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NÃveis sÃricos de interleucina-6 e polimorfismo - 174G>C em infecÃÃo latente pelo Mycobacterium tuberculosis / Serun levels of interleukin-6 and -174G>C polymorphism at the IL-6 gene in latent infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis.Fernando Henrique Azevedo Lopes 24 February 2012 (has links)
CoordenaÃÃo de AperfeiÃoamento de Pessoal de NÃvel Superior / A interleucina-6 (IL-6) à uma importante citocina que exerce papel fundamental na imunopatogÃnese de diversas doenÃas infecciosas. O objetivo deste estudo foi investigar o nÃvel de produÃÃo sistÃmica de IL-6 e aferir o papel funcional do polimorfismo -174 G>C do gene dessa citocina em indivÃduos diagnosticados como portadores de infecÃÃo latente pelo Mycobacterium tuberculosis (ILTB). Para controle, foram utilizados dois grupos de comparaÃÃo: um deles composto por portadores de tuberculose pulmonar ativa (TB) e o outro formado por indivÃduos saudÃveis, doadores de sangue. O grupo ILTB foi composto por 15 indivÃduos, selecionados dentre os contactantes de portadores de TB pulmonar ativa, atendidos no Hospital SÃo Josà de DoenÃas Infecciosas e no Centro de SaÃde da FamÃlia AnastÃcio MagalhÃes. O grupo TB foi formado por 38 pacientes com TB pulmonar ativa, procedentes do Hospital de Messejana, Hospital de Maracanaà e Hospital Geral Dr. CÃsar Cals. O grupo de indivÃduos saudÃveis contava com 63 doadores voluntÃrios de sangue do Centro de Hematologia e Hemoterapia do CearÃ. A dosagem sÃrica de IL-6 foi realizada por meio de um ensaio imunoenzimÃtico (ELISA), com kit especÃfico fornecido pela Invitrogen Corporation. Para purificaÃÃo do DNA, foi utilizado o kit GFX Genomic Blood DNA Purification, da GE Healthcare. O polimorfismo -174GC do gene da IL â 6 foi tipificado pela tÃcnica de reaÃÃo em cadeia da polimerase (PCR), utilizando-se iniciadores de sequÃncia especÃfica (PCR-SSP) (One-Lambda). As medianas de concentraÃÃes sÃricas de IL-6 para os grupos ILTB, TB e saudÃveis foram de, respectivamente, 1,7 pg/mL, 4,3 pg/mL e 0,5 pg/mL (p < 0,0001). Nos trÃs grupos estudados, o genÃtipo encontrado com maior frequÃncia foi o G/G [ILTB = (80%); TB = (58,9%); saudÃveis = (62,8%)]. Em conclusÃo, podemos inferir que a IL-6 deve desempenhar um papel importante na manutenÃÃo do estado de latÃncia, haja vista que sua concentraÃÃo, nos indivÃduos com ILTB, foi 3,4 vezes maior que no grupo saudÃvel. Ademais, constatamos que, na populaÃÃo estudada, o polimorfismo -174GC nÃo se mostrou funcional no Ãmbito da infecÃÃo latente pelo Mycobacterium tuberculosis. / Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is an important cytokine involved in the pathogenesis of multiple infectious diseases. The aim of this study was to investigate the levels of IL-6 production and to correlate to the -174G>C polymorphism at the IL-6 gene in latent infection with M. tuberculosis (ILTB). As controls, two groups were used. One of them with active pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) patients and the other with healthy blood donors. ILTB group was composed by 15 individuals, selected among active pulmonary TB contacts seen at the Hospital SÃo Josà de DoenÃas Infecciosas and the Centro de SaÃde da FamÃlia AnastÃcio MagalhÃes. TB group had 38 patients with active pulmonary disease seen at the Hospital de Messejana, Hospital de Maracanaà and the Hospital Geral Dr. CÃsar Cals. The third group was composed by 63 healthy blood donors from the Centro de Hematologia e Hemoterapia do CearÃ. Serum levels of IL-6 were measured by an ELISA using specific kits from Invitrogen Corporation. For DNA purification a GFX Genomic Blood DNA Purification kit (GE Healthcare) was used. The -174GC polymorphism was analyzed by a SSP-PCR method using One-Lambda kits. Median values of serum levels of IL-6 from ILTB, TB and healthy groups were, respectively, 1.7 pg/mL, 4.3 pg/mL and 0.5 pg/mL (p < 0.0001). For the three studied group, the most frequent genotype found was the G/G (ILTB = 80%; TB = 58.9%; saudÃveis = 62.8%). In conclusion, it is possible to consider that IL-6 should play an important role in the maintenance of latent infection state as its concentrations were 3.4 fold higher in ILTB group than that of healthy controls. Moreover, the -174GC polymorpism was not functional in the ILTB group.
