249 research outputs found

    Induction, development and regulation of trimolters: Great progress in the domesticated silkworm (Bombyx mori L.)

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    As the only truly agricultural and great economic domesticated insect, the silkworm is not only value as a model for genetics and rmolecular biology research, but it also has great value for new silk materials. Induction and regulation of trimolter induced by anti-juvenile hormone have shown vast potential to be significant patterns in silkworm research, especially after the further studies on the regulation mechanism of trimolters. This paper reviews the great progress of the induction technique of trimolter silkworms, particularly focusing on its cocoon quality, cocoon filament and the production of advanced silk materials. This review also presents the control technology of fine filament size and the regulatory mechanism of trimolters during the developmental stages.Key words: Silkworm, trimolter, chemical induction, development, filament control, regulatory mechanism

    Reactivity of nitric oxide with the [4Fe-4S] cluster of dihydroxyacid dehydratase from Escherichia coli

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    Although the NO (nitric oxide)-mediated modification of iron-sulfur proteins has been well-documented in bacteria and mammalian cells, specific reactivity of NO with iron-sulfur proteins still remains elusive. In the present study, we report the first kinetic characterization of the reaction between NO and iron-sulfur clusters in protein using the Escherichia coli IlvD (dihydroxyacid dehydratase) [4Fe-4S] cluster as an example. Combining a sensitive NO electrode with EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) spectroscopy and an enzyme activity assay, we demonstrate that NO is rapidly consumed by the IlvD [4Fe-4S] cluster with the concomitant formation of the IlvD-bound DNIC (dinitrosyl-iron complex) and inactivation of the enzyme activity under anaerobic conditions. The rate constant for the initial reaction betweenNOand the IlvD [4Fe-4S] cluster is estimated to be (7.0±2.0)×106 M-2 · s-1 at 25°C, which is approx. 2-3 times faster than that of the NO autoxidation by O2 in aqueous solution. Addition of GSH failed to prevent the NOmediated modification of the IlvD [4Fe-4S] cluster regardless of the presence of O2 in the medium, further suggesting that NO is more reactivewith the IlvD [4Fe-4S] cluster than with GSH or O2. Purified aconitase B [4Fe-4S] cluster from E. coli has an almost identical NO reactivity as the IlvD [4Fe-4S] cluster. However, the reaction between NO and the endonuclease III [4Fe-4S] cluster is relatively slow, apparently because the [4Fe-4S] cluster in endonuclease III is less accessible to solvent than those in IlvD and aconitase B. When E. coli cells containing recombinant IlvD, aconitase B or endonuclease III are exposed to NO using the Silastic tubing NO delivery system under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, the [4Fe-4S] clusters in IlvD and aconitase B, but not in endonuclease III, are efficiently modified forming the proteinbound DNICs, confirming that NO has a higher reactivity with the [4Fe-4S] clusters in IlvD and aconitase B than with O2 or GSH. The results suggest that the iron-sulfur clusters in proteins such as IlvD and aconitase B may constitute the primary targets of the NO cytotoxicity under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. © The Authors Journal compilation © 2009 Biochemical Society

    IscA/SufA paralogues are required for the [4Fe-4S] cluster assembly in enzymes of multiple physiological pathways in Escherichia coli under aerobic growth conditions

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    IscA/SufA paralogues are the members of the iron-sulfur cluster assembly machinery in Escherichia coli. Whereas deletion of either IscA or SufA has only a mild effect on cell growth, deletion of both IscA and SufA results in a null-growth phenotype in minimal medium under aerobic growth conditions. Here we report that cell growth of the iscA/sufA double mutant (E. coli strain in which both iscA and sufA had been in-frame-deleted) can be partially restored by supplementing with BCAAs (branched-chain amino acids) and thiamin. We further demonstrate that deletion of IscA/SufA paralogues blocks the [4Fe-4S] cluster assembly in IlvD (dihydroxyacid dehydratase) of the BCAA biosynthetic pathway in E. coli cells under aerobic conditions and that addition of the iron-bound IscA/SufA efficiently promotes the [4Fe-4S] cluster assembly in IlvD and restores the enzyme activity in vitro, suggesting that IscA/SufA may act as an iron donor for the [4Fe-4S] cluster assembly under aerobic conditions. Additional studies reveal that IscA/SufA are also required for the [4Fe-4S] cluster assembly in enzyme ThiC of the thiamin-biosynthetic pathway, aconitase B of the citrate acid cycle and endonuclease III of the DNA-base-excision-repair pathway in E. coli under aerobic conditions. Nevertheless, deletion of IscA/SufA does not significantly affect the [2Fe-2S] cluster assembly in the redox transcription factor SoxR, ferredoxin and the siderophore-iron reductase FhuF. The results suggest that the biogenesis of the [4Fe-4S] clusters and the [2Fe-2S] clusters may have distinct pathways and that IscA/SufA paralogues are essential for the [4Fe-4S] cluster assembly, but are dispensable for the [2Fe-2S] cluster assembly in E. coli under aerobic conditions. © The Authors Journal compilation

