236 resultados para PHOSPHOENOLPYRUVATE CARBOXYLASE


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Coordinated expression of virulence genes in Bacillus anthracis occurs via a multi-faceted signal transduction pathway that is dependent upon the AtxA protein. Intricate control of atxA gene transcription and AtxA protein function have become apparent from studies of AtxA-induced synthesis of the anthrax toxin proteins and the poly-D-glutamic acid capsule, two factors with important roles in B. anthracis pathogenesis. The amino-terminal region of the AtxA protein contains winged-helix (WH) and helix-turn-helix (HTH) motifs, structural features associated with DNA-binding. Using filter binding assays, I determined that AtxA interacted non-specifically at a low nanomolar affinity with a target promoter (Plef) and AtxA-independent promoters. AtxA also contains motifs associated with phosphoenolpyruvate: sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) regulation. These PTS-regulated domains, PRD1 and PRD2, are within the central amino acid sequence. Specific histidines in the PRDs serve as sites of phosphorylation (H199 and H379). Phosphorylation of H199 increases AtxA activity; whereas, H379 phosphorylation decreases AtxA function. For my dissertation, I hypothesized that AtxA binds target promoters to activate transcription and that DNA-binding activity is regulated via structural changes within the PRDs and a carboxy-terminal EIIB-like motif that are induced by phosphorylation and ligand binding. I determined that AtxA has one large protease-inaccessible domain containing the PRDs and the carboxy-terminal end of the protein. These results suggest that AtxA has a domain that is distinct from the putative DNA-binding region of the protein. My data indicate that AtxA activity is associated with AtxA multimerization. Oligomeric AtxA was detected when co-affinity purification, non-denaturing gel electrophoresis, and bis(maleimido)hexane (BMH) cross-linking techniques were employed. I exploited the specificity of BMH for cysteine residues to show that AtxA was cross-linked at C402, implicating the carboxy-terminal EIIB-like region in protein-protein interactions. In addition, higher amounts of the cross-linked dimeric form of AtxA were observed when cells were cultured in conditions that promote toxin gene expression. Based on the results, I propose that AtxA multimerization requires the EIIB-like motif and multimerization of AtxA positively impacts function. I investigated the role of the PTS in the function of AtxA and the impact of phosphomimetic residues on AtxA multimerization. B. anthracis Enzyme I (EI) and HPr did not facilitate phosphorylation of AtxA in vitro. Moreover, markerless deletion of ptsHI in B. anthracis did not perturb AtxA function. Taken together, these results suggest that proteins other than the PTS phosphorylate AtxA. Point mutations mimicking phosphohistidine (H to D) and non-phosphorylated histidine (H to A) were tested for an impact on AtxA activity and multimerization. AtxA H199D, AtxA H199A, and AtxA H379A displayed multimerization phenotypes similar to that of the native protein, whereas AtxA H379D was not susceptible to BMH cross-linking or co-affinity purification with AtxA-His. These data suggest that phosphorylation of H379 may decrease AtxA activity by preventing AtxA multimerization. Overall, my data support the following model of AtxA function. AtxA binds to target gene promoters in an oligomeric state. AtxA activity is increased in response to the host-related signal bicarbonate/CO2 because this signal enhances AtxA multimerization. In contrast, AtxA activity is decreased by phosphorylation at H379 because multimerization is inhibited. Future studies will address the interplay between bicarbonate/CO2 signaling and phosphorylation on AtxA function.