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Nucleic Acid-binding Adenylyl Cyclases in Mycobacteria : Studies on Evolutionary & Biochemical AspectsZaveri, Anisha January 2016 (has links) (PDF)
Mycobacterium tuberculosis is one of the most successful human pathogens, estimated to have infected close to one-third of the global human population. In order to survive within its host, M. tuberculosis utilises multiple signalling strategies, one of them being synthesis and secretion of universal second messenger cAMP. This process is enabled by the presence of sixteen predicted adenylyl cyclases in the genome of M. tuberculosis H37Rv, ten of which have been characterised in vitro. The synthesized cAMP is recognised by ten putative cAMP-binding proteins in which the cyclic AMP-binding domain is associated with a variety of enzymatic domains. The cAMP signal can be extinguished by degradation by phosphodiesterase’s, secretion into the extracellular milieu or via sequestration of the nucleotide by upregulation of a high-affinity cAMP-binding protein.
Of the sixteen adenylyl cyclases (ACs) encoded by M. tuberculosis H37Rv, a subset of multidomain adenylyl cyclases remain poorly characterised, primarily due to challenges associated with studying these in vitro. The adenylyl cyclase domain in these proteins is associated with an NB-ARC domain (nucleotide binding domain common to APAF-1, plant R proteins and CED-4), a TPR domain (tetratricopeptide repeat) and an LuxR-type HTH motif (helix-turn-helix). This architecture places these multidomain mycobacterial ACs within a larger group of STAND (Signal transduction ATPase’s with numerous domains) proteins, and hence they will be referred to as STAND ACs. The STAND proteins are a recently recognised class of multidomain ATPases which integrate a variety of signals prior to activation. Activation is accompanied by formation of large oligomeric signalling hubs which facilitate downstream signalling events. While most STAND proteins have a single effector domain followed by an NB-ARC domain and a scaffolding domain, the STAND ACs distinguish themselves by retaining two effector domains, the AC domain and the HTH domain, at the N- and C- termini respectively.
The cyclase, NB-ARC, TPR and HTH domains have widely divergent taxonomic distributions making the presence of these four domains in a single polypeptide rare. In fact, proteins with cyclase-NB-ARC-TPR-HTH (C-A-T-H) domain organisation were found to be encoded almost exclusively by slow growing mycobacterial species, a clade that harbours most mycobacterial pathogens, such as M. tuberculosis and M. leprae. Notably, one of the STAND ACs, Rv0386, is the only mycobacterial AC shown till date to be required for virulence of M. tuberculosis in mice.
