972 resultados para Maltose binding protein
Resumo:
SUMMARY: Iron is an essential element for nearly all organisms but it is poorly available in most environments and not sufficient to support microbial growth. Bacteria have evolved a range of strategies to acquire this important metal, the most common of these being siderophore-mediated iron uptake. Siderophores are high-affinity iron chelators which are released to the extracellular environment where they complex iron and deliver it to the bacterial cell, via specific uptake systems. The Gram-negative bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa produces two siderophores, pyoverdine and pyochelin, which both contribute to the virulence of this opportunistic human pathogen. The genes responsible for pyochelin-mediated iron uptake are grouped in the P. aeruginosa chromosome. The pyochelin biosynthetic genes are organized in two divergent operons, pchDCBA and pchEFGHI, which flank the regulatory gene pchR. The fptA gene, encoding the ferric pyochelin outer membrane receptor, occurs immediately downstream of the pchEFGHI genes. The biosynthesis of the siderophore and its receptor is subjected to dual regulation enabling P. aeruginosa to respond not only to the intracellular iron level but also to the presence of the siderophore in the extracellular environment. Negative regulation is mediated by the widespread Fur protein which employs ferrous iron as a corepressor and binds to a consensus sequence in the promoter region of iron-regulated genes. Positive regulation occurs during iron starvation and requires the AraC-type transcriptional regulator PchR. This regulator, together with pyochelin, induces the expression of pyochelin biosynthesis and uptake genes via a mechanism which was partly unraveled during this thesis. A 32-bp conserved sequence element (PchR-box) was identified in promoter regions of pyochelin-controlled genes. The PchR-box in the pchR-pchDCBA intergenic region was found to be essential for the induction of the pchDCBA operon and for the repression of the divergently transcribed pchR gene. PchR was purified as a fusion with maltose-binding protein (MBP). Mobility shift assays demonstrated specific binding of MBP-PchR to the PchR-box in the presence, but not in the absence of pyochelin. PchR-box mutations which interfered with pyochelin-dependent regulation in vivo, also affected pyochelin-dependent PchR-box recognition in vitro. These results show that pyochelin is the intracellular effector required for PchR-mediated regulation. The fact that extracellular pyochelin triggers this regulation implies that the siderophore can enter the cytoplasm. This conclusion was corroborated by analysing the importance of known and putative pyochelin uptake genes for pyochelin-dependent gene regulation. The pyochelin receptor gene fptA is followed by three genes, fptB, fptC, and fptX, which were shown here to be co-transcribed with fPtA. While fPtX encodes an inner membrane pen-I-lease, the functions of FptB and FptC are currently unknown. FptA and FptX, which are both required for pyochelin-mediated iron uptake, were found to be also needed for pyochelin-dependent gene regulation. FptB and FptC however, were not required and their role, if any, in the uptake of the PchR effector pyochelin remains elusive. RESUME Le fer est un élément essentiel pour la quasi-totalité des organismes, mais dans la plupart des environnements, il est difficilement accessible et insuffisant à la croissance microbienne. Les bactéries ont développé de multiples stratégies pour acquérir ce précieux métal, la plus commune étant l'acquisition au moyen de sidérophores. Les sidérophores sont des petites molécules dotées d'une forte affinité pour le fer qui, une fois relâchées dans l'environnement extracellulaire, vont complexer le fer et le délivrer à la cellule bactérienne par l'intermédiaire de systèmes d'acquisition spécifiques. La bactérie Gram-négative Pseudomonas aeruginosa produit deux sidérophores, la pyoverdine et la pyochéline, qui contribuent également à la virulence de ce pathogène opportuniste. Les gènes impliqués dans l'acquisition du fer à l'aide de la pyochéline