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424
result(s) for
"Escherichia coli K12 - metabolism"
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unique regulation of iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis in a Gram-positive bacterium
by
Sandra Macedo-Ribeiro
,
Joana A. Santos
,
Pedro José Barbosa Pereira
in
Bacteria
,
Bacterial
,
biogenesis
2014
Iron-sulfur clusters function as cofactors of a wide range of proteins, with diverse molecular roles in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Dedicated machineries assemble the clusters and deliver them to the final acceptor molecules in a tightly regulated process. In the prototypical Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli , the two existing iron-sulfur cluster assembly systems, iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) and sulfur assimilation (SUF) pathways, are closely interconnected. The ISC pathway regulator, IscR, is a transcription factor of the helix-turn-helix type that can coordinate a [2Fe-2S] cluster. Redox conditions and iron or sulfur availability modulate the ligation status of the labile IscR cluster, which in turn determines a switch in DNA sequence specificity of the regulator: cluster-containing IscR can bind to a family of gene promoters (type-1) whereas the clusterless form recognizes only a second group of sequences (type-2). However, iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis in Gram-positive bacteria is not so well characterized, and most organisms of this group display only one of the iron-sulfur cluster assembly systems. A notable exception is the unique Gram-positive dissimilatory metal reducing bacterium Thermincola potens , where genes from both systems could be identified, albeit with a diverging organization from that of Gram-negative bacteria. We demonstrated that one of these genes encodes a functional IscR homolog and is likely involved in the regulation of iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis in T. potens . Structural and biochemical characterization of T. potens and E. coli IscR revealed a strikingly similar architecture and unveiled an unforeseen conservation of the unique mechanism of sequence discrimination characteristic of this distinctive group of transcription regulators.
Journal Article
Selective charging of tRNA isoacceptors induced by amino-acid starvation
by
Sørensen, Michael A
,
Dittmar, Kimberly A
,
Pan, Tao
in
Amino acids
,
Amino Acids - metabolism
,
Anticodon
2005
Aminoacylated (charged) transfer RNA isoacceptors read different messenger RNA codons for the same amino acid. The concentration of an isoacceptor and its charged fraction are principal determinants of the translation rate of its codons. A recent theoretical model predicts that amino‐acid starvation results in ‘selective charging’ where the charging levels of some tRNA isoacceptors will be low and those of others will remain high. Here, we developed a microarray for the analysis of charged fractions of tRNAs and measured charging for all
Escherichia coli
tRNAs before and during leucine, threonine or arginine starvation. Before starvation, most tRNAs were fully charged. During starvation, the isoacceptors in the leucine, threonine or arginine families showed selective charging when cells were starved for their cognate amino acid, directly confirming the theoretical prediction. Codons read by isoacceptors that retain high charging can be used for efficient translation of genes that are essential during amino‐acid starvation. Selective charging can explain anomalous patterns of codon usage in the genes for different families of proteins.
Journal Article
Two-step pathway for isoprenoid synthesis
by
Χατζηβασιλeίoυ, Αλκιβιάδης Ορφeύς
,
Chatzivasileiou, Alkiviadis Orfefs
,
Stephanopoulos, Gregory
in
Applied Biological Sciences
,
BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
,
Biological properties
2019
Isoprenoids comprise a large class of chemicals of significant interest due to their diverse properties. Biological production of isoprenoids is considered to be the most efficient way for their large-scale production. Isoprenoid biosynthesis has thus far been dependent on pathways inextricably linked to glucose metabolism. These pathways suffer from inherent limitations due to their length, complex regulation, and extensive cofactor requirements. Here, we present a synthetic isoprenoid pathway that aims to overcome these limitations. This isopentenol utilization pathway (IUP) can produce isopentenyl diphosphate or dimethylallyl diphosphate, the main precursors to isoprenoid synthesis, through sequential phosphorylation of isopentenol isomers isoprenol or prenol. After identifying suitable enzymes and constructing the pathway, we attempted to probe the limits of the IUP for producing various isoprenoid downstream products. The IUP flux exceeded the capacity of almost all downstream pathways tested and was competitive with the highest isoprenoid fluxes reported.
Journal Article
Isoprenoid Pathway Optimization for Taxol Precursor Overproduction in Escherichia coli
by
Mucha, Oliver
,
Ajikumar, Parayil Kumaran
,
Phon, Too Heng
in
Alkenes - metabolism
,
antineoplastic agents
,
biochemical pathways
2010
Taxol (paclitaxel) is a potent anticancer drug first isolated from the Taxus brevifolia Pacific yew tree. Currently, cost-efficient production of Taxol and its analogs remains limited. Here, we report a multivariate-modular approach to metabolic-pathway engineering that succeeded in increasing titers of taxadiene—the first committed Taxol intermediate—approximately 1 gram per liter (~15,000-fold) in an engineered Escherichia coli strain. Our approach partitioned the taxadiene metabolic pathway into two modules: a native upstream methylerythritol-phosphate pathway forming isopentenyl pyrophosphate and a heterologous downstream terpenoid-forming pathway. Systematic multivariate search identified conditions that optimally balance the two pathway modules so as to maximize the taxadiene production with minimal accumulation of indole, which is an inhibitory compound found here. We also engineered the next step in Taxol biosynthesis, a P450-mediated 5α-oxidation of taxadiene to taxadien-5α-ol. More broadly, the modular pathway engineering approach helped to unlock the potential of the pathway for the engineered production of terpenoid natural products.
