4 resultados para Polyketide Synthase

em Digital Commons at Florida International University


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Aquatic toxins are responsible for a number of acute and chronic diseases in humans. Okadaic acid (OA) and other dinoflagellate derived polyketide toxins pose serious health risks on a global scale. Ingestion of OA contaminated shellfish causes diarrheic shellfish poisoning (DSP). Some evidence also suggests tumor promotion in the liver by OA. Microcystin-LR (MC-LR) is produced by cyanobacteria and is believed to be the most common freshwater toxin in the US. Humans may be exposed to this acute hepatotoxin through drinking or recreational use of contaminated waters. ^ OA producing dinoflagellates have not been cultured axenically. The presence of associated bacteria raises questions about the ultimate source of OA. Identification of the toxin-producing organism(s) is the first step in identifying the biosynthetic pathways involved in toxin production. Polyketide synthase (PKS) genes of toxic and non-toxic species were surveyed by construction of clonal libraries from PCR amplicons of various toxic and non-toxic species of Prorocentrum in an effort to identify genes, which may be part of the biosynthetic pathway of OA. Analysis of the PKS sequences revealed that toxic species shared identical PKS genes not present in non-toxic species. Interestingly, the same PKS genes were identified in a library constructed from associated bacteria. ^ Subsequent bacterial small subunit RNA (16S) clonal libraries identified several common bacterial species. The most frequent 16S sequences found were identified as species of the genus Roseobacter which has previously been implicated in the production of OA. Attempts to culture commonly occurring bacteria resulted in the isolation of Oceanicaulis alexandrii , a novel marine bacterium previously isolated from the dinoflagellate Alexandrium tamarense, from both P. lima, and P. hoffmanianum. ^ Metabolic studies of microcystin-LR, were conducted to probe the activity of the major human liver cytochromes (CYP) towards the toxin. CYPs may provide alternate routes of detoxification of toxins when the usual routes have been inhibited. For example, some research indicates that cyanobacterial xenobiotics, in particular, lipopolysaccharides may inhibit glutathione S-transferases allowing the toxin to persist long enough to be acted upon by other enzymes. These studies found that at least one human liver CYP was capable of metabolizing the toxin. ^

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Polyketides derived from dinoflagellates are among the most complex and unique structures identified to date. The carbon framework of all polyketides is assembled by a polyketide synthase (PKS). No studies of the biosynthesis of dinoflagellate derived polyketides at the genomic level have been reported to date. Nine strains representing seven different species of dinoflagellates were screened for the presence of type I and type II polyketide synthases (PKS) by PCR and RT-PCR. Seven of the nine strains yielded products that were homologous with known and putative type I polyketide synthases. In each case, the presence of a PKS gene was correlated with the presence of bacteria in the cultures as identified by amplification of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene. However, residual phylogenetic signals, resistance to methylation sensitive restriction enzymes and the lack of hybridization to bacterial isolates support a dinoflagellate origin for most of these genes. ^ A more detailed analysis of Karenia brevis, a toxic marine dinoflagellate endemic to the Gulf of Mexico, also supports the hypothesis that dinoflagellates have polyketide synthase genes. Blooms of this harmful alga cause fish kills, marine mammal mortalities and neurotoxic shellfish poisonings. These harmful effects are attributed to a suite of polyketide secondary metabolites known as the brevetoxins. PKS encoding genes amplified from K. brevis culture were found to be similar to PKS genes from the closely related protist, Cryptosporidium parvum. This suggested that these genes originate from the dinoflagellate. However, K. brevis has not been grown axenically. The associated bacteria might be the source of the toxins or the PKS genes. This dissertation reports the localization of these PKS encoding genes by a combination of flow cytometry/PCR and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Two genes localized exclusively to K. brevis cells while a third localized to both K. brevis and associated bacteria. While these genes have not yet been linked to toxin production, the work describes the first definitive evidence of resident PKS genes in any dinoflagellate. ^