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We investigated carbon acquisition by the N2-fixing cyanobacterium Trichodesmium IMS101 in response to CO2 levels of 15.1, 37.5, and 101.3 Pa (equivalent to 150, 370, and 1000 ppm). In these acclimations, growth rates as well as cellular C and N contents were measured. In vivo activities of carbonic anhydrase (CA), photosynthetic O2 evolution, and CO2 and HCO3- fluxes were measured using membrane inlet mass spectrometry and the 14C disequilibrium technique. While no differences in growth rates were observed, elevated CO2 levels caused higher C and N quotas and stimulated photosynthesis and N2 fixation. Minimal extracellular CA (eCA) activity was observed, indicating a minor role in carbon acquisition. Rates of CO2 uptake were small relative to total inorganic carbon (Ci) fixation, whereas HCO{3 contributed more than 90% and varied only slightly over the light period and between CO2 treatments. The low eCA activity and preference for HCO3- were verified by the 14C disequilibrium technique. Regarding apparent affinities, half-saturation concentrations (K1/2) for photosynthetic O2 evolution and HCO3- uptake changed markedly over the day and with CO2 concentration. Leakage (CO2 efflux : Ci uptake) showed pronounced diurnal changes. Our findings do not support a direct CO2 effect on the carboxylation efficiency of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) but point to a shift in resource allocation among photosynthesis, carbon acquisition, and N2 fixation under elevated CO2 levels. The observed increase in photosynthesis and N2fixation could have potential biogeochemical implications, as it may stimulate productivity in N-limited oligotrophic regions and thus provide a negative feedback in rising atmospheric CO2 levels.

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NADPH: protochlorophyllide oxido reductase (POR) A is a key enzyme of chlorophyll biosynthesis in angiosperms. It is nucleus-encoded, synthesized as a larger precursor in the cytosol and imported into the plastids in a substrate-dependent manner. Plastid envelope membrane proteins, called protochlorophyllide dependent translocon proteins, Ptcs, have been identified that interact with pPORA during import. Amongthem are a 16-kDa ortholog of the previously characterized outer envelope protein Oep16 (named Ptc16) and a33-kDa protein (Ptc33) related to the GTP-binding proteins Toc33 and Toc34 of Arabidopsis. In the present work, we studied the interactions and roles of Ptc16 and Ptc33 during pPORA import. Radio labeled Ptc16/Oep16 was synthesized from a corresponding cDNA and imported into isolated Arabidopsis plastids. Crosslinking experiments revealed that import of35S-Oep16/Ptc16 is stimulated by GTP.35S-Oep16/Ptc16forms larger complexes with Toc33 but not Toc34. Plastids of the ppi1 mutant of Arabidopsis lacking Toc33, were unable to import pPORA in darkness but imported the small subunit precursor of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (pSSU), precursor ferredoxin (pFd) as well as pPORB which is a close relative of pPORA. In white light, partial suppressions of pSSU, pFd and pPORB import were observed. Our results unveil a hitherto unrecognized role of Toc33 in pPORA import and suggest photo oxidative membrane damage, induced by excess Pchlide accumulating in ppi1 chloroplasts because of the lack of pPORA import, to be the cause of the general drop of protein import.

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La nueva legislación en materia fitosanitaria se dirige hacia una Gestión Integrada de Plagas (GIP). Estos programas dan preferencia a aquellos métodos más respetuosos y sostenibles con el medio ambiente, siendo piezas claves en ellos el control biológico, el físico y otros de carácter no químico. Sin embargo, el uso de insecticidas selectivos es a veces necesario para el adecuado manejo de plagas en cultivos hortícolas. Por ello, el objetivo general de este estudio es aportar conocimientos para mejorar el control de plagas en cultivos hortícolas, mediante la integración de tres estrategias de lucha: biológica, física y química. Una parte de este trabajo ha consistido en el estudio de los posibles efectos que mallas tratadas con insecticida (bifentrin) pudieran provocar mediante diferentes ensayos de laboratorio, invernadero y campo, en los enemigos naturales Orius laevigatus (Fieber) (Hemiptera: Anthocoridae) (depredador de trips), Nesidiocoris tenuis (Reuter) (Hemiptera: Miridae) (depredador de mosca blanca y Tuta absoluta (Meirick) (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae)), y