sont regroupés sur t. le chromosome de P. aeruginosa. Les gènes de biosynthèse de la pyochéline sont organisés en deux opérons divergents, pchDCBA et pchEFGHI, qui flanquent le gène régulateur pchR. Le gène fptA, codant pour le récepteur de la pyochéline dans la membrane externe, est situé immédiatement en aval des gènes pchEFGHL La biosynthèse du sidérophore et de son récepteur est soumise à une double régulation permettant à P. aeruginosa de réagir non seulement à la quantité de fer intracellulaire, mais également à la présence du sidérophore dans le milieu extracellulaire. La répression se fait par l'intermédiaire de la protéine Fur, qui nécessite le fer ferreux comme co-répresseur et se lie à une séquence consensus dans la région promotrice des gènes régulés par le fer. L'induction se produit lorsque le fer est limitant, et requiert PchR, un régulateur transcriptionnel de la famille AraC. En présence de pyochéline, ce régulateur induit l'expression des gènes de biosynthèse et du récepteur de la pyochéline par l'intermédiaire d'un mécanisme partiellement résolu dans ce travail. Une séquence conservée (PchR-box) a été identifiée dans la région promotrice des gènes régulés par la pyochéline. La PchR-box située dans la région intergénique pchR-pchDCBA s'est révélée être importante pour l'induction de l'opéron pchDCBA et la répression du gène divergent pchR. PchR a été purifiée en tant que protéine de fusion avec une protéine liant le maltose (MBP). Des expériences de gel retard ont démontré la liaison spécifique de la protéine MBP-PchR sur la PchR-box en présence, mais non en absence de pyochéline. Les mutations de la PchR-box qui ont affecté la régulation pyochéline-dépendante in vivo, ont également eu un effet sur la liaison de la protéine in vitro. Ces résultats démontrent que la pyochéline est l'effecteur intracellulaire nécessaire à la régulation par PchR. Le fait que la pyochéline extracellulaire soit capable d'activer cette régulation implique que le sidérophore entre dans le cytoplasme. Cette conclusion a été corroborée par l'évaluation du rôle des gènes connus ou putatifs de l'incorporation du fer via la pyochéline sur la régulation pyochéline-dépendente. Le gène fPtA, codant pour le récepteur de la pyochéline, est suivi de trois gènes, fptB,fptC, et fptX, co-transcrits avec,ffitA. Si sffitX code pour une perméase de la membrane interne, la fonction de FptB et FptC reste obscure. FptA et FptX, nécessaires à l'acquisition du fer par l'intermédiaire de la pyochéline, se sont également révélés être requis pour la régulation pyochéline-dépendante des gènes pchDCBA, pchEFGHI et fptABCX. FptB et FptC n'ont quant à eux vraisemblablement pas de rôle majeur à jouer, si ce n'est aucun, dans l'incorporation de la pyochéline.
Resumo:
Under iron limitation, the opportunistic human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa produces the siderophore pyochelin. When secreted into the extracellular environment, pyochelin complexes ferric ions and delivers them, via the outer membrane receptor FptA, to the bacterial cytoplasm. Extracellular pyochelin also acts as a signalling molecule, inducing the expression of pyochelin biosynthesis and uptake genes by a mechanism involving the AraC-type regulator PchR. We have identified a 32 bp conserved sequence element (PchR-box) in promoter regions of pyochelin-controlled genes and we show that the PchR-box in the pchR-pchDCBA intergenic region is essential for the induction of the pyochelin biosynthetic operon pchDCBA and the repression of the divergently transcribed pchR gene. PchR was purified as a fusion with maltose-binding protein (MBP). Mobility shift assays demonstrated specific binding of MBP-PchR to the PchR-box in the presence, but not in the absence of pyochelin and iron. PchR-box mutations that interfered with pyochelin-dependent regulation in vivo, also affected pyochelin-dependent PchR-box recognition in vitro. We conclude that pyochelin, probably in its iron-loaded state, is the intracellular effector required for PchR-mediated regulation. The fact that extracellular pyochelin triggers this regulation suggests that the siderophore can enter the cytoplasm.