Journal Article
Small CRISPR RNAs Guide Antiviral Defense in Prokaryotes
by
Brouns, Stan J.J
,
Koonin, Eugene V
,
Jore, Matthijs M
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Antivirals
,
Bacteriophage lambda - genetics
2008
Prokaryotes acquire virus resistance by integrating short fragments of viral nucleic acid into clusters of regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPRs). Here we show how virus-derived sequences contained in CRISPRs are used by CRISPR-associated (Cas) proteins from the host to mediate an antiviral response that counteracts infection. After transcription of the CRISPR, a complex of Cas proteins termed Cascade cleaves a CRISPR RNA precursor in each repeat and retains the cleavage products containing the virus-derived sequence. Assisted by the helicase Cas3, these mature CRISPR RNAs then serve as small guide RNAs that enable Cascade to interfere with virus proliferation. Our results demonstrate that the formation of mature guide RNAs by the CRISPR RNA endonuclease subunit of Cascade is a mechanistic requirement for antiviral defense.
Journal Article
Chromosome Organization by a Nucleoid-Associated Protein in Live Bacteria
2011
Bacterial chromosomes are confined in submicrometer-sized nucleoids. Chromosome organization is facilitated by nucleoid-associated proteins (NAPs), but the mechanisms of action remain elusive. In this work, we used super-resolution fluorescence microscopy, in combination with a chromosome-conformation capture assay, to study the distributions of major NAPs in live Escherichia coli cells. Four NAPs—HU, Fis, IHF, and StpA—were largely scattered throughout the nucleoid. In contrast, H-NS, a global transcriptional silencer, formed two compact clusters per chromosome, driven by oligomerization of DNA-bound H-NS through interactions mediated by the amino-terminal domain of the protein. H-NS sequestered the regulated operons into these clusters and juxtaposed numerous DNA segments broadly distributed throughout the chromosome. Deleting H-NS led to substantial chromosome reorganization. These observations demonstrate that H-NS plays a key role in global chromosome organization in bacteria.
Journal Article
An evolutionarily conserved metabolite inhibits biofilm formation in Escherichia coli K-12
2024
Methylerythritol cyclodiphosphate (MEcPP) is an intermediate in the biosynthesis of isoprenoids in plant plastids and in bacteria, and acts as a stress signal in plants. Here, we show that MEcPP regulates biofilm formation in
Escherichia coli
K-12 MG1655. Increased MEcPP levels, triggered by genetic manipulation or oxidative stress, inhibit biofilm development and production of fimbriae. Deletion of
fimE
, encoding a protein known to downregulate production of adhesive fimbriae, restores biofilm formation in cells with elevated MEcPP levels. Limited proteolysis-coupled mass spectrometry (LiP-MS) reveals that MEcPP interacts with the global regulatory protein H-NS, which is known to repress transcription of
fimE
. MEcPP prevents the binding of H-NS to the
fimE
promoter. Therefore, our results indicate that MEcPP can regulate biofilm formation by modulating H-NS activity and thus reducing fimbriae production. Further research is needed to test whether MEcPP plays similar regulatory roles in other bacteria.
Methylerythritol cyclodiphosphate is an intermediate in the biosynthesis of isoprenoids in plants and bacteria, and acts as a stress signal in plants. Here, Guo et al. show that, in addition, the metabolite can inhibit biofilm formation in
Escherichia coli
by modulating the activity of the DNA-binding protein H-NS, thus downregulating the production of adhesive fimbriae.
Journal Article
The bacterial cell division proteins FtsA and FtsZ self-organize into dynamic cytoskeletal patterns
2014
Bacterial cytokinesis is commonly initiated by the Z-ring, a cytoskeletal structure that assembles at the site of division. Its primary component is FtsZ, a tubulin superfamily GTPase, which is recruited to the membrane by the actin-related protein FtsA. Both proteins are required for the formation of the Z-ring, but if and how they influence each other’s assembly dynamics is not known. Here, we reconstituted FtsA-dependent recruitment of FtsZ polymers to supported membranes, where both proteins self-organize into complex patterns, such as fast-moving filament bundles and chirally rotating rings. Using fluorescence microscopy and biochemical perturbations, we found that these large-scale rearrangements of FtsZ emerge from its polymerization dynamics and a dual, antagonistic role of FtsA: recruitment of FtsZ filaments to the membrane and negative regulation of FtsZ organization. Our findings provide a model for the initial steps of bacterial cell division and illustrate how dynamic polymers can self-organize into large-scale structures.
