22 research outputs found

    Molecular architecture of Streptococcus pneumoniae surface thioredoxin-fold lipoproteins crucial for extracellular oxidative stress resistance and maintenance of virulence.

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    19 pags, 8 figs, tabsThe respiratory pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae has evolved efïŹcient mechanisms to resist oxidative stress conditions and to displace other bacteria in the nasopharynx. Here we character ize at physiological, functional and structural levels two novel surface-exposed thioredoxin-family lipoproteins, Etrx1 and Etrx2. The impact of both Etrx proteins and their r edox partner methionine sulfoxide reductase SpMsrAB2 on pneumococcal pathogenesis was assessed in mouse virulence studies and phagocytosis assays. The results demonstrate that loss of function of either both Etrx proteins or SpMsrAB2 dramatically attenuated pneumococcal virulence in the acute mouse pneumonia model and that Etrx proteins compensate each other. The deïŹciency of Etrx proteins or SpMsrAB2 further enhanced bacterial uptake by macrophages, and accelerated pneumococcal killing by H2O2 or free methionine sulfoxides (MetSO). Moreover, the absence of both Etrx redox pathways provokes an accumulation of oxidized SpMsrAB2 in vivo. Taken together our results reveal insights into the role of two extracellular electron pathways required for reduction of SpMsrAB2 and surface-exposed MetSO. IdentiïŹcation of this system and its target proteins paves the w ay for the design of novel a ntimicrobialsThe authors thank the PXIII beamline at SLS and the ESRF beamline ID14‐1 for access to synchrotron radiation. We are also grateful to Kristine Sievert‐Giermann, Nadine Gotzmann and Melanie Skibbe (Department of Genetics, University of Greifswald, Germany) for technical assistance. This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG HA3125/4‐2 (to S.H.), DFG AN746/3‐1 (to H.A.), BFU2011‐25326 and S2010/BMD‐2457 (to J.A.H.) and EU FP7 CAREPNEUMO Grant EU‐CP223111 from the European Union (to J.A.H. and S.H.

    Results of Diagnosis and Genetic Counseling of Sphingolipidoses in the GDR

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    Carbon catabolite repression of phenol degradation in Pseudomonas putida is mediated by the inhibition of the activator protein PhlR.

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    Enzymes involved in (methyl)phenol degradation of Pseudomonas putida H are encoded by the catabolic operon (phlA-L) on plasmid pPGH1. Transcription of this operon by the sigma54 (RpoN)-containing RNA polymerase is positively controlled by the gene product of the divergently transcribed phlR in response to the availability of the respective substrate. Additionally, phenol degradation is subject to carbon catabolite repression induced by organic acids (e.g., succinate, lactate, and acetate) or carbohydrates (e.g., glucose and gluconate). Analysis of lacZ fusion to the catabolic promoter and quantified primer extension experiments indicate that carbon catabolite repression also occurs at the transcriptional level of the catabolic operon. In this study, it is furthermore shown that carbon catabolite repression is a negative control. Titration of the postulated negative controlling factor was exclusively observed when extra copies of functional phlR gene were present in the cell. We therefore conclude that PhlR is the target and that carbon catabolite repression of phenol degradation occurs by interfering with the activating function of PhlR

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