Using phylogenetic, the evolutionary underpinnings of this domain architecture were examined. The STAND ACs appear to have most likely evolved via a domain gain event from a cyclase-ATPase-TPR progenitor encoded by a strain ancestral to M. marina. Subsequently, the genes duplicated and diverged, sometimes leading to frameshift mutations splitting the cyclase domain from the C-terminal domains. Consequently, M. tuberculosis encodes for three ‘full-length’ STAND ACs, namely, Rv0386, Rv1358 and Rv2488c and one split STAND AC. The split STAND AC is made up of Rv0891c, containing the AC domain, and Rv0890c, containing the NB-ARC, TPR and HTH domains. rv0891c and rv0890c were found to be expressed as an operatic transcript, though they were translationally uncoupled. Pertinently, M. Canetti, an early-branching species of the M. tuberculosis complex, contains an orthologue of Rv0891c and Rv0890c where all four domains are present in a single polypeptide.
Sequence analysis of the four STAND ACs in M. tuberculosis allowed predictions of significant divergence in function. These proteins showed high sequence conservation in their HTH domains, with substantial sequence divergence in their TPR, NB-ARC and AC domains. Biochemical analysis on the AC domains revealed that Rv0891c and Rv2488c possessed poor or no AC activity, respectively. On the other hand, the cyclase domain of Rv0386 could catalyse cAMP synthesis. Moreover, for both Rv0891c and Rv0386, presence of the C-terminal domains potentiated adenylyl cyclase activity, suggestive of allosteric regulation within the STAND AC module. Studies on Rv0891c also revealed that the protein could inhibit the adenylyl cyclase activity of Rv0386 in trans. This result thus provided a novel mechanism by which proteins harbouring poorly active/inactive adenylyl cyclase domains could contribute to cAMP levels, by acting as inhibitors of other adenylyl cyclases.
The STAND ACs were found to be inactive ATPases. Additionally, incubation with nucleotides did not stimulate oligomerisation of these proteins, unlike what has been shown for several other STAND proteins. However, mutations in the NB-ARC domain perturbed the basal oligomeric state of these proteins, indicating that the NB-ARC domain can influence self- association. A subset of NB-ARC domain mutants also showed increased adenylyl cyclase activity, reiterating the inter-domain cross-talk in the STAND ACs.
Since the AC activity of these proteins was meagre, the properties of the HTH domain were examined, as an alternative effector domain. Genomic SELEX was performed using the TPR-HTH domains of Rv0890c, and revealed a set of sequences that bound to this protein, though they lacked common sequence features. Further analysis revealed that Rv0890c bound to DNA in a sequence-independent manner, through the HTH domain. This binding was cooperative with multiple protein units engaging in DNA-binding. Due to the cooperative nature of binding and the lack of sequence preference, Rv0890c appeared coat the DNA molecule. This was further proved by the ability of Rv0890c to protect DNA from DNaseI-mediated degradation, and the requirement for long DNA sequences to form stable DNA-protein complexes.
Studies also revealed that Rv0890c interacted with RNA and ssDNA. In fact, the protein as purified from heterologously expressing E. coli cells was bound to RNA. RNA-binding by a LuxR-type HTH has not been reported previously, providing a new function for this class of HTHs. Interestingly, nucleic acid-binding by a fusion Rv0891c-Rv0890c protein, similar to the one encoded in M. canetti, was shown to stimulate adenylyl cyclase activity. This was likely due to a relief of inhibitory interactions between the TPR-HTH and the AC domains, on DNA-binding.
Given the high sequence similarity between the HTH domains of the STAND ACs, they were expected to bind to DNA in an identical manner. Indeed, the HTH domains of Rv0386 and Rv1358 engaged with DNA with an identical affinity as Rv0890c. Sequence comparisons in the HTH domain enabled identification of conserved basic residues, of which one, R850 was essential for nucleic acid-binding. Surprisingly however, Rv0386 and Rv1358 did not exhibit RNA-binding, pointing towards functional divergence of Rv0890c from its paralogues. Since the HTH domains of the STAND ACs were highly conserved, it was possible that the ability to bind to RNA was instead dictated by the adjacent TPR modules. To examine this possibility, TPR domains were swapped between Rv0890c and Rv0386. Interestingly, both the chimeric proteins showed a reduced ability to bind to DNA, while showing a complete absence of RNA- binding. These results suggested that the TPR domains were critical in modulating nucleic acid-binding. Moreover, the effect of the TPR domain was context-dependent, since the presence of non-cognate TPR domains hampered nucleic acid-binding. However, the ability to bind to RNA was not solely governed by the TPR domain since the Rv0890cTPR-Rv0386HTH chimeric protein did not show RNA-binding, in spite of containing a permissive TPR domain.
