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"Muramidase - genetics"
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Drosophila Antimicrobial Peptides and Lysozymes Regulate Gut Microbiota Composition and Abundance
2021
This study advances current knowledge in the field of host-microbe interactions by demonstrating that the two families of immune effectors, antimicrobial peptides and lysozymes, actively regulate the gut microbiota composition and abundance. Consequences of the loss of these antimicrobial peptides and lysozymes are exacerbated during aging, and their loss contributes to increased microbiota abundance and shifted composition in old flies. The gut microbiota affects the physiology and metabolism of animals and its alteration can lead to diseases such as gut dysplasia or metabolic disorders. Several reports have shown that the immune system plays an important role in shaping both bacterial community composition and abundance in Drosophila , and that immune deficit, especially during aging, negatively affects microbiota richness and diversity. However, there has been little study at the effector level to demonstrate how immune pathways regulate the microbiota. A key set of Drosophila immune effectors are the antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), which confer defense upon systemic infection. AMPs and lysozymes, a group of digestive enzymes with antimicrobial properties, are expressed in the gut and are good candidates for microbiota regulation. Here, we take advantage of the model organism Drosophila melanogaster to investigate the role of AMPs and lysozymes in regulation of gut microbiota structure and diversity. Using flies lacking AMPs and newly generated lysozyme mutants, we colonized gnotobiotic flies with a defined set of commensal bacteria and analyzed changes in microbiota composition and abundance in vertical transmission and aging contexts through 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Our study shows that AMPs and, to a lesser extent, lysozymes are necessary to regulate the total and relative abundance of bacteria in the gut microbiota. We also decouple the direct function of AMPs from the immune deficiency (IMD) signaling pathway that regulates AMPs but also many other processes, more narrowly defining the role of these effectors in the microbial dysbiosis observed in IMD-deficient flies upon aging. IMPORTANCE This study advances current knowledge in the field of host-microbe interactions by demonstrating that the two families of immune effectors, antimicrobial peptides and lysozymes, actively regulate the gut microbiota composition and abundance. Consequences of the loss of these antimicrobial peptides and lysozymes are exacerbated during aging, and their loss contributes to increased microbiota abundance and shifted composition in old flies. This work shows that immune effectors, typically associated with resistance to pathogenic infections, also help shape the beneficial gut community, consistent with the idea that host-symbiont interactions use the same “language” typically associated with pathogenesis.
Journal Article
Resolving dynamics and function of transient states in single enzyme molecules
2020
We use a hybrid fluorescence spectroscopic toolkit to monitor T4 Lysozyme (T4L) in action by unraveling the kinetic and dynamic interplay of the conformational states. In particular, by combining single-molecule and ensemble multiparameter fluorescence detection, EPR spectroscopy, mutagenesis, and FRET-positioning and screening, and other biochemical and biophysical tools, we characterize three short-lived conformational states over the ns-ms timescale. The use of 33 FRET-derived distance sets, to screen available T4L structures, reveal that T4L in solution mainly adopts the known open and closed states in exchange at 4 µs. A newly found minor state, undisclosed by, at present, more than 500 crystal structures of T4L and sampled at 230 µs, may be actively involved in the product release step in catalysis. The presented fluorescence spectroscopic toolkit will likely accelerate the development of dynamic structural biology by identifying transient conformational states that are highly abundant in biology and critical in enzymatic reactions.
T4 Lysozyme (T4L) is a model protein whose structure is extensively studied. Here the authors combine single-molecule and ensemble FRET measurements, FRET-positioning and screening and EPR spectroscopy to study the structural dynamics of T4L and describe its conformational landscape during the catalytic cycle by an extended Michaelis–Menten mechanism and identify an excited conformational state of the enzyme.
Journal Article
Type VI secretion delivers bacteriolytic effectors to target cells
by
Russell, Alistair B.
,
Bui, Nhat Khai
,
Vollmer, Waldemar
in
631/326/22/1290
,
631/326/41/1969/2180
,
631/45/607/468
2011
Peptidoglycan is the major structural constituent of the bacterial cell wall, forming a meshwork outside the cytoplasmic membrane that maintains cell shape and prevents lysis. In Gram-negative bacteria, peptidoglycan is located in the periplasm, where it is protected from exogenous lytic enzymes by the outer membrane. Here we show that the type VI secretion system of
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
breaches this barrier to deliver two effector proteins, Tse1 and Tse3, to the periplasm of recipient cells. In this compartment, the effectors hydrolyse peptidoglycan, thereby providing a fitness advantage for
P. aeruginosa
cells in competition with other bacteria. To protect itself from lysis by Tse1 and Tse3,
P. aeruginosa
uses specific periplasmically localized immunity proteins. The requirement for these immunity proteins depends on intercellular self-intoxication through an active type VI secretion system, indicating a mechanism for export whereby effectors do not access donor cell periplasm in transit.
Duelling bacterial pathogens
The type VI secretion system (T6SS) is a protein-export machine that is present in about one-quarter of all sequenced bacteria. Bacteria can use this system to deliver toxic effector proteins in a contact-dependent manner to other bacterial cells. However, what these proteins do once their destination is reached has remained largely unknown. It is now shown that the opportunistic human pathogen
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
uses its T6SS to kill competing Gram-negative bacteria by injecting them with two peptidoglycan-degradative enzymes, the effector proteins Tse1 and Tse3.