otros agentes de biocontrol comúnmente usados en cultivos hortícolas protegidos. Este tipo de mallas se han empleado con éxito en entomología médica para controlar mosquitos vectores de la malaria, y actualmente se está trabajando en su desarrollo para uso agrícola como método de exclusión, y método directo de control de plagas. En los ensayos realizados en laboratorio, O. laevigatus y N. tenuis no fueron capaces de detectar la presencia de bifentrin en el ensayo de preferencia. Además, no se produjo mortalidad a corto plazo (72 horas) en ambos chinches depredadores. Por el contrario, se registró una elevada mortalidad cuando se expusieron por contacto a la malla tratada durante 72 horas en cajas de dimensiones reducidas (10 cm de diámetro X 3 cm de altura). En ensayos llevados a cabo bajo condiciones más reales de exposición, en un invernadero experimental con jaulas de 25 X 25 X 60 cm de altura, no se produjo ningún efecto en la mortalidad a corto plazo (72 horas) o en los parámetros reproductivos de O. laevigatus y N. tenuis. Finalmente, en ensayos de campo realizados en túneles semi-comerciales (8 m de largo X 6,5 m de ancho X 2,6 m de altura), ni las condiciones ambientales [temperatura, humedad relativa, radiación ultravioleta (UV) y fotosintéticamente activa (PAR)], ni los enemigos naturales, se vieron afectados por la presencia de la malla tratada con bifentrin en el cultivo. Sin embargo, los resultados no fueron concluyentes, debido al bajo establecimiento de los agentes de biocontrol liberados. Por lo tanto, más estudios son necesarios en invernaderos comerciales para confirmar los resultados preliminares de compatibilidad. Además, en este trabajo se han evaluado los efectos letales (mortalidad) y subletales (parámetros reproductivos) de seis modernos insecticidas sobre los chinches depredadores O. laevigatus y N. tenuis, mediante ensayos de laboratorio y persistencia. Los ensayos se realizaron por contacto residual, aplicando los insecticidas a la dosis máxima de campo sobre placas de cristal (laboratorio) o plantas (persistencia). Los productos fitosanitarios se seleccionaron por representar a un grupo de modernos plaguicidas con modos de acción en principio más selectivos para los enemigos naturales que antiguos plaguicidas como organoclorados, oroganofosforados o carbamatos, y por su uso frecuente en cultivos hortícolas donde O. laevigatus y N. tenuis están presentes. Todos ellos están incluidos o en proceso de inclusión en la lista comunitaria de sustancias activas para uso agrícola, Anexo I de la Directiva 91/414/CEE: abamectina y emamectina (avermectinas neurotóxicas, activadoras del canal del cloro), deltametrina (piretroide neurotóxico, modulador del canal del sodio, control positivo), flubendiamida (neurotóxico, modulador del receptor de rianodina), spinosad (naturalito neurotóxico, agonistas/antagonistas del receptor de nicotínico acetilcolina) y spiromesifen (inhibidor de la acetil CoA carboxilasa). El estudio mostró que O. laevigatus fue más susceptible a los insecticidas que N. tenuis. Además, los resultados revelaron que flubendiamida y spiromesifen fueron compatibles con los dos enemigos naturales estudiados, y por tanto se podrían usar en programas de GIP. Por el contrario, los insecticidas abamectina, deltametrina, emamectina y spinosad no fueron selectivos para ninguno de los chinches depredadores. Sin embargo, los estudios de persistencia demostraron que a pesar de que estos insecticidas no proporcionaron selectividad fisiológica, pueden proporcionar selectividad ecológica en algunos casos. Abamectina, deltametrina, emamectina y spinosad podrían ser compatibles con N. tenuis si el enemigo natural es introducido en el cultivo 4 días después de su aplicación. En el caso de O. laevigatus, abamectina, deltametrina y spinosad se clasificaron como persistentes, por lo tanto es necesario completar el estudio con experimentos de semi-campo y campo que determinen si es posible su uso conjunto en programas de GIP. Por otro lado, emamectina podría ser compatible con O. laevigatus si el enemigo natural es introducido en el cultivo 7 días después de su aplicación. Por último, se ha comprobado la selectividad de tres insecticidas aceleradores de la muda (MACs) (metoxifenocida, tebufenocida y RH-5849) sobre O. laevigatus y N. tenuis. Además de realizar estudios para evaluar la toxicidad en laboratorio de los insecticidas por contacto residual e ingestión (principal modo de acción de los MAC´s), se extrajo RNA de los insectos y con el cDNA obtenido se secuenció y clonó el dominio de unión al ligando (LBD) del receptor de ecdisona correspondiente