2 resultados para Bellingshausen Sea, eastern bank of mini trough, outer shelf

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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It was previously assumed that the import of cytoplasmically synthesized precursor proteins into mitochondria occurs through a single structure spanning both outer and inner membranes at contact sites. Based on recent findings, however, the two membranes appear to contain independent translocation elements that reversibly cooperate during protein import. This feature makes it difficult to generate a means of isolating a fully integrated and functional translocation complex. To study these independent translocases in vitro and in vivo, we have constructed a chimeric protein consisting of an N-terminal authentic mitochondrial precursor (delta1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase) linked, through glutathione S-transferase, to IgG binding domains derived from staphylococcal protein A. This construct becomes trapped en route to the matrix, spanning both outer and inner membranes in such a way that the entire signal-less delta1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase moiety reaches the matrix, while only the folded protein A domain remains outside. During in vivo import of this precursor, outer and inner membranes of yeast mitochondria become progressively “zippered” together, forming long stretches of close contact. Using this novel intermediate, the outer and inner mitochondrial membrane channels, which normally interact only transiently, can be tightly joined (both in vitro and in vivo), forming a stable association. This suggests a method for isolating the functional translocation complex as a single entity.

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We used novel immunofluorescence strategies to demonstrate that outer surface proteins (Osps) A, B and C of Borrelia burgdorferi have limited surface exposure, finding that contradicts the prevailing viewpoint that these antigens are exclusively surface exposed. Light labeling was observed when antibodies to OspA or OspB were added to motile organisms, whereas intense fluorescence was observed when the same slides were methanol-fixed and reprobed. Modest labeling also was observed when spirochetes encapsulated in agarose beads (gel microdroplets) were incubated with antibodies to these same two antigens. This contrasted with the intense fluorescence observed when encapsulated spirochetes were probed in the presence of 0.06% Triton X-100, which selectively removed outer membranes. Proteinase K (PK) treatment of encapsulated spirochetes abrogated surface labeling. However, PK-treated spirochetes fluoresced intensely after incubation with antibodies to OspA or OspB in the presence of detergent, confirming the existence of large amounts of subsurface Osp antigens. Modest surface labeling once again was detected when PK-treated spirochetes were reprobed after overnight incubation, a result consistent with the existence of a postulated secretory apparatus that shuttles lipoproteins to the borrelial surface. Last, experiments with the OspC-expressing B. burgdorferi strain 297 revealed that this antigen was barely detectable on spirochetal surfaces even though it was a major constituent of isolated outer mem- branes. We propose a model of B. burgdorferi molecular architecture that helps to explain spirochetal persistence during chronic Lyme disease.