To further dissect the molecular requirements for RNA-binding, the conservation of basic residues between the HTH domains of Rv0890c versus Rv1358 and Rv0386 was examined. Interestingly the HTH domain Rv0890c contained two additional positively charged residues over Rv1358 and Rv0386. Mutations of these abolished RNA-binding by Rv0890c. Thus the evolution of two basic residues permit Rv0890c to diverge in its nucleic acid-binding properties, a possible example of defunctionalisation following gene duplication.
In summary, this thesis attempts to understand the evolution and functions of the STAND ACs, a group of pathogenically relevant and uniquely mycobacterial multidomain proteins. Phylogenetic analysis revealed an expansion of this gene family in slow growing mycobacteria. Biochemical characterisation showed that following gene duplication, the resulting proteins diverge both in their ability to synthesize cAMP and in their association with nucleic acids. Studies on these proteins also revealed novel mechanisms of regulation of mycobacterial cAMP levels. Additionally, these proteins exhibited indiscriminate binding to DNA/nucleic acids indicating that they may be responsible for global functions in the cell which extend beyond cAMP synthesis.
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Deciphering the immune response to respiratory pathogens - Role of programmed death-ligand 1 / Déchiffrer la réponse immunitaire contre les pathogènes respiratoires - Rôle de programmed death ligand 1Stephen Victor, Emmanuel 22 September 2016 (has links)
Les pathogènes respiratoires sont parmi les causes majeures de décès dans le monde entier. Déchiffrer les mécanismes d'évasion immune employés par les pathogènes est essentiel pour le développement de stratégies thérapeutiques contre les pathogènes respiratoires. Dans ce contexte, la vole de signalisation PDL-1 (programmed death ligand 1)-PD-1 (programmed death 1) a été impliquée dans l'évasion immune par les cellules tumorales et des virus. Par conséquent, j'ai voulu étudier le rôle de la voie PD-L1 dans la modulation de la réponse immunitaire contre le Mycobacterium tuberculosis et l'Aspergillus fumigatus. J'ai trouvé que l'α-(1,3)-glucan dérivé de l'A. fumigatus activait les cellules dendritiques (CDs) ; la maturation des CDs était partiellement dépendante du Toll like receptor (TLR)-2. L'analyse de la polarisation des cellules T CD4+ a révélé que les CDs éduquées par l'α-(1,3)-glucan induisent la génération de cellules T régulatrices (Treg) CD4+ CD25+FoxP3+, ceci étant en partie lié à l'expression de PD-L1 sur les CDs. De façon importante, le blocage de PD-L1 sur les CDs augmente la sécrétion d'IFN-γ sans moduler la réponse Th17. De manière similaire, PD-L1 induit par M. tuberculosis freine la réponse Th1 sans moduler la réponse Th17. L'analyse des voies de signalisation en aval a indiqué que la voie sonic hedgehog (SHH) en réponse au mycobacterium médiait l'induction de PD-L1 en inhibant des microARNs spécifiques, miR-324-5p et miR-338-5p qui ciblent PD-L1. De plus, SHH induit la cyclooxygénase (COX)-2 qui catalyse la synthèse de la prostaglandine E2 (PGE2) qui agit en synergie avec PD-L1 pour coordonner l'expansion des Treg. / SummaryPulmonary infections caused by respiratory pathogens are among the major causes of death worldwide. The outcome of infection depends on the ability of the host to respond to the challenge posed by the pathogens. Of note, the host needs to sense the pathogen, mount an efficient immune response and finally clear the ensuing inflammatory response to avoid tissue damage. In this context