a O. laevigatus (OlEcR-LBD) y N. tenuis (NtEcR-LBD). Posteriormente, se obtuvo la configuración en tres dimensiones del LBD y se estudió el acoplamiento de las moléculas de los tres insecticidas en la cavidad que forman las 12 α-hélices que constituyen el EcR-LBD. En el caso de N. tenuis se debe mencionar que no fue posible la obtención de la secuencia completa del LBD. Sin embargo, se obtuvo una secuencia parcial (hélice 6-hélice 11), que mostró una alta conservación de aminoácidos con respecto a la obtenida en O. laevigatus. Los ensayos de toxicidad mostraron que metoxifenocida, tebufenocida y RH-5849 no produjeron ningún efecto nocivo en ambos depredadores. Además, los estudios de modelado por homología y acoplamiento molecular llevados a cabo con O. laevigatus, también indicaron que los MACs no produjeron ningún efecto deletéreo en este enemigo natural. Por lo tanto, estos compuestos pueden ser aplicados de manera segura en programas de GIP en los cuales O. laevigatus y N. tenuis estén presentes. ABSTRACT The new pesticide legislation on pest control is aimed at integrated pest management (IPM). These programs are based on the most environmentally sustainable approaches, where biological, physical control and other non-chemical methods are the cornerstone. However, selective pesticides are often required for pest management on horticultural crops. Therefore, the main goal of this study is to provide knowledge to improve pest control on horticultural crops through the integration of three strategies: biological, physical and chemical. Firstly, the effects of insecticide treated nets (bifenthrin) were evaluated in different laboratory, greenhouse and field experiments on the natural enemies Orius laevigatus (Fieber) (Hemiptera: Anthocoridae) (predator of thrips), Nesidiocoris tenuis (Reuter) (Hemiptera: Miridae) (predator of whiteflies and Tuta absoluta (Meirick) (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae)), and other biocontrol agents commonly used on protected horticultural crops. These types of nets have been successfully used in medical entomology to control mosquito malaria vectors, and work is currently being done on their use as exclusion barriers and as a direct method of pest control in agriculture. In experiments made under laboratory conditions, O. laevigatus and N. tenuis were not able to detect the presence of bifenthrin in a dual-choice test. Furthermore, no shortterm mortality (72 hours) was recorded on both predatory bugs. In contrast, a high mortality rate was found when they were exposed by contact to the bifenthrin-treated net for 72 hours in small cages (10 cm diameter X 3 cm high). In assays carried out under more realistic conditions of exposure, in an experimental greenhouse with cages of 25 X 25 X 60 cm high, short-term mortality (72 hours) and reproductive parameters were not affected. Lastly, in field experiments carried out in semi-commercial tunnels (8 m long X 6.5 m width X 2.6 m high), neither environmental conditions [temperature, relative humidity, ultraviolet (UV) and photosynthetically active radiation (PAR)] nor natural enemies were affected by the presence of the bifenthrin-treated net on the crop. However, results were not conclusive, mainly due to a low settlement of the released biocontrol agents, and further studies are needed in commercial greenhouses to confirm our preliminary results of compatibility. Secondly, the lethal (mortality) and sublethal effects (reproductive parameters) of six modern pesticides on the predatory bugs O. laevigatus and N. tenuis has been evaluated through laboratory and persistence experiments. Trials were carried out by residual contact, applying the insecticides to the maximum field recommended concentration on glass plates (laboratory) or plants (persistence). Insecticides were chosen as representatives of modern pesticides with a more selective mode of action on natural enemies than organochlorine, organophosphorus and carbamate insecticides. Moreover, they were also chosen because of their frequent use on horticultural crops where O. laevigatus and N. tenuis are present. All of them have been included or have been requested for inclusion in the community list of active substances on the agricultural market, Annex I of the European Directive 91/414/EEC: abamectin and emamectin (neurotoxic avermectins, chloride channel activators), deltamethrin (neutotoxic pyrethroid, sodium channel modulator, positive commercial standard), flubendiamide (neurotoxic, rianodine receptor modulator), spinosad (neurotoxic naturalyte, nicotinic acetylcholine receptor allosteric