2 resultados para organic mechanism teaching
em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI
Resumo:
We describe here a simple and easily manipulatable Escherichia coli-based genetic system that permits us to identify bacterial gene products that modulate the sensitivity of bacteria to tumoricidal agents, such as DMP 840, a bisnaphthalimide drug. To the extent that the action of these agents is conserved, these studies may expand our understanding agents is conserved, these studies may expand our understanding of how the agents work in mammalian cells. The approach briefly is to use a library of E. coli genes that are overexpressed in a high copy number vector to select bacterial clones that are resistant to the cytotoxic effects of drugs. AtolC bacterial mutant is used to maximize permeability of cells to hydrophobic organic molecules. By using DMP 840 to model the system, we have identified two genes, designated mdaA and mdaB, that impart resistance to DMP 840 when they are expressed at elevated levels. mdaB maps to E. coli map coordinate 66, is located between the parE and parC genes, and encodes a protein of 22 kDa. mdaA maps to E. coli map coordinate 18, is located adjacent to the glutaredoxin (grx) gene, and encodes a protein of 24 kDa. Specific and regulatable overproduction of both of these proteins correlates with DMP 840 resistance. Overproduction of the MdaB protein also imparts resistance to two mammalian topoisomerase inhibitors, Adriamycin and etoposide. In contrast, overproduction of the MdaA protein produces resistance only to Adriamycin. Based on its drug-resistance properties and its location between genes that encode the two subunits of the bacterial topoisomerase IV, we suggest that mdaB acts by modulating topoisomerase IV activity. The location of the mdaA gene adjacent to grx suggests it acts by a drug detoxification mechanism.
Resumo:
Although bacterial strain able to grow in the presence of organic solvents have been isolated, little is known about the mechanism of their resistance. In the present study, 1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalene (tetralin), a solvent with potential applications in industrial biocatalysis, was used to select a resistant mutant of Escherichia coli. The resultant mutant strain was tested for resistance to a wide range of solvents of varying hydrophobicities and was found to be resistant not only to tetralin itself but also to cyclohexane, propylbenzene, and 1,2-dihydronaphthalene. A recombinant library from mutant DNA was used to clone the resistance gene. The sequence of the cloned locus was determined and found to match the sequence of the previously described alkylhydroperoxide reductase operon ahpCF. The mutation was localized to a substitution of valine for glycine at position 142 in the coding region of ahpC, which is the gene encoding the catalytic subunit of the enzyme. The ahpC mutant was found to have an activity that was three times that of the wild type in reducing tetralin hydroperoxide to 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-1-naphthol. We conclude that the toxicity of such solvents as tetralin is caused by the formation of toxic hydroperoxides in the cell. The ahpC mutation increases the activity of the enzyme toward hydrophobic hydroperoxides, thereby conferring resistance. The ahpC mutant was sensitive to the more hydrophilic solvents xylene and toluene, suggesting that there are additional mechanisms of solvent toxicity. Mutants resistant to a mixture of xylene and tetralin were isolated from the ahpC mutant but not from the wild-type strain.