pathogens have adapted numerous strategies that hijack the host mechanisms to dampen the immune response and as a consequence causing infection. The programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) – programmed death 1 (PD-1) pathway is a key pathway involved in mediating self-tolerance thereby maintaining homeostasis. Elegant reports have demonstrated that the PD-L1 – PD-1 pathway is exploited by cancer cells and viruses as an immune evasion mechanism to suppress effector T cell responses. Thus, I aimed at investigating the role of PD-L1 pathway in modulating immune response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis a bacterial pathogen and Aspergillus fumigatus an opportunistic fungal pathogen. I found that A. fumigatus-derived α-(1,3)-glucan induces maturation of DCs and secretion of various immunoregulatory cytokines that was partially dependant on Toll like receptor (TLR)-2. Analysis of CD4+ T cell polarization revealed that α-(1,3)-glucan-educated DCs induced CD4+ CD25+FoxP3+ regulatory T cell (Treg) generation that was in part dependent on the PD-L1 expression on DCs. Importantly, blocking PD-L1 on DCs enhanced IFN-γ secretion without modulating Th17 response. Similarly, M. tuberculosis induced PD-L1 dampened Th1 response without modulating Th17 response. Analysis of downstream signalling pathways indicated that, mycobacterium-responsive sonic hedgehog (SHH) mediated PD-L1 induction by inhibiting specific microRNAs, miR-324-5p and miR-338-5p that target PD-L1. Additionally, SHH induced cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 catalysed the synthesis of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) that synergize with PD-L1 to coordinate the expansion of Tregs. My results thus demonstrate that respiratory pathogens either directly or by harbouring imuunoregulatory antigens highjack the PD-L1 pathway to suppress the protective Th1 response and orchestrate Treg generation without modulating Th17 response. Importantly, my results provide a rational for exploiting immunotherapeutic approaches that target PD-1 – PD-L1 co-stimulatory axis to restore effector T cell response to respiratory pathogens.
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Prevalence, seasonal trends and incidences of cattle tuberculosis and brucellosis in the Cacadu municipality, Eastern Cape, South AfricaNombebe, Thobeka January 2012 (has links)
A cross-sectional study was conducted from February 2011 to August 2012 to investigate the status and identify risk factors for Bovine Tuberculosis (BTB) and cattle Brucellosis. A total of 1277 cattle from 6 selected dairy farms were tested. The farms were purposively selected on suspected risk. Samples were analysed using Rose Bengal Test (RBPT) and Complement Fixation Test (CFT) for Brucellosis and Comparative Intradermal Tuberculin Test (CITT) for BTB. The results revealed the overall prevalence of 1.6% for Brucellosis and no BTB was found. Logistic regression analysis revealed that age of cattle, herd size and number of calves a cow has had significant association with Brucellosis with p-values 0.0071, 0.0490 and 0.000 respectively. The role of location (p>0.05), gender (p>0.05) and breed (p>0.05) in the occurrence of the disease was not statistically significant at α=0.05, although higher rates were obtained in females and Jersey breed. Questionnaires were also administered to 47 individuals a total of 12 females and 35 males. Most respondents were not aware about cattle brucellosis and cattle tuberculosis. Consumption of raw or unpasteurized milk still occurs with 74.75% of respondents revealed.