activator) and spiromesifen (inhibitors of acetyl CoA carboxylase). The study showed that O. laevigatus was more susceptible to all the studied pesticides than N. tenuis. In addition, the research results indicated no impact of flubendiamide and spiromesifen on the two natural enemies studied under laboratory conditions. Consequently, both pesticides are candidates to be included in IPM programmes where these biocontrol agents are present. On the other hand, abamectin, deltamethrin, emamectin and spinosad were not selective for both predatory bugs in laboratory experiments. However, persistence test demonstrated that in spite of the lack of physiological selectivity, these pesticides can provide ecological selectivity in some cases. Abamectin, deltamethrin, emamectin and spinosad could be compatible with N. tenuis if the mirid bug is released 4 days after the insecticide treatment on the crop. With regard to O. laevigatus, abamectin, deltamethrin and spinosad were classified as persistent in our assays, thus the study should be completed with semi-field and field experiments in order to ascertain their possible joint use in IPM programs. In contrast, emamectin could be compatible with O. laevigatus if the pirate bug is released 7 days after the insecticide treatment on the crop. Finally, the selectivity of three moulting accelerating compounds (MACs) (methoxyfenozide, tebufenozide and RH-5849) has also been evaluated on O. laevigatus and N. tenuis. In addition to laboratory experiments to evaluate the toxicity of the insecticides by residual contact and ingestion, molecular approaches were used as well. RNA of both insects was isolated, cDNA was subsequently synthesized and the complete sequence of the ligand binding domain (LBD) of the ecdysone receptor of O. laevigatus (OlEcR-LBD) and N. tenuis (NtEcR-LBD) were determined. Afterwards, the three dimensional structure of LBD was constructed. Finally, the docking of the insecticide molecules in the cavity delineated by the 12 α-helix that composed the EcRLBD was performed. In the case of N. tenuis, it should be noted that in spite of intensive efforts, we did not manage to complete the sequence for the LBD.However, a partial sequence of the LBD was obtained (helix 6-helix 11), and a strong conservation between the amino acids of N. tenuis and O. laevigatus was observed. Results showed no biological activity of methoxyfenozide, tebufenozide and RH-5849, on both predatory bugs. Moreover, modeling of the OlEcR-LBD and docking experiments also suggested that MACs were devoid of any deleterious effect on O. laevigatus. Therefore, our results indicate that these compounds could be safely applied in IPM programs in which O. laevigatus and N. tenuis are present.

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The recent discovery of leptin receptors in peripheral tissue raises questions about which of leptin’s biological actions arise from direct effects of the hormone on extraneural tissues and what intracellular mechanisms are responsible for leptin’s effects on carbohydrate and lipid metabolism. The present study is focused on the action of leptin on hepatic metabolism. Nondestructive 13C NMR methodology was used to follow the kinetics of intermediary metabolism by monitoring flux of 13C-labeled substrate through several multistep pathways. In perfused liver from either ob/ob or lean mice, we found that acute treatment with leptin in vitro modulates pathways controlling carbohydrate flux into 13C-labeled glycogen, thereby rapidly enhancing synthesis by an insulin-independent mechanism. Acute treatment of ob/ob liver also caused a rapid stimulation of long-chain fatty acid synthesis from 13C-labeled acetyl-CoA by the de novo synthesis route. Chronic leptin treatment in vivo induced homeostatic changes that resulted in a tripling of the rate of glycogen synthesis via the gluconeogenic pathway from [2-13C]pyruvate in ob/ob mouse liver perfused in the absence of the hormone. Consistent with the 13C NMR results, leptin treatment of the ob/ob mouse in vivo resulted in significantly increased hepatic glycogen synthase activity. Chronic treatment with leptin in vivo exerted the opposite effect of acute treatment in vitro and markedly decreased hepatic de novo synthesis of fatty acids in ob/ob mouse liver. In agreement with the 13C NMR findings, activities of hepatic acetyl-CoA carboxylase and fatty acid synthase were significantly reduced by chronic treatment of the ob/ob mouse with leptin. Our data represent a demonstration of direct effects of leptin in the regulation of metabolism in the intact functioning liver.