P. aeruginosa
protects itself from these effectors by expressing immunity proteins that bind the toxins.
Journal Article
A lysozyme with altered substrate specificity facilitates prey cell exit by the periplasmic predator Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus
2020
Lysozymes are among the best-characterized enzymes, acting upon the cell wall substrate peptidoglycan. Here, examining the invasive bacterial periplasmic predator
Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus
, we report a diversified lysozyme, DslA, which acts, unusually, upon (GlcNAc-) deacetylated peptidoglycan.
B. bacteriovorus
are known to deacetylate the peptidoglycan of the prey bacterium, generating an important chemical difference between prey and self walls and implying usage of a putative deacetyl-specific “exit enzyme”. DslA performs this role, and ΔDslA strains exhibit a delay in leaving from prey. The structure of DslA reveals a modified lysozyme superfamily fold, with several adaptations. Biochemical assays confirm DslA specificity for deacetylated cell wall, and usage of two glutamate residues for catalysis. Exogenous DslA, added ex vivo, is able to prematurely liberate
B. bacteriovorus
from prey, part-way through the predatory lifecycle. We define a mechanism for specificity that invokes steric selection, and use the resultant motif to identify wider DslA homologues.
The bacterial periplasmic predator
Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus
deacetylates the peptidoglycan of the prey bacterium early upon invasion. Here, the authors identify and characterize a
Bdellovibrio
lysozyme that acts specifically on deacetylated peptidoglycan and is important for periplasmic exit.
Journal Article
Induction of antibacterial proteins and peptides in the coprophilous mushroom Coprinopsis cinerea in response to bacteria
2019
Bacteria are the main nutritional competitors of saprophytic fungi during colonization of their ecological niches. This competition involves the mutual secretion of antimicrobials that kill or inhibit the growth of the competitor. Over the last years it has been demonstrated that fungi respond to the presence of bacteria with changes of their transcriptome, but the significance of these changes with respect to competition for nutrients is not clear as functional proof of the antibacterial activity of the induced gene products is often lacking. Here, we report the genome-wide transcriptional response of the coprophilous mushroom
Coprinopsis cinerea
to the bacteria
Bacillus subtilis
and
Escherichia coli
. The genes induced upon co-cultivation with each bacterium were highly overlapping, suggesting that the fungus uses a similar arsenal of effectors against Gram-positive and -negative bacteria. Intriguingly, the induced genes appeare to encode predominantly secreted peptides and proteins with predicted antibacterial activities, which was validated by comparative proteomics of the
C. cinerea
secretome. Induced members of two putative antibacterial peptide and protein families in
C. cinerea
, the cysteine-stabilized αβ-defensins (Csαβ-defensins) and the GH24-type lysozymes, were purified, and their antibacterial activity was confirmed. These results provide compelling evidence that fungi are able to recognize the presence of bacteria and respond with the expression of an arsenal of secreted antibacterial peptides and proteins.
Journal Article
High Fat Diet Alters Gut Microbiota and the Expression of Paneth Cell-Antimicrobial Peptides Preceding Changes of Circulating Inflammatory Cytokines
by
Li, Jinchao
,
Guo, Xiulan
,
Wood, Richard J.
in
adipose tissue
,
Animals
,
Antimicrobial peptides
2017
Obesity is an established risk factor for many diseases including intestinal cancer. One of the responsible mechanisms is the chronic inflammation driven by obesity. However, it remains to be defined whether diet-induced obesity exacerbates the intestinal inflammatory status by cytokines produced in adipose tissue or the high fat diet first alters the gut microbiota and then drives intestinal inflammation. To address this question, we fed C57BL/6 mice with a high fat diet (HF, 60%) and sacrificed them sequentially after 8, 12, and 16 weeks, and then compositions of gut microbiota and expressions of antimicrobial peptides were determined. The compositions of gut microbiota were altered at 8 wk HF feeding, followed with reduced Paneth antimicrobial peptides lysozyme and Reg IIIγ after 12 and 16 wk HF feeding (p<0.05), whereas elevations of circulating inflammatory cytokines IFNγ and TNF-α were observed until feeding a HF diet for 16 weeks (p<0.05). These results indicated that high fat diet may stimulate intestinal inflammation via altering gut microbiota, and it occurs prior to the potential influence by circulating inflammatory cytokines. These findings emphasized the importance of microbiota, in addition to adipose tissue per se, in driving intestinal inflammation, which may thereafter promote intestinal tumorigenesis.