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Structural Studies Of Mycobacterial Uracil-DNA Glycosylase (Ung) And Single-Stranded DNA Binding Protein (SSB)Kaushal, Prem Singh 04 1900 (has links) (PDF)
For survival and successful propagation, every organism has to maintain the genomic integrity of the cell. The information content, in the form of nucleotide bases, is constantly threatened by endogenous agents and environmental pollutants. In particular, pathogenic mycobacteria are constantly exposed to DNA-damaging assaults such as reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen intermediate (RNI), in their habitat which is inside host macrophage. In addition, the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis makes it more susceptible for guanine oxidation and cytosine deamination as it is G-C rich. Therefore DNA repair mechanisms are extremely important for the mycobacterium. An important enzyme involved in DNA repair is uracil-DNA glycosylase (Ung). To access the genomic information, during repair as well as DNA replication and recombination, dsDNA must unwind to form single stranded (ss) intermediates. ssDNA is more prone to chemical and nuclease attacks that can produce breaks or lesions and can also inappropriately self associate. In order to preserve ssDNA intermediates, cells have evolved a specialized class of ssDNA-binding proteins (SSB) that associate with ssDNA with high affinity. As part of a major programme on mycobacterial proteins in this laboratory, structural studies on mycobacterial uracil-DNA glycosylase (Ung) and single-stranded DNA binding protein (SSB) have been carried out.
The structures were solved using the well-established techniques of protein X-ray crystallography. The hanging drop vapour diffusion and microbatch methods were used for crystallization in all cases. X-ray intensity data were collected on a MAR Research imaging plate mounted on a Rigaku RU200 X-ray generator. The data were processed using the HKL program suite. The structures were solved by the molecular replacement method using the program PHASER and AMoRe. Structure refinements were carried out using the programs CNS and REFMAC. Model building was carried out using COOT. PROCHECK, ALIGN, INSIGHT and NACCESS were used for structure validation and analysis of the refined structures. MD simulations were performed using the software package GROMACS v 3.3.1.
Uracil-DNA glycosylase (UNG), a repair enzyme involved in the excision of uracil from DNA, from mycobacteria differs from UNGs from other sources, particularly in the sequence in the catalytically important loops. The structure of the enzyme from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MtUng) in complex with a proteinaceous inhibitor (Ugi) has been determined by X-ray analysis of a crystal containing seven crystallographically independent copies of the complex. This structure provides the first geometric characterization of a mycobacterial UNG. A comparison of the structure with those of other UNG proteins of known structure shows that a central core region of the molecule is relatively invariant in structure and sequence, while the N- and C-terminal tails exhibit high variability. The tails are probably important in folding and stability. The mycobacterial enzyme exhibits differences in UNG-Ugi interactions compared with those involving UNG from other sources. The MtUng-DNA complex modelled on the basis of the known structure of the complex involving the human enzyme indicates a domain closure in the enzyme when binding to DNA. The binding involves a larger burial of surface area than is observed in binding by human UNG. The DNA-binding site of MtUng is characterized by the presence of a higher proportion of arginyl residues than is found in the binding site of any other UNG of known structure. In addition to the electrostatic effects produced by the arginyl residues, the hydrogen bonds in which they are involved compensate for the loss of some interactions arising from changes in amino-acid residues, particularly in the catalytic loops. The results arising from the present investigation represent unique features of the structure and interaction of mycobacterial Ungs.
To gain further insights, the structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Ung (MtUng) in its free form was also determined. Comparison with appropriate structures indicate that the two domain enzyme slightly closes up when binding to DNA while it slightly opens up when binding to its proteinaceous inhibitor Ugi. The structural changes on complexation in the catalytic loops reflect the special features of their structure in the mycobacterial protein. A comparative analysis of available sequences of the enzyme from different sources indicates high conservation of amino acid residues in the catalytic loops. The uracil binding pocket in the structure is occupied by a citrate ion. The interactions of the citrate ion with the protein mimic those of uracil in addition to providing insights into other possible interactions that inhibitors could be involved in.