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Während der Spermatogenese von Drosophila werden viele mRNAs zwar vor der Meiose transkribiert, dann aber durch Komplexbildung mit Proteinen stillgelegt und erst am Ende der Spermienentwicklung durch Veränderung desselben für die Translation freigegeben. Ein Beispiel hierfür ist die Mst87F mRNA. Während das cis-agierende Sequenzelement in der RNA seit langem bekannt ist, gestaltete sich die Suche nach den trans-agierenden RNA-bindenden Proteinen schwierig. In meiner Diplomarbeit (Stinski, 2007) waren mithilfe von präparativen Shift-Experimenten (Auftrennung von RNP-Komplexen im elektrischen Feld) zwei vielversprechende Kandidaten identifiziert worden, die Proteine Exuperantia (Exu) und Purity of Essence (Poe). Ziel der vorliegenden Dissertation war zum einen die Aufklärung der Funktion dieser Kandidatenproteine und zum anderen die Identifizierung weiterer Kandidaten, die an der Komplexbildung und damit an der Regulation beteiligt sind. Dabei war die Hoffnung, sowohl Proteine zu finden, die die Repression vermitteln, als auch solche, die am Ende die Aktivierung ermöglichen. Durch eine Affinitätsreinigung, in der Mst87F-RNA mit einem ms2-Tag versehen über das MS2-Maltose binding protein an eine Amylose-Matrix gebunden und schließlich die Komplexe mit Maltose wieder eluiert wurden, ließen sich erneut das Exu-Protein und drei neue Kandidaten identifizieren: CG3213, CG12470 und CG1898. Das Protein Exu hat eindeutig eine Funktion bei der Translationskontrolle: seine Abwesenheit führt zum Abbau der kontrollierten mRNAs. Die Inkubation mit exu-defizientem Protein-Extrakt (aus Hoden) unterstützt keine RNP-Komplexbildung und aufgereinigtes Exu-His Fusionsprotein kann auch nicht direkt an die Mst87F mRNA binden. Ein exu-defizienter Proteinextrakt lässt sich aber durch die Zugabe von rekombinantem Exu-His komplettieren und es entsteht wieder ein starker mRNP-Komplex. Dies beweist, dass das Experiment im Prinzip korrekt verläuft und dass Exu für die Komplexbildung entscheidend ist. Darüber hinaus konnten durch eine Co-Immunpräzipitation mit dem Exu-GFP Fusionsprotein sowohl interagierende Proteine als auch in die RNP-Komplexe einbezogene mRNAs nachgewiesen werden. Vielversprechende Kandidatenproteine stammen von den Genen CG3213, dfmr1 und CG12470. Die durch cDNA-Synthese in den Komplexen nachgewiesenen mRNAs sind in aller Regel solche, die der Translationskontrolle unterworfen sind. Damit ist gezeigt, dass Exu Teil eines großen Proteinkomplexes ist oder zumindest mit ihm assoziiert ist, der auf viele translationskontrollierte Transkripte Einfluss nimmt. Die Mst87F mRNA wird zum Zeitpunkt der Translationsaktivierung sekundär polyadenyliert, das heißt ihre Länge wird größer und heterogen. In einer Mutante für das Kandidatengen poe wurde diese sekundäre Polyadenylierung plötzlich nicht mehr beobachtet und die RNA blieb auch bei Translationsaktivierung so groß wie in den frühen Stadien. So ergab sich die Möglichkeit, endlich zu prüfen, ob die sekundäre Polyadenylierung für die Translationsaktivierung von essentieller Bedeutung ist. Eine Serie von Fusionskonstrukten mit funktionstüchtigem TCE verhielten sich alle gleich. Die sekundäre Polyadenylierung fand nicht statt, aber das Transkript des Fusionsgens wurde zum richtigen Zeitpunkt translatiert. Somit ist dieser Prozess zumindest nicht generell für eine Translation zu diesem späten Zeitpunkt in der Spermiogenese notwendig. Ein quantitativer Effekt kann allerdings nicht ausgeschlossen werden. Des Weiteren konnten mit antisense Konstrukten mutante Phänotypen erzeugt werden. Solche Männchen waren ausnahmslos steril, was die Wichtigkeit des Proteins Poe für den Prozess der Spermienreifung belegt. Die Defekte zeigen sich spät während der Individualisierung, was mit der vermuteten Funktion übereinstimmen würde. Das Kandidatenprotein dFMR1 bindet allein an die Mst87F RNA und trägt zur Stärke des beobachtbaren Komplexes bei. Die Komplexbildung zeigt Salzabhängigkeit, wie sie für dFMR1 in anderen Zusammenhängen dokumentiert wurde. Dies unterstützt die obige Aussage und suggeriert, dass dFMR1 die Basis für den Komplexaufbau bildet. Das CPEB-homologe Kandidatenprotein Orb2 bindet ebenfalls allein an die Mst87F mRNA, hat aber keinen Einfluss auf die Repression oder die sekundäre Polyadenylierung. Eine Beteiligung an der Regulation wäre demnach eindeutig unterschiedlich zu der in anderen Fällen dokumentierten Rolle. Die Expression der Kandidatengene CG1898, CG3213 und CG12470 ist konform mit einer unterschiedlichen Beteiligung an der Translationskontrolle. Das erste Protein ist nur in prämeiotischen Stadien, das zweite durchgängig und das dritte nur in postmeiotischen Stadien nachzuweisen, was einer Funktion bei der Stillegung, während der gesamten inaktiven Phase bzw. bei der Aktivierung entsprechen könnte. Die verschiedenen Experimente identifizieren in mehreren Fällen die gleichen Kandidatenproteine und untermauern damit deren Bedeutung. Sie lassen vielfach konkrete Schlüsse auf die Art der Interaktionen zu, welche in einem Schema zusammengefasst werden.