Journal Article
Identification of T6SS-dependent effector and immunity proteins by Tn-seq in Vibrio cholerae
2013
Type VI protein secretion system (T6SS) is important for bacterial competition through contact-dependent killing of competitors. T6SS delivers effectors to neighboring cells and corresponding antagonistic proteins confer immunity against effectors that are delivered by sister cells. Although T6SS has been found in more than 100 gram-negative bacteria including many important human pathogens, few T6SS-dependent effector and immunity proteins have been experimentally determined. Here we report a high-throughput approach using transposon mutagenesis and deep sequencing (Tn-seq) to identify T6SS immunity proteins in Vibrio cholerae . Saturating transposon mutagenesis was performed in wild type and a T6SS null mutant. Genes encoding immunity proteins were predicted to be essential in the wild type but dispensable in the T6SS mutant. By comparing the relative abundance of each transposon mutant in the mutant library using deep sequencing, we identified three immunity proteins that render protection against killing by T6SS predatory cells. We also identified their three cognate T6SS-secreted effectors and show these are important for not only antibacterial and antieukaryotic activities but also assembly of T6SS apparatus. The lipase and muramidase T6SS effectors identified in this study underscore the diversity of T6SS-secreted substrates and the distinctly different mechanisms that target these for secretion by the dynamic T6SS organelle.
Journal Article
Correlation of Solvent Interaction Analysis Signatures with Thermodynamic Properties and In Silico Calculations of the Structural Effects of Point Mutations in Two Proteins
by
Uversky, Vladimir N.
,
Titus, Amber R.
,
Madeira, Pedro P.
in
Bacteriophage T4 - enzymology
,
Bacteriophage T4 - genetics
,
Computer Simulation
2024
The partition behavior of single and double-point mutants of bacteriophage T4 lysozyme (T4 lysozyme) and staphylococcal nuclease A was examined in different aqueous two-phase systems (ATPSs) and studied by Solvent Interaction Analysis (SIA). Additionally, the solvent accessible surface area (SASA) of modeled mutants of both proteins was calculated. The in silico calculations and the in vitro analyses of the staphylococcal nuclease and T4 lysozyme mutants correlate, indicating that the partition analysis in ATPSs provides a valid descriptor (SIA signature) covering various protein features, such as structure, structural dynamics, and conformational stability.
Journal Article
Solution structure of a minor and transiently formed state of a T4 lysozyme mutant
by
Baker, David
,
Bouvignies, Guillaume
,
Hansen, D. Flemming
in
631/45/535
,
631/57/2272/2273
,
Bacteriophage T4 - enzymology
2011
Structure of a protein intermediate
The function of a protein depends critically on structural dynamics, and on the nature of the transient conformation intermediates that the molecule can adopt. These transients can be elusive and therefore hard to characterize. This paper reports the use of a combination of relaxation-dispersion nuclear magnetic resonance with Rosetta computational structure predictions to design T4 lysozyme mutations that stabilize 'excited' states that are normally too transient to be observed.
Proteins are inherently plastic molecules, whose function often critically depends on excursions between different molecular conformations (conformers)
1
,
2
,
3
. However, a rigorous understanding of the relation between a protein’s structure, dynamics and function remains elusive. This is because many of the conformers on its energy landscape are only transiently formed and marginally populated (less than a few per cent of the total number of molecules), so that they cannot be individually characterized by most biophysical tools. Here we study a lysozyme mutant from phage T4 that binds hydrophobic molecules
4
and populates an excited state transiently (about 1 ms) to about 3% at 25 °C (ref.
5
). We show that such binding occurs only via the ground state, and present the atomic-level model of the ‘invisible’, excited state obtained using a combined strategy of relaxation-dispersion NMR (ref.
6
) and CS-Rosetta
7
model building that rationalizes this observation. The model was tested using structure-based design calculations identifying point mutants predicted to stabilize the excited state relative to the ground state. In this way a pair of mutations were introduced, inverting the relative populations of the ground and excited states and altering function. Our results suggest a mechanism for the evolution of a protein’s function by changing the delicate balance between the states on its energy landscape. More generally, they show that our approach can generate and validate models of excited protein states.
Journal Article
Immune Response and Transcriptome Analysis of the Head Kidney to Different Concentrations of Aeromonas veronii in Common Carp (Cyprinus carpio)
2024
The common carp (Cyprinus carpio), a major economic freshwater fish, is suffering from a variety of bacterial infectious diseases because of its high-density, factory and intensive farming patterns. Aeromonas veronii is the causative agent of high mortality in common carp, causing severe economic losses in aquaculture. However, the regulatory mechanisms involved in the response of common carp to this bacterial infection remain poorly understood. In this study, we compared mortality, blood serum LZM (Lysozyme) and IgM (Immunoglobulin M) levels and transcriptome patterns of head kidney tissues after infection with different concentrations of Aeromonas veronii. We observed that mortality increased progressively with an increasing pathogen concentration. The concentrations of blood serum LZM and IgM significantly increased after infection. A total of 13 and 925 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified after infection with low (T4) and high (T9) concentrations of bacterial suspension, respectively. KEGG and GO analyses of the DEGs highlighted multiple immune-related signaling pathways. Weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA) revealed that 136 and 83 hub genes were related to blood serum LZM and IgM, respectively. Finally, the gene expression in the head kidney was validated via RT–qPCR to be consistent with the transcriptome. These results provide insights into the mechanisms of the immune response to infection with different concentrations of Aeromonas veronii and offer useful information for further studies on immune defense mechanisms in common carp.
Journal Article