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Enhanced long chain fatty acid synthesis may occur in breast cancer, where it is necessary for tumor growth and predicts a poor prognosis. “Spot 14” (S14) is a carbohydrate- and thyroid hormone-inducible nuclear protein specific to liver, adipose, and lactating mammary tissues that functions to activate genes encoding the enzymes of fatty acid synthesis. Amplification of chromosome region 11q13, where the S14 gene (THRSP) resides, also predicts a poor prognosis in breast tumors. We localized the S14 gene between markers D11S906 and D11S937, at the telomeric end of the amplified region at 11q13, and found that it was amplified and expressed in breast cancer-derived cell lines. Moreover, concordant expression of S14 and a key lipogenic enzyme (acetyl-CoA carboxylase) in a panel of primary breast cancer specimens strongly supported a role for S14 as a determinant of tumor lipid metabolism. S14 expression provides a pathophysiological link between two prognostic indicators in breast cancer: enhanced lipogenesis and 11q13 amplification.

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Carbon catabolite repression (CCR) of several Bacillus subtilis catabolic genes is mediated by ATP-dependent phosphorylation of histidine-containing protein (HPr), a phosphocarrier protein of the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP): sugar phosphotransferase system. In this study, we report the discovery of a new B. subtilis gene encoding a HPr-like protein, Crh (for catabolite repression HPr), composed of 85 amino acids. Crh exhibits 45% sequence identity with HPr, but the active site His-15 of HPr is replaced with a glutamine in Crh. Crh is therefore not phosphorylated by PEP and enzyme I, but is phosphorylated by ATP and the HPr kinase in the presence of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate. We determined Ser-46 as the site of phosphorylation in Crh by carrying out mass spectrometry with peptides obtained by tryptic digestion or CNBr cleavage. In a B. subtilis ptsH1 mutant strain, synthesis of β-xylosidase, inositol dehydrogenase, and levanase was only partially relieved from CCR. Additional disruption of the crh gene caused almost complete relief from CCR. In a ptsH1 crh1 mutant, producing HPr and Crh in which Ser-46 is replaced with a nonphosphorylatable alanyl residue, expression of β-xylosidase was also completely relieved from glucose repression. These results suggest that CCR of certain catabolic operons requires, in addition to CcpA, ATP-dependent phosphorylation of Crh, and HPr at Ser-46.

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Glucocorticoid hormones, acting via nuclear receptors, regulate many metabolic processes, including hepatic gluconeogenesis. It recently has been recognized that intracellular glucocorticoid concentrations are determined not only by plasma hormone levels, but also by intracellular 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (11β-HSDs), which interconvert active corticosterone (cortisol in humans) and inert 11-dehydrocorticosterone (cortisone in humans). 11β-HSD type 2, a dehydrogenase, thus excludes glucocorticoids from otherwise nonselective mineralocorticoid receptors in the kidney. Recent data suggest the type 1 isozyme (11β-HSD-1) may function as an 11β-reductase, regenerating active glucocorticoids from circulating inert 11-keto forms in specific tissues, notably the liver. To examine the importance of this enzyme isoform in vivo, mice were produced with targeted disruption of the 11β-HSD-1 gene. These mice were unable to convert inert 11-dehydrocorticosterone to corticosterone in vivo. Despite compensatory adrenal hyperplasia and increased adrenal secretion of corticosterone, on starvation homozygous mutants had attenuated activation of the key hepatic gluconeogenic enzymes glucose-6-phosphatase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, presumably, because of relative intrahepatic glucocorticoid deficiency. The 11β-HSD-1 −/− mice were found to resist hyperglycamia provoked by obesity or stress. Attenuation of hepatic 11β-HSD-1 may provide a novel approach to the regulation of gluconeogenesis.