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The expression of proteins using recombinant baculoviruses is a mature and widely used technology. However, some aspects of the technology continue to detract from high throughput use and the basis of the final observed expression level is poorly understood. Here, we describe the design and use of a set of vectors developed around a unified cloning strategy that allow parallel expression of target proteins in the baculovirus system as N-terminal or C-terminal fusions. Using several protein kinases as tests we found that amino-terminal fusion to maltose binding protein rescued expression of the poorly expressed human kinase Cot but had only a marginal effect on expression of a well-expressed kinase IKK-2. In addition, MBP fusion proteins were found to be secreted from the expressing cell. Use of a carboxyl-terminal GFP tagging vector showed that fluorescence measurement paralleled expression level and was a convenient readout in the context of insect cell expression, an observation that was further supported with additional non-kinase targets. The expression of the target proteins using the same vectors in vitro showed that differences in expression level were wholly dependent on the environment of the expressing cell and an investigation of the time course of expression showed it could affect substantially the observed expression level for poorly but not well-expressed proteins. Our vector suite approach shows that rapid expression survey can be achieved within the baculovirus system and in addition, goes some way to identifying the underlying basis of the expression level obtained. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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The AFN1 gene is transiently expressed in germinating oat grains. As AFN1 is not expressed in dormant oat grains during imbibition, we hypothesize that AFN1 may be involved in stimulating the germination process. Sequence analysis of an AFN1 cDNA clone indicates that the AFN1 polypeptide is similar to a previously identified abscisic acid (ABA) glucosyl transferase. This suggests that AFN1 may be acting to glucosylate ABA, thereby inactivating it. As the hormone ABA is known to inhibit germination, ABA glucosylation/inactivation could lead to germination in grains expressing AFN1. To test this hypothesis, we have constructed an expression plasmid that encodes an MBP::AFN1 (maltose binding protein) fusion protein. E. coli cells carrying the expression plasmid were found to produce the MBP::AFN1 fusion protein as a substantial fraction of total protein. We are currently in the process of purifying the MBP::AFN1 fusion protein by affinity chromatography, so that it can be assayed for ABA glucosyl transferase activity. We also wish to test the effect of AFN1 gene expression during grain imbibition on the germination behavior of the grains. To this end, we have constructed plasmids for the overexpression and RNAi-based suppression of AFN1 in transgenic plants. These plasmids have been introduced into oat cells by particle bombardment and we are in the process of regenerating transgenic plants for study.