In bacteria, the tubulin-related GTPase FtsZ and the actin-related protein FtsA cooperate to form the Z-ring required for cytokinesis. Loose and Mitchison now show that FtsZ and FtsA can self-organize into dynamic structures
in vitro
, providing insights into the potential regulatory interplay of the two proteins.
Journal Article
Sulphoglycolysis in Escherichia coli K-12 closes a gap in the biogeochemical sulphur cycle
2014
Escherichia coli
K-12 performs sulphoglycolysis; heterologous expression of enzymes encoded in a ten-gene cluster present in almost all (>91%) available
E. coli
genomes is used to show that sulphoquinovose is catabolised through four reactions to produce dihydroxyacetone phosphate, which powers energy conservation and growth, and a sulphonate product, which is excreted.
Sulphoglycolysis as well as glycolysis in
E. coli
The monosaccharide sugar sulphoquinovose is a major component of the biological sulphur cycle, distributed widely in photosynthetic membranes and also in some non-photosynthetic bacteria and archaea. There is evidence for three different degradative pathways for sulphoquinovose in bacteria, but until now none had been fully characterized. This study shows that
Escherichia coli
K-12, the most widely-studied prokaryotic model organism, can perform sulphoglycolysis as well as standard glycolysis. A ten-gene cluster encodes all the enzymes needed to degrade sulphoquinovose to dihydroxyacetone phosphate. The same gene cluster is present in almost all available
E. coli
genomes and is widespread among the Enterobacteriaceae. The authors suggest that this newly defined pathway may represent a substantial part of the biogeochemical sulphur cycle, and may have a significant role in bacteria in the alimentary tract of all omnivores and herbivores, and in plant pathogens.
Sulphoquinovose (SQ, 6-deoxy-6-sulphoglucose) has been known for 50 years as the polar headgroup of the plant sulpholipid
1
,
2
in the photosynthetic membranes of all higher plants, mosses, ferns, algae and most photosynthetic bacteria
3
. It is also found in some non-photosynthetic bacteria
4
, and SQ is part of the surface layer of some Archaea
5
. The estimated annual production of SQ
4
is 10,000,000,000 tonnes (10 petagrams), thus it comprises a major portion of the organo-sulphur in nature, where SQ is degraded by bacteria
6
,
7
. However, despite evidence for at least three different degradative pathways in bacteria
6
,
7
,
8
, no enzymic reaction or gene in any pathway has been defined, although a sulphoglycolytic pathway has been proposed
7
. Here we show that
Escherichia coli
K-12, the most widely studied prokaryotic model organism, performs sulphoglycolysis, in addition to standard glycolysis. SQ is catabolised through four newly discovered reactions that we established using purified, heterologously expressed enzymes: SQ isomerase, 6-deoxy-6-sulphofructose (SF) kinase, 6-deoxy-6-sulphofructose-1-phosphate (SFP) aldolase, and 3-sulpholactaldehyde (SLA) reductase. The enzymes are encoded in a ten-gene cluster, which probably also encodes regulation, transport and degradation of the whole sulpholipid; the gene cluster is present in almost all (>91%) available
E. coli
genomes, and is widespread in Enterobacteriaceae. The pathway yields dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP), which powers energy conservation and growth of
E. coli
, and the sulphonate product 2,3-dihydroxypropane-1-sulphonate (DHPS), which is excreted. DHPS is mineralized by other bacteria, thus closing the sulphur cycle within a bacterial community.
Journal Article
Bactericidal effect of tetracycline in E. coli strain ED1a may be associated with ribosome dysfunction
2024
Ribosomes translate the genetic code into proteins. Recent technical advances have facilitated in situ structural analyses of ribosome functional states inside eukaryotic cells and the minimal bacterium Mycoplasma. However, such analyses of Gram-negative bacteria are lacking, despite their ribosomes being major antimicrobial drug targets. Here we compare two
E. coli
strains, a lab
E. coli
K-12 and human gut isolate
E. coli
ED1a, for which tetracycline exhibits bacteriostatic and bactericidal action, respectively. Using our approach for close-to-native E. coli sample preparation, we assess the two strains by cryo-ET and visualize their ribosomes at high resolution in situ. Upon tetracycline treatment, these exhibit virtually identical drug binding sites, yet the conformation distribution of ribosomal complexes differs. While K-12 retains ribosomes in a translation-competent state, tRNAs are lost in the vast majority of ED1a ribosomes. These structural findings together with the proteome-wide abundance and thermal stability assessments indicate that antibiotic responses are complex in cells and can differ between different strains of a single species, thus arguing that all relevant bacterial strains should be analyzed in situ when addressing antibiotic mode of action.
The human gut contains diverse bacterial strains that are beneficial/critical for health. Here, the authors compare the response of human gut and laboratory
E. coli
strains to the antibiotic tetracycline in molecular detail and find a severe dysfunction of protein synthesis only in the gut strain.
Journal Article