13 research outputs found

    Characterization of the B-chain of human plasma α2HS-glycoprotein. The complete amino acid sequence and primary structure of its heteroglycan

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    α2HS-Glycoprotein, a normal human plasma protein, was recently shown to consist of two polypeptide chains. In the present study, we have separated these two chains from one another and have elucidated the complete primary structure of the B-chain. Employing automated Edman degradation, the polypeptide moiety of this chain was shown to consist of 27 amino acid residues with an unequal distribution of the neutral and charged amino acid residues. The first 20 residues are uncharged, whereas the carboxyl-terminal heptapeptide contains all charged residues. Utilizing 500-MHz 1H-NMR spectroscopy, the carbohydrate unit proved to be a trisaccharide consisting of sialic acid, galactose, and N-acetylgalactosamine O-glycosidically linked to serine (residue 6). The structure of the B-chain was found to be as follows. (formula; see text) Thus, the molecular weight of the B-chain is 3386. Evaluation of the polypeptide chain by the procedure of Chou and Fasman (Chou, P.Y., and Fasman, G.D. (1979) Adv. Enzymol. 47, 45- 148) predicts that the B-chain has two beta-turns. Thereby, the carbohydrate unit which is linked to the Ser residue located in the first β-turn appears to be directed away from the protein. The second β-turn probably includes the Cys residue which links the B- to the A-chain. In agreement with the CD analysis, the B-chain lacks beta-conformation but possesses a short α-helical region

    Characterization of histatin 5 with respect to amphipathicity, hydrophobicity, and effects on cell and mitochondrial membrane integrity excludes a candidacidal mechanism of pore formation

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    Histatin 5 is a 24-residue peptide from human saliva with antifungal properties. We recently demonstrated that histatin 5 translocates across the yeast membrane and targets to the mitochondria, suggesting an unusual antifungal mechanism (Helmerhorst, E. J., Breeuwer, P., van`t Hof, W., Walgreen-Weterings, E., Oomen, L. C. J. M., Veerman, E. C. I., Nieuw Amerongen, A. V., and Abee, T. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 7286-7291). The present study used specifically designed synthetic analogs of histatin 5 to elucidate the role of peptide amphipathicity, hydrophobicity, and the propensity to adopt -helical structures in relation to membrane permeabilization and fungicidal activity. Studies included circular dichroism measurements, evaluation of the effects on the cytoplasmic transmembrane potential and on the respiration of isolated mitochondria, and analysis of the peptide hydrophobicity/amphipathicity relationship (Eisenberg, D. (1984) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 53, 595-623). The 14-residue synthetic peptides used were dh-5, comprising the functional domain of histatin 5, and dhvar1 and dhvar4, both designed to maximize amphipathic characteristics. The results obtained show that the amphipathic analogs exhibited a high fungicidal activity, a high propensity to form an -helix, dissipated the cytoplasmic transmembrane potential, and uncoupled the respiration of isolated mitochondria, similar to the pore-forming peptide PGLa (Peptide with N-terminal Glycine and C-terminal Leucine-amide). In contrast, histatin 5 and dh-5 showed fewer or none of these features. The difference in these functional characteristics between histatin 5 and dh-5 on the one hand and dhvar1, dhvar4, and PGLa on the other hand correlated well with their predicted affinity for membranes based on hydrophobicity/amphipathicity analysis. These data indicate that the salivary protein histatin 5 exerts its antifungal function through a mechanism other than pore formatio

    Impact of biocontrol strain Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0 on rhizosphere bacteria isolated from barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) with special reference to Cytophaga-like bacteria.

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    AIMS: To assess the impact of the biocontrol strain Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0 on a collection of barley rhizosphere bacteria using an agar plate inhibition assay and a plant microcosm, focusing on a CHA0-sensitive member of the Cytophaga-like bacteria (CLB). METHODS AND RESULTS: The effect of strain CHA0 on a collection of barley rhizosphere bacteria, in particular CLB and fluorescent pseudomonads sampled during a growth season, was assessed by a growth inhibition assay. On average, 85% of the bacteria were sensitive in the May sample, while the effect was reduced to around 68% in the July and August samples. In the May sample, around 95% of the CLB and around 45% of the fluorescent pseudomonads were sensitive to strain CHA0. The proportion of CHA0-sensitive CLB and fluorescent pseudomonad isolates decreased during the plant growth season, i.e. in the July and August samples. A particularly sensitive CLB isolate, CLB23, was selected, exposed to strain CHA0 (wild type) and its genetically modified derivatives in the rhizosphere of barley grown in gnotobiotic soil microcosms. Two dry-stress periods were imposed during the experiment. Derivatives of strain CHA0 included antibiotic or exopolysaccharide (EPS) overproducing strains and a dry-stress-sensitive mutant. Despite their inhibitory activity against CLB23 in vitro, neither wild-type strain CHA0, nor any of its derivatives, had a major effect on culturable and total cell numbers of CLB23 during the 23-day microcosm experiment. Populations of all inoculants declined during the two dry-stress periods, with soil water contents below 5% and plants reaching the wilting point, but they recovered after re-wetting the soil. Survival of the dry-stress-sensitive mutant of CHA0 was most affected by the dry periods; however, this did not result in an increased population density of CLB23. CONCLUSIONS: CLB comprise a large fraction of barley rhizosphere bacteria that are sensitive to the biocontrol pseudomonad CHA0 in vitro. However, in plant microcosm experiments with varying soil humidity conditions, CHA0 or its derivatives had no major impact on the survival of the highly sensitive CLB strain, CLB23, during two dry-stress periods and a re-wetting period; all co-existed well in the rhizosphere of barley plants. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: Results indicate a lack of interaction between the biocontrol pseudomonad CHA0 and a sensitive CLB when the complexity increases from agar plate assays to plant microcosm experiments. This suggests the occurrence of low levels of antibiotic production and/or that the two bacterial genera occupy different niches in the rhizosphere
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