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We engineered a full-length (8.3-kbp) cDNA coding for fatty acid synthase (FAS; EC 2.3.1.85) from the human brain FAS cDNA clones we characterized previously. In the process of accomplishing this task, we developed a novel PCR procedure, recombinant PCR, which is very useful in joining two overlapping DNA fragments that do not have a common or unique restriction site. The full-length cDNA was cloned in pMAL-c2 for heterologous expression in Escherichia coli as a maltose-binding protein fusion. The recombinant protein was purified by using amylose-resin affinity and hydroxylapatite chromatography. As expected from the coding capacity of the cDNA expressed, the chimeric recombinant protein has a molecular weight of 310,000 and reacts with antibodies against both human FAS and maltose-binding protein. The maltose-binding protein-human FAS (MBP-hFAS) catalyzed palmitate synthesis from acetyl-CoA, malonyl-CoA, and NADPH and exhibited all of the partial activities of FAS at levels comparable with those of the native human enzyme purified from HepG2 cells. Like the native HepG2 FAS, the products of MBP-hFAS are mainly palmitic acid (>90%) and minimal amounts of stearic and arachidic acids. Similarly, a human FAS cDNA encoding domain I (β-ketoacyl synthase, acetyl-CoA and malonyl-CoA transacylases, and β-hydroxyacyl dehydratase) was cloned and expressed in E. coli using pMAL-c2. The expressed fusion protein, MBP-hFAS domain I, was purified to apparent homogeneity (Mr 190,000) and exhibited the activities of the acetyl/malonyl transacylases and the β-hydroxyacyl dehydratase. In addition, a human FAS cDNA encoding domains II and III (enoyl and β-ketoacyl reductases, acyl carrier protein, and thioesterase) was cloned in pET-32b(+) and expressed in E. coli as a fusion protein with thioredoxin and six in-frame histidine residues. The recombinant fusion protein, thioredoxin-human FAS domains II and III, that was purified from E. coli had a molecular weight of 159,000 and exhibited the activities of the enoyl and β-ketoacyl reductases and the thioesterase. Both the MBP and the thioredoxin-His-tags do not appear to interfere with the catalytic activity of human FAS or its partial activities.
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Previous studies have demonstrated that presecretory proteins such as maltose binding protein (MBP) and outer membrane protein A (OmpA) are targeted to the Escherichia coli inner membrane by the molecular chaperone SecB, but that integral membrane proteins are targeted by the signal recognition particle (SRP). In vitro studies have suggested that trigger factor binds to a sequence near the N terminus of the mature region of OmpA and shunts the protein into the SecB pathway by blocking an interaction between SRP and the signal peptide. By contrast, we have found that the targeting pathway of a protein under physiological conditions is dictated by the composition of its targeting signal. Replacement of the MBP or OmpA signal peptide with the first transmembrane segment of AcrB abolished the dependence on SecB for transport and rerouted both proteins into the SRP targeting pathway. More modest alterations of the MBP signal peptide that simply increase its hydrophobicity also promoted SRP binding. Furthermore, we obtained evidence that SRP has a low affinity for typical signal peptides in vivo. These results imply that different classes of E. coli proteins are targeted by distinct pathways because bacterial SRP binds to a more restricted range of targeting signals than its eukaryotic counterpart.
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We describe the construction of a soluble protein carrying the N-terminal extracellular domain (ECD) of the α7 subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. The approach was to fuse the α7 ECD at the C and N termini of several monomeric and pentameric soluble carrier proteins and to investigate the soluble expression of the product in Escherichia coli. An initial screening of six carrier proteins resulted in the selection of a fusion protein comprising, from the N to the C terminus, the maltose binding protein, a 17-aa linker containing an enterokinase binding site, and the α7 ECD. This protein is soluble upon expression in bacteria and is purified by affinity chromatography. It binds the competitive nicotinic antagonist α-bungarotoxin with 2.5 μM affinity and displays a CD spectrum corresponding to a folded protein. The method might be suitable to produce large quantities of protein for crystallization and immunochemical experiments.
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The assembly of functional proteins from fragments in vivo has been recently described for several proteins, including the secreted maltose binding protein in Escherichia coli. Here we demonstrate for the first time that split gene products can function within the eukaryotic secretory system. Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains able to use sucrose produce the enzyme invertase, which is targeted by a signal peptide to the central secretory pathway and the periplasmic space. Using this enzyme as a model we find the following: (i) Polypeptide fragments of invertase, each containing a signal peptide, are independently translocated into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) are modified by glycosylation, and travel the entire secretory pathway reaching the yeast periplasm. (ii) Simultaneous expression of independently translated and translocated overlapping fragments of invertase leads to the formation of an enzymatically active complex, whereas individually expressed fragments exhibit no activity. (iii) An active invertase complex is assembled in the ER, is targeted to the yeast periplasm, and is biologically functional, as judged by its ability to facilitate growth on sucrose as a single carbon source. These observation are discussed in relation to protein folding and assembly in the ER and to the trafficking of proteins through the secretory pathway.