    Iron-binding activity of human iron-sulfur cluster assembly protein hIscA1

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    A human homologue of the iron-sulfur cluster assembly protein IscA (hIscA1) has been cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli cells. The UV-visible absorption and EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) measurements reveal that hIscA1 purified from E. coli cells contains a mononuclear iron centre and that the iron binding in hIscA1 expressed in E. coli cells can be furthermodulated by the iron content in the cell growth medium. Additional studies show that purified hIscA1 binds iron with an iron association constant of approx. 2×1019 M-1, and that the iron-bound hIscA1 is able to provide the iron for the iron-sulfur cluster assembly in a proposed scaffold protein, IscU of E. coli, in vitro. The complementation experiments indicate that hIscA1 can partially substitute for IscA in restoring the cell growth of E. coli in the M9 minimal medium under aerobic conditions. The results suggest that hIscA1, like E. coli IscA, is an iron-binding protein that may act as an iron chaperone for biogenesis of iron-sulfur clusters. © The Authors

    Deletion of the proposed iron chaperones IscA/SufA results in accumulation of a red intermediate cysteine desulfurase IscS in Escherichia coli

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    © 2015 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. In Escherichia coli, sulfur in iron-sulfur clusters is primarily derived from L-cysteine via the cysteine desulfurase IscS. However, the iron donor for iron-sulfur cluster assembly remains elusive. Previous studies have shown that, among the iron-sulfur cluster assembly proteins in E. coli, IscA has a unique and strong iron-binding activity and that the iron-bound IscA can efficiently provide iron for iron-sulfur cluster assembly in proteins in vitro, indicating that IscA may act as an iron chaperone for iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis. Here we report that deletion of IscA and its paralog SufA in E. coli cells results in the accumulation of a red-colored cysteine desulfurase IscS under aerobic growth conditions. Depletion of intracellular iron using a membrane-permeable iron chelator, 2,2′-dipyridyl, also leads to the accumulation of red IscS in wild-type E. coli cells, suggesting that the deletion of IscA/SufA may be emulated by depletion of intracellular iron. Purified red IscS has an absorption peak at 528 nm in addition to the peak at 395 nm of pyridoxal 5′-phosphate. When red IscS is oxidized by hydrogen peroxide, the peak at 528 nm is shifted to 510 nm, which is similar to that of alanine-quinonoid intermediate in cysteine desulfurases. Indeed, red IscS can also be produced in vitro by incubating wild-type IscS with excess L-alanine and sulfide. The results led us to propose that deletion of IscA/SufA may disrupt the iron delivery for iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis, therefore impeding sulfur delivery by IscS, and result in the accumulation of red IscS in E. coli cells

    Competition of zinc ion for the [2Fe-2S] cluster binding site in the diabetes drug target protein mitoNEET

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    Human mitochondrial protein mitoNEET is a novel target of type II diabetes drug pioglitazone, and contains a redox active [2Fe-2S] cluster that is hosted by a unique ligand arrangement of three cysteine and one histidine residues. Here we report that zinc ion can compete for the [2Fe-2S] cluster binding site in human mitoNEET and potentially modulate the physiological function of mitoNEET. When recombinant mitoNEET is expressed in Escherichia coli cells grown in M9 minimal media, purified mitoNEET contains very little or no iron-sulfur clusters. Addition of exogenous iron or zinc ion in the media produces mitoNEET bound with a [2Fe-2S] cluster or zinc, respectively. Mutations of the amino acid residues that hosting the [2Fe-2S] cluster in mitoNEET diminish the zinc binding activity, indicating that zinc ion and the [2Fe-2S] cluster may share the same binding site in mitoNEET. Finally, excess zinc ion effectively inhibits the [2Fe-2S] cluster assembly in mitoNEET in E. coli cells, suggesting that zinc ion may impede the function of mitoNEET by blocking the [2Fe-2S] cluster assembly in the protein. Copyright © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC. 2012
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