3 resultados para Complexes of ruthenium

em Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro - Portugal


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As carbapenemases, serínicas e metalo-β-lactamases (MBLs), formam um grupo cada vez mais importante de β-lactamases capazes de tornar as bactérias resistentes a antibióticos β-lactâmicos, incluindo carbapenemos utilizados como antibióticos de último recurso no tratamento de infecções causadas por bactérias multirresistentes. De modo a compreender melhor a relação estrutura-função deste grupo de enzimas, prosseguimos com a caracterização bioquímica e estrutural das carbapenemases SFC-1 e Sfh-I específicas de Serratia fonticola UTAD54, uma estirpe ambiental isolada previamente de águas de consumo não tratadas no Nordeste de Portugal. Ambas as β-lactamases foram sobre-expressas em Escherichia coli e purificadas por cromatografia líquida. A SFC-1 recombinante, uma carbapenemase serínica, hidrolisa eficientemente antibióticos β-lactâmicos de todas as classes e exibe, comparativamente a enzimas relacionadas (ex. KPC), uma maior eficiência contra a ceftazidima e uma menor susceptibilidade aos inibidores convencionais das β-lactamases. As estruturas do cristal da SFC-1 nativa e de complexos de mutantes, obtidos por mutagénese dirigida, com o meropenemo não hidrolisado e na forma de acetilenzima foram determinados por substituição molecular utilizando cristalografia de raios-X. A estrutura da SFC-1 contém todas as características conservadas do centro activo das carbapenemases de classe A. Nas estruturas dos mutantes o meropenemo aparece orientado no centro activo por Thr236 e Thr238, posicionando-o próximo da Ser130 para a transferência do protão. Nas enzimas de classe A inibidas por carbapenemos, a interacção com a Arg244 impõe uma orientação diferente do meropenemo ligado, prejudicando a transferência do protão. Estas constituem as primeiras estruturas de uma carbapenemase de classe A com um carbapenemo no centro activo e revelam que estas enzimas alteram a orientação do meropenemo ligado para promover a catálise, sem alteração significativa da estrutura geral. A Sfh-I, tal como as outras MBLs da subclasse B2, apresenta um perfil de substratos reduzido, que inclui maioritariamente os carbapenemos. A Sfh-I hidrolisa imipenemo e meropenemo com um kcat de 51 e 109 s-1 e um KM de 79 e 215 μM, respectivamente. A Sfh-I liga um equivalente de zinco, como demonstrado por espectrometria de massa. Contrariamente a enzimas da subclasse B2 previamente caracterizadas, a Sfh-I hidrolisa a cefepima, mostrando que a Sfh-I é uma MBL da subclasse B2 com propriedades únicas. Por espectroscopia de fluorescência mostrou-se que a Sfh-I é capaz de ligar até 3 equivalentes de zinco (Kd2 = 95 μM; Kd3 = 2.3 mM). A estrutura do cristal da Sfh-I, determinada por substituição molecular utilizando a CphA como modelo, é a primeira para uma MBL da subclasse B2 não ligada. Esta estrutura revela a disposição das moléculas de água no centro activo corroborando um mecanismo catalítico para as MBLs da subclasse B2 no qual a His118, em vez do Asp120 proposto anteriormente, activa a molécula de água nucleofílica.

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The study of the Portuguese Hydrozoa fauna has been abandoned for more than half a century, except for the Azores archipelago. One of the main aims of this Ph.D. project was to contribute new hydrozoan records leading to a more accurate perception of the actual hydrozoan diversity found in Portuguese waters, including the archipelagos of Azores and Madeira, and neighbouring geographical areas, for habitats ranging from the deep sea to the intertidal. Shallow water hydroids from several Portuguese marine regions (including the Gorringe Bank) were sampled by scuba-diving. Deep-water hydroids, from the Azores, Madeira, Gulf of Cadiz and Alboran Sea, were collected by researchers of different institutions during several oceanographic campaigns. Occasional hydroid sampling by scuba-diving was performed in the UK, Malta and Spain. Over 300 hydroid species were identified and about 600 sequences of the hydrozoan ‘DNA barcode’ 16S mRNA were generated. The families Sertulariidae, Plumulariidae, Lafoeidae, Hebellidae, Aglaopheniidae, Campanulinidae, Halopterididae, Kirchenpaueriidae, Haleciidae and Eudendriidae, were studied in greater detail. About 350 16S sequences were generated for these taxa, allowing phylogenetic, phylogeographic and evolutionary inferences, and also more accurate taxonomic identifications. Phylogenetic analyses integrated molecular and morphological characters. Subsequent results revealed: particularly high levels of cryptic biodiversity, polyphyly in many taxonomic groups, pairs of species that were synonymous, the identity of several varieties as valid species, and highlighted phylogeographic associations of hydroids in deep and shallow-water areas of the NE Atlantic and W Mediterranean. It was proved that many (but not all) marine hydroid species with supposedly widespread vertical and/or horizontal geographical distributions, correspond in fact to complexes of cryptic taxa. This study further revealed that, in the NE Atlantic, shallow environments sustain higher hydrozoan diversity and abundance, but the importance of bathyal habitats as a source of phylogenetic diversity was also revealed. The Azorean seamounts were shown to be particularly important in the segregation of populations of hydroids with reduced dispersive potential. The bathyal habitats of the Gulf of Cadiz proved to harbour a considerably high number of cryptic species, which may mainly be a consequence of habitat heterogeneity and convergence of various water masses in the Gulf. The main causes proposed for speciation and population divergence of hydroids were: species population size, dispersal mechanisms and plasticity to inhabit different environmental conditions, but also the influence of oceanic currents (and its properties), habitat heterogeneity, climate change and continental drift. Higher phylogenetic resolution obtained for the family Plumulariidae revealed particularly that glacial cycles likely facilitated population divergence, ultimately speciation, and also faunal evolutionary transitions from deep to shallow waters.

