2, and Fil-3) confer distinct cell division defects on B. subtilis. They also block B. subtilis sporulation, which is mechanistically unrelated to the sporulation pathway of streptomycetes but is also dependent on the divisome. We discuss ways in which these differing phenotypes can be used in screens for cell division inhibitors

    Bacterial Transmembrane Proteins that Lack N-Terminal Signal Sequences

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    Tail-anchored membrane proteins (TAMPs), a class of proteins characterized by their lack of N-terminal signal sequence and Sec-independent membrane targeting, play critical roles in apoptosis, vesicle trafficking and other vital processes in eukaryotic organisms. Until recently, this class of membrane proteins has been unknown in bacteria. Here we present the results of bioinformatic analysis revealing proteins that are superficially similar to eukaryotic TAMPs in the bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor. We demonstrate that at least four of these proteins are bona fide membrane-spanning proteins capable of targeting to the membrane in the absence of their N-terminus and the C-terminal membrane-spanning domain is sufficient for membrane targeting. Several of these proteins, including a serine/threonine kinase and the SecE component of the Sec translocon, are widely conserved in bacteria

    System-wide transcriptome damage and tissue identity loss in COVID-19 patients

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    The molecular mechanisms underlying the clinical manifestations of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), and what distinguishes them from common seasonal influenza virus and other lung injury states such as acute respiratory distress syndrome, remain poorly understood. To address these challenges, we combine transcriptional profiling of 646 clinical nasopharyngeal swabs and 39 patient autopsy tissues to define body-wide transcriptome changes in response to COVID-19. We then match these data with spatial protein and expression profiling across 357 tissue sections from 16 representative patient lung samples and identify tissue-compartment-specific damage wrought by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection, evident as a function of varying viral loads during the clinical course of infection and tissue-type-specific expression states. Overall, our findings reveal a systemic disruption of canonical cellular and transcriptional pathways across all tissues, which can inform subsequent studies to combat the mortality of COVID-19 and to better understand the molecular dynamics of lethal SARS-CoV-2 and other respiratory infections., ā€¢ Across all organs, fibroblast, and immune cell populations increase in COVID-19 patients ā€¢ Organ-specific cell types and functional markers are lost in all COVID-19 tissue types ā€¢ Lung compartment identity loss correlates with SARS-CoV-2 viral loads ā€¢ COVID-19 uniquely disrupts co-occurrence cell type clusters (different from IAV/ARDS) , Park etĀ al. report system-wide transcriptome damage and tissue identity loss wrought by SARS-CoV-2, influenza, and bacterial infection across multiple organs (heart, liver, lung, kidney, and lymph nodes) and provide a spatiotemporal landscape of COVID-19 in the lung

    Discovery of novel antibacterials

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    Membrane-association of five candidates.

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    <p>(<b>A</b>) Cells were fractionated into pellet (P) and supernatant (S) fractions and Western blot analysis directed against the FLAG epitope was used to determine the localization of the putative membrane proteins SCO2900, SCO2973, SCO4008, SCO4646 and SCO7133. ActR was used as a cytoplasmic control. (<b>B</b>) The pellets from (A) were subjected to sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation and 1 ml fractions were collected with fraction 1 corresponding to the highest density and fraction 10 the lowest. Fractions 2 to 4 (underlined) correspond to sedimentation profiles of known membrane proteins. (<b>C</b>) Carbonate extraction of TAMP proteins. Cell lysate was mixed with either sucrose (āˆ’) or carbonate (+) and separated into pellet (P) and supernatant (S) fractions. Fractions were subjected to Western blot analysis. The peripheral membrane protein RamC was used as a control.</p
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