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Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 (GSK3), a serine/threonine kinase initially characterized in the context of glycogen metabolism, has been repeatedly realized as a multitasking protein that can regulate numerous cellular events in both metazoa and protozoa. I recently found GSK3 plays a role in regulating chemotaxis, a guided cell movement in response to an external chemical gradient, in one of the best studied model systems for chemotaxis - Dictyostelium discoideum. ^ It was initially found that comparing to wild type cells, gsk3 - cells showed aberrant chemotaxis with a significant decrease in both speed and chemotactic indices. In Dictyostelium, phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-triphosphate (PIP3) signaling is one of the best characterized pathways that regulate chemotaxis. Molecular analysis uncovered that gsk3- cells suffer from high basal level of PIP3, the product of PI3K. Upon chemoattractant cAMP stimulation, wild type cells displayed a transient increase in the level of PIP3. In contrast, gsk3- cells exhibited neither significant increase nor adaptation. On the other hand, no aberrant dynamic of phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN), which antagonizes PI3K function, was observed. Upon membrane localization of PI3K, PI3K become activated by Ras, which will in turn further facilitate membrane localization of PI3K in an F-Actin dependent manner. The gsk3- cells treated with F-Actin inhibitor Latrunculin-A showed no significant difference in the PIP3 level. ^ I also showed GSK3 affected the phosphorylation level of the localization domain of PI3K1 (PI3K1-LD). PI3K1-LD proteins from gsk3- cells displayed less phosphorylation on serine residues compared to that from wild type cells. When the potential GSK3 phosphorylation sites of PI3K1-LD were substituted with aspartic acids (Phosphomimetic substitution), its membrane localization was suppressed in gsk3- cells. When these serine residues of PI3K1-LD were substituted with alanine, aberrantly high level of membrane localization of the PI3K1-LD was monitored in wild type cells. Wild type, phosphomimetic, and alanine substitution of PI3K1-LD fused with GFP proteins also displayed identical localization behavior as suggested by the cell fraction studies. Lastly, I identified that all three potential GSK3 phosphorylation sites on PI3K1-LD could be phosphorylated in vitro by GSK3.^

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Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 (GSK3), a serine/threonine kinase initially characterized in the context of glycogen metabolism, has been repeatedly realized as a multitasking protein that can regulate numerous cellular events in both metazoa and protozoa. I recently found GSK3 plays a role in regulating chemotaxis, a guided cell movement in response to an external chemical gradient, in one of the best studied model systems for chemotaxis - Dictyostelium discoideum. It was initially found that comparing to wild type cells, gsk3- cells showed aberrant chemotaxis with a significant decrease in both speed and chemotactic indices. In Dictyostelium, phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-triphosphate (PIP3) signaling is one of the best characterized pathways that regulate chemotaxis. Molecular analysis uncovered that gsk3- cells suffer from high basal level of PIP3, the product of PI3K. Upon chemoattractant cAMP stimulation, wild type cells displayed a transient increase in the level of PIP3. In contrast, gsk3- cells exhibited neither significant increase nor adaptation. On the other hand, no aberrant dynamic of phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN), which antagonizes PI3K function, was observed. Upon membrane localization of PI3K, PI3K become activated by Ras, which will in turn further facilitate membrane localization of PI3K in an F-Actin dependent manner. The gsk3- cells treated with F-Actin inhibitor Latrunculin-A showed no significant difference in the PIP3 level. I also showed GSK3 affected the phosphorylation level of the localization domain of PI3K1 (PI3K1-LD). PI3K1-LD proteins from gsk3- cells displayed less phosphorylation on serine residues compared to that from wild type cells. When the potential GSK3 phosphorylation sites of PI3K1-LD were substituted with aspartic acids (Phosphomimetic substitution), its membrane localization was suppressed in gsk3- cells. When these serine residues of PI3K1-LD were substituted with alanine, aberrantly high level of membrane localization of the PI3K1-LD was monitored in wild type cells. Wild type, phosphomimetic, and alanine substitution of PI3K1-LD fused with GFP proteins also displayed identical localization behavior as suggested by the cell fraction studies. Lastly, I identified that all three potential GSK3 phosphorylation sites on PI3K1-LD could be phosphorylated in vitro by GSK3.