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Chemotaxis of Escherichia coli toward phosphotransferase systems (PTSs)–carbohydrates requires phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent PTSs as well as the chemotaxis response regulator CheY and its kinase, CheA. Responses initiated by flash photorelease of a PTS substrates d-glucose and its nonmetabolizable analog methyl α-d-glucopyranoside were measured with 33-ms time resolution using computer-assisted motion analysis. This, together with chemotactic mutants, has allowed us to map out and characterize the PTS chemotactic signal pathway. The responses were absent in mutants lacking the general PTS enzymes EI or HPr, elevated in PTS transport mutants, retarded in mutants lacking CheZ, a catalyst of CheY autodephosphorylation, and severely reduced in mutants with impaired methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein (MCP) signaling activity. Response kinetics were comparable to those triggered by MCP attractant ligands over most of the response range, the most rapid being 11.7 ± 3.1 s−1. The response threshold was <10 nM for glucose. Responses to methyl α-d-glucopyranoside had a higher threshold, commensurate with a lower PTS affinity, but were otherwise kinetically indistinguishable. These facts provide evidence for a single pathway in which the PTS chemotactic signal is relayed rapidly to MCP–CheW–CheA signaling complexes that effect subsequent amplification and slower CheY dephosphorylation. The high sensitivity indicates that this signal is generated by transport-induced dephosphorylation of the PTS rather than phosphoenolpyruvate consumption.

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The transmembrane subunit of the Glc transporter (IICBGlc), which mediates uptake and concomitant phosphorylation of glucose, spans the membrane eight times. Variants of IICBGlc with the native N and C termini joined and new N and C termini in the periplasmic and cytoplasmic surface loops were expressed in Escherichia coli. In vivo transport/in vitro phosphotransferase activities of the circularly permuted variants with the termini in the periplasmic loops 1 to 4 were 35/58, 32/37, 0/3, and 0/0% of wild type, respectively. The activities of the variants with the termini in the cytoplasmic loops 1 to 3 were 0/25, 0/4 and 24/70, respectively. Fusion of alkaline phosphatase to the periplasmic C termini stabilized membrane integration and increased uptake and/or phosphorylation activities. These results suggest that internal signal anchor and stop transfer sequences can function as N-terminal signal sequences in a circularly permuted α-helical bundle protein and that the orientation of transmembrane segments is determined by the amino acid sequence and not by the sequential appearance during translation. Of the four IICBGlc variants with new termini in periplasmic loops, only the one with the discontinuity in loop 4 is inactive. The sequences of loop 4 and of the adjacent TM7 and TM8 are conserved in all phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent carbohydrate:phosphotransferase system transporters of the glucose family.

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Net photosynthesis (Pn) is inhibited by moderate heat stress. To elucidate the mechanism of inhibition, we examined the effects of temperature on gas exchange and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) activation in cotton and tobacco leaves and compared the responses to those of the isolated enzymes. Depending on the CO2 concentration, Pn decreased when temperatures exceeded 35–40°C. This response was inconsistent with the response predicted from the properties of fully activated Rubisco. Rubisco deactivated in leaves when temperature was increased and also in response to high CO2 or low O2. The decrease in Rubisco activation occurred when leaf temperatures exceeded 35°C, whereas the activities of isolated activase and Rubisco were highest at 42°C and >50°C, respectively. In the absence of activase, isolated Rubisco deactivated under catalytic conditions and the rate of deactivation increased with temperature but not with CO2. The ability of activase to maintain or promote Rubisco activation in vitro also decreased with temperature but was not affected by CO2. Increasing the activase/Rubisco ratio reduced Rubisco deactivation at higher temperatures. The results indicate that, as temperature increases, the rate of Rubisco deactivation exceeds the capacity of activase to promote activation. The decrease in Rubisco activation that occurred in leaves at high CO2 was not caused by a faster rate of deactivation, but by reduced activase activity possibly in response to unfavorable ATP/ADP ratios. When adjustments were made for changes in activation state, the kinetic properties of Rubisco predicted the response of Pn at high temperature and CO2.