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The fusion of a protein of interest to a large-affinity tag, such as the maltose-binding protein (MBP), thioredoxin (TRX), or glutathione-S-transferase (GST), can be advantageous in terms of increased expression, enhanced solubility, protection from proteolysis, improved folding, and protein purification via affinity chromatography. Unfortunately, crystal growth is hindered by the conformational heterogeneity induced by the fusion tag, requiring that the tag is removed by a potentially problematic cleavage step. The first three crystal structures of fusion proteins with large-affinity tags have been reported recently. All three structures used a novel strategy to rigidly fuse the protein of interest to MBP via a short three- to five-amino acid spacer. This strategy has the potential to aid structure determination of proteins that present particular experimental challenges and are not conducive to more conventional crystallization strategies (e.g., membrane proteins). Structural genomics initiatives may also benefit from this approach as a way to crystallize problematic proteins of significant interest.
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The folding of HIV gp41 into a 6-helix bundle drives virus-cell membrane fusion. To examine the structural relationship between the 6-helix bundle core domain and other regions of gp41, we expressed in Escherichia coli, the entire ectodomain of HIV-2(ST) gp41 as a soluble, trimeric maltose-binding protein (MBP)/gp41 chimera. Limiting proteolysis indicated that the Cys-591-Cys-597 disulfide-bonded region is outside a core domain comprising two peptides, Thr-529-Trp-589 and Val-604-Ser-666. A biochemical examination of MBP/gp41 chimeras encompassing these core peptides; indicated that the N-terminal polar segment, 521-528, and C-terminal membrane-proximal segment, 658-666, cooperate in stabilizing the ectodomain. A functional interaction between sequences outside the gp41 core may contribute energy to membrane fusion. (C) 2004 Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of the Federation of European Biochemical Societies.
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Post-transcriptional regulation of cytoplasmic mRNAs is an efficient mechanism of regulating the amounts of active protein within a eukaryotic cell. RNA sequence elements located in the untranslated regions of mRNAs can influence transcript degradation or translation through associations with RNA-binding proteins. Tristetraprolin (TTP) is the best known member of a family of CCCH zinc finger proteins that targets adenosine-uridine rich element (ARE) binding sites in the 3’ untranslated regions (UTRs) of mRNAs, promoting transcript deadenylation through the recruitment of deadenylases. More specifically, TTP has been shown to bind AREs located in the 3’-UTRs of transcripts with known roles in the inflammatory response. The mRNA-binding region of the protein is the highly conserved CCCH tandem zinc finger (TZF) domain. The synthetic TTP TZF domain has been shown to bind with high affinity to the 13-mer sequence of UUUUAUUUAUUUU. However, the binding affinities of full-length TTP family members to the same sequence and its variants are unknown. Furthermore, the distance needed between two overlapping or neighboring UUAUUUAUU 9-mers for tandem binding events of a full-length TTP family member to a target transcript has not been explored. To address these questions, we recombinantly expressed and purified the full-length C. albicans TTP family member Zfs1. Using full-length Zfs1, tagged at the N-terminus with maltose binding protein (MBP), we determined the binding affinities of the protein to the optimal TTP binding sequence, UUAUUUAUU. Fluorescence anisotropy experiments determined that the binding affinities of MBP-Zfs1 to non-canonical AREs were influenced by ionic buffer strength, suggesting that transcript selectivity may be affected by intracellular conditions. Furthermore, electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs) revealed that separation of two core AUUUA sequences by two uridines is sufficient for tandem binding of MBP-Zfs1. Finally, we found evidence for tandem binding of MBP-Zfs1 to a 27-base RNA oligonucleotide containing only a single ARE-binding site, and showed that this was concentration and RNA length dependent; this phenomenon had not been seen previously. These data suggest that the association of the TTP TZF domain and the TZF domains of other species, to ARE-binding sites is highly conserved. Domains outside of the TZF domain may mediate transcript selectivity in changing cellular conditions, and promote protein-RNA interactions not associated with the ARE-binding TZF domain.
In summary, the evidence presented here suggests that Zfs1-mediated decay of mRNA targets may require additional interactions, in addition to ARE-TZF domain associations, to promote transcript destabilization and degradation. These studies further our understanding of post-transcriptional steps in gene regulation.