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The island of São Jorge (38º 45’ 24’’ N - 28º 20’ 44’’W and 38º 33’ 00’’ N - 27º 44’ 32’’ W) is one of the nine islands of the Azores Archipelago that is rooted in the Azores Plateau, a wide and complex region which encompasses the triple junction between the American, Eurasia and Nubia plates. São Jorge Island has grown by fissural volcanic activity along fractures with the regional WNW-ESE trend, unveiling the importance of the regional tectonics during volcanic activity. The combination of the volcanostratigraphy (Forjaz & Fernandes, 1975; and Madeira, 1998) with geochronological data evidences that the island developed during two main volcanic phases. The first subaerial phase that occurred between 1.32 and 1.21 Ma ago (Hildenbrand et al. 2008) is recorded on the lava sequence forming the cliff at Fajã de São João, while the second phase started at 757 ka ago, is still active, and edified the rest of the island. This second phase edified the east side of the island that corresponds to Topo Volcanic Complex, in the period between 757 and 543 ka ago, while the west side named Rosais Volcanic Complex, started at 368 ka ago (Hildenbrand et al. 2008) and was still active at 117 ka ago. After the onset of Rosais, volcanic activity migrates to the center of São Jorge edifying Manadas Volcanic Complex. The volcanism on São Jorge is dominantly alkaline, with a narrow lithological composition ranging between the basanites/tefrites through the basaltic trachyandesites, in spite of this the two volcanic phases show distinct mineralogical, petrographic and geochemical characteristics that should be related with different petrogenetic conditions and growth rates of the island. Abstract viii During the first volcanic phase, growth rates are faster (≈3.4 m/ka), the lavas are slightly less alkaline and plagioclase-richer, pointing to the existence of a relative shallow and dynamic magma chamber where fractional crystallization associated with gravitational segregation and accumulation processes, produced the lavas of Fajã de São João sequence. The average growth rates during the second volcanic phase are lower (≈1.9 m/ka) and the lavas are mainly alkaline sodic, with a mineralogy composed by olivine, pyroxene, plagioclase and oxide phenocrysts, in a crystalline groundmass. The lavas are characterized by enrichment in incompatible trace element and light REE, but show differences for close-spaced lavas that unveil, in some cases, slight different degrees of fertilization of the mantle source along the island. These differences might also result from higher degrees of partial melting, as observed in the early stages of Topo and Rosais volcanic complexes, of a mantle source with residual garnet and amphibole, and/or from changing melting conditions of the mantle source as pressure. The subtle geochemical differences of the lavas contrast with the isotopic signatures, obtained from Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf isotopes, that São Jorge Island volcanism exhibit along its volcanic complexes. The lavas from Topo Volcanic Complex and from the submarine flank, i.e. the lavas located east of Ribeira Seca Fault, sample a mantle source with similar isotopic signature that, in terms of lead, overlaps Terceira Island. The lavas from Rosais and Manadas volcanic complexes, the western lavas, sample a mantle source that becomes progressively more distinct towards the west end of the island and that, in terms of lead isotopes, trends towards the isotopic composition of Faial Island. The two isotopic signatures of São Jorge, observed from the combination of lead isotopes with the other three systems, seem to result from the mixing of three distinct end-members. These end-members are (1) the common component related with the Azores Plateau and the MAR, (2) the eastern component with a FOZO signature and possibly related with the Azores plume located beneath Terceira, and (3) the western component, similar to Faial, where the lithosphere could have been entrained by an ancient magmatic liquid, isolated for a period longer than 2Ga. The two trends observed in the island reinforce the idea of small-scale mantle heterogeneities beneath the Azores region, as it has been proposed to explain the isotopic diversity observed in the Archipelago.