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The effect of different total enzyme concentrations on the flux through the bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate:carbohydrate phosphotransferase system (PTS) in vitro was determined by measuring PTS-mediated carbohydrate phosphorylation at different dilutions of cell-free extract of Escherichia coli. The dependence of the flux on the protein concentration was more than linear but less than quadratic. The combined flux–response coefficient of the four enzymes constituting the glucose PTS decreased slightly from values of ≈1.8 with increasing protein concentrations in the assay. Addition of the macromolecular crowding agents polyethylene glycol (PEG) 6000 and PEG 35000 led to a sharper decrease in the combined flux–response coefficient, in one case to values of ≈1. PEG 6000 stimulated the PTS flux at lower protein concentrations and inhibited the flux at higher protein concentrations, with the transition depending on the PEG 6000 concentration. This suggests that macromolecular crowding decreases the dissociation rate constants of enzyme complexes. High concentrations of the microsolute glycerol did not affect the combined flux–response coefficient. The data could be explained with a kinetic model of macromolecular crowding in a two-enzyme group-transfer pathway. Our results suggest that, because of the crowded environment in the cell, the different PTS enzymes form complexes that live long on the time-scale of their turnover. The implications for the metabolic behavior and control properties of the PTS, and for the effect of macromolecular crowding on nonequilibrium processes, are discussed.

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Sugar transport by some permeases in Escherichia coli is allosterically regulated by the phosphorylation state of the intracellular regulatory protein, enzyme IIAglc of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system. A sensitive radiochemical assay for the interaction of enzyme IIAglc with membrane-associated lactose permease was used to characterize the binding reaction. The binding is stimulated by transportable substrates such as lactose, melibiose, and raffinose, but not by sugars that are not transported (maltose and sucrose). Treatment of lactose permease with N-ethylmaleimide, which blocks ligand binding and transport by alkylating Cys-148, also blocks enzyme IIAglc binding. Preincubation with the substrate analog β-d-galactopyranosyl 1-thio-β-d-galactopyranoside protects both lactose transport and enzyme IIAglc binding against inhibition by N-ethylmaleimide. A collection of lactose permease replacement mutants at Cys-148 showed, with the exception of C148V, a good correlation of relative transport activity and enzyme IIAglc binding. The nature of the interaction of enzyme IIAglc with the cytoplasmic face of lactose permease was explored. The N- and C-termini, as well as five hydrophilic loops in the permease, are exposed on the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane and it has been proposed that the central cytoplasmic loop of lactose permease is the major determinant for interaction with enzyme IIAglc. Lactose permease mutants with polyhistidine insertions in cytoplasmic loops IV/V and VI/VII and periplasmic loop VII/VIII retain transport activity and therefore substrate binding, but do not bind enzyme IIAglc, indicating that these regions of lactose permease may be involved in recognition of enzyme IIAglc. Taken together, these results suggest that interaction of lactose permease with substrate promotes a conformational change that brings several cytoplasmic loops into an arrangement optimal for interaction with the regulatory protein, enzyme IIAglc. A topological map of the proposed interaction is presented.

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The chloroplast gene rbcL encodes the large subunit of the CO2-fixing enzyme ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase. In previous work a target for photo-accelerated degradation of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii rbcL transcripts in vivo was found to lie within the first 63 nucleotides, and a sequence element required for increasing the longevity of transcripts of rbcL-reporter genes was found to occur between nucleotides 170 and 350. Photo-accelerated degradation of rbcL transcripts has been found to require nucleotides 21 to 41. Transcript nucleotides lying between 329 and 334 and between 14 and 27 are essential for stabilizing transcripts in vivo; mutations in either region reduce the longevity of transcripts. It is postulated that the effectiveness of photo-accelerated endonuclease attacks on the nucleotide 21 to 41 region is reduced by physical blockage or distortion of the target sequence by interacting proteins that associate with nucleotides in the 14 to 27 and 329 to 334 regions of the transcripts. Both the nucleotide +329 to +334 stabilizing sequence of rbcL and a transcription enhancing sequence that lies between +126 and +170 encode well conserved (cyanobacteria through angiosperms) amino acid sequences; the evolution of expression control elements within the protein coding sequence of rbcL is considered.