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Albicidins are a family of phytotoxins and antibiotics which play an important role in the pathogenesis of sugarcane leaf scald disease. The albA gene from Klebsiella oxytoca encodes a protein which inactivates albicidin by heat-reversible binding. Albicidin ligand binding to a recombinant AlbA protein, purified by means of a glutathione S-transferase gene fusion system, is an almost instant and saturable reaction. Kinetic and stoichiometric analysis of the binding reaction indicated the presence of a single high affinity binding site with a dissociation constant of 6.4 x 10(-8) M. The AlbA-albicidin complex is stable from 4 to 40 degrees C, from ph 5 to 9 and in high salt solutions. Treatment with protein denaturants released all bound albicidin. These properties indicate that AlbA may be a useful affinity matrix for selective purification of albicidin antibiotics. AlbA does not bind to p-nitrophenyl butyrate or alpha-naphthyl butyrate, the substrates of the albicidin detoxification enzyme AlbD from Pantoea dispersa. The potential exists to pyramid genes for different mechanisms in transgenic plants to protect plastid DNA replication from inhibition by albicidins.
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Cellular inhibitor of apoptosis (cIAP) proteins, cIAP1 and cIAP2, are important regulators of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) superfamily (SF) signaling and are amplified in a number of tumor types. They are targeted by IAP antagonist compounds that are undergoing clinical trials. IAP antagonist compounds trigger cIAP autoubiquitylation and degradation. The TNFSF member TWEAK induces lysosomal degradation of TRAF2 and cIAPs, leading to elevated NIK levels and activation of non-canonical NF-kappaB. To investigate the role of the ubiquitin ligase RING domain of cIAP1 in these pathways, we used cIAP-deleted cells reconstituted with cIAP1 point mutants designed to interfere with the ability of the RING to dimerize or to interact with E2 enzymes. We show that RING dimerization and E2 binding are required for IAP antagonists to induce cIAP1 degradation and protect cells from TNF-induced cell death. The RING functions of cIAP1 are required for full TNF-induced activation of NF-kappaB, however, delayed activation of NF-kappaB still occurs in cIAP1 and -2 double knock-out cells. The RING functions of cIAP1 are also required to prevent constitutive activation of non-canonical NF-kappaB by targeting NIK for proteasomal degradation. However, in cIAP double knock-out cells TWEAK was still able to increase NIK levels demonstrating that NIK can be regulated by cIAP-independent pathways. Finally we show that, unlike IAP antagonists, TWEAK was able to induce degradation of cIAP1 RING mutants. These results emphasize the critical importance of the RING of cIAP1 in many signaling scenarios, but also demonstrate that in some pathways RING functions are not required.
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Recognition by the T-cell receptor (TCR) of immunogenic peptides (p) presented by Class I major histocompatibility complexes (MHC) is the key event in the immune response against virus-infected cells or tumor cells. A study of the 2C TCR/SIYR/H-2K(b) system using a computational alanine scanning and a much faster binding free energy decomposition based on the Molecular Mechanics-Generalized Born Surface Area (MM-GBSA) method is presented. The results show that the TCR-p-MHC binding free energy decomposition using this approach and including entropic terms provides a detailed and reliable description of the interactions between the molecules at an atomistic level. Comparison of the decomposition results with experimentally determined activity differences for alanine mutants yields a correlation of 0.67 when the entropy is neglected and 0.72 when the entropy is taken into account. Similarly, comparison of experimental activities with variations in binding free energies determined by computational alanine scanning yields correlations of 0.72 and 0.74 when the entropy is neglected or taken into account, respectively. Some key interactions for the TCR-p-MHC binding are analyzed and some possible side chains replacements are proposed in the context of TCR protein engineering. In addition, a comparison of the two theoretical approaches for estimating the role of each side chain in the complexation is given, and a new ad hoc approach to decompose the vibrational entropy term into atomic contributions, the linear decomposition of the vibrational entropy (LDVE), is introduced. The latter allows the rapid calculation of the entropic contribution of interesting side chains to the binding. This new method is based on the idea that the most important contributions to the vibrational entropy of a molecule originate from residues that contribute most to the vibrational amplitude of the normal modes. The LDVE approach is shown to provide results very similar to those of the exact but highly computationally demanding method.