SSB is an essential accessory protein required during DNA replication, repair and recombination, and various other DNA transactions. Eubacteral single stranded DNA binding (SSB) proteins constitute an extensively studied family of proteins. The variability in the quaternary association in these tetrameric proteins was first demonstrated through the X-ray analysis of the crystal structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis SSB (MtSSB) and Mycobacterium smegmatis (MsSSB) in this laboratory. Subsequent studies on these proteins elsewhere have further explored this variability, but attention was solely concentrated on the variability in the relative orientation of the two dimers that constitute the tetramer. Furthermore, the effect of this variability on the properties of the tetrameric molecule was not adequately addressed. In order to further explore this variability and strengthen structural information on mycobacterial SSBs in particular, and on SSB proteins in general, the crystal structures of two forms of Mycobacterium leprae single stranded DNA-binding protein (MlSSB) has been determined. Comparison of the structures with other eubacterial SSB structures indicates considerable variation in their quaternary association although the DNA binding domains in all of them exhibit the same OB-fold. This variation has no linear correlation with sequence variation, but it appears to correlate well with variation in protein stability. Molecular dynamics simulations have been carried out on tetrameric molecules derived from the two forms and the prototype E. coli SSB and the individual subunits of both the proteins. The X-ray studies and molecular dynamics simulations together yield information on the relatively rigid and flexible regions of the molecule and the effect of oligomerization on flexibility. The simulations provide insights into the changes in the subunit structure on oligomerization. They also provide insights into the stability and time evolution of the hydrogen bonds/water-bridges that connect two pairs of monomers in the tetramer.
In continuation of our effort to understand structure-function relationships of mycobacterial SSBs, the structure of MsSSB complexed with a 31-mer polydeoxy-cytidine single stranded DNA (ssDNA) was determined. The mode of ssDNA binding in the MsSSB is different from the modes in the known structures of similar complexes of the proteins from E. coli (EcSSB) and Helicobacter pylori (HpSSB). The modes in the EcSSB and HpSSB also exhibit considerable differences between them. A comparison of the three structures reveals the promiscuity of DNA-binding to SSBs from different species in terms of symmetry and the path followed by the bound DNA chain. It also reveals commonalities within the diversity. The regions of the protein molecule involved in DNA-binding and the nature of the residues which interact with the DNA, exhibit substantial similarities. The regions which exhibit similarities are on the central core of the subunit which is unaffected by tetramerisation. The variable features of DNA binding are associated with the periphery of the subunit, which is involved in oligomerization. Thus, there is some correlation between variability in DNA-binding and the known variability in tetrameric association in SSBs.
In addition to the work on Ung and SSB, the author was involved in X-ray studies on crystals of horse methemoglobin at different levels of hydration, which is described in the Appendix of the thesis. The crystal structure of high-salt horse methaemoglobin has been determined at environmental relative humidities (r.h.) of 88, 79, 75 and 66%. The molecule is in the R state in the native and the r.h. 88% crystals. At r.h.79% the molecule appears to move towards the R2 state. The crystal structure at r.h.66% is similar, but not identical, to that at r.h.75%. Thus variation in hydration leads to variation in the quaternary structure. Furthermore, partial dehydration appears to shift the structure from the R state to the R2 state. This observation is in agreement with the earlier conclusion that the changes in protein structure that accompany partial dehydration are similar to those that occur during protein action.
A part of the work presented in the thesis has been reported in the following publications.
1. Singh, P., Talawar, R.K., Krishna, P.D., Varshney, U. & Vijayan, M. (2006). Overexpression, purification, crystallization and preliminary X-ray analysis of uracil N-glycosylase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis in complex with a proteinaceous inhibitor. Acta Crystallogr. F62, 1231-1234.
2. Kaushal, P.S., Talawar, R.K., Krishna, P.D., Varshney, U. & Vijayan, M. (2008). Unique features of the structure and interactions of mycobacterial uracil-DNA glycosylase: structure of a complex of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis enzyme in comparison with those from other sources. Acta Crystallogr. D64, 551-560.
3. Kaushal, P.S., Sankaranarayanan, R. & Vijayan, M. (2008). Water-mediated variability in the structure of relaxed-state haemoglobin. Acta Crystallogr. F64, 463-469.
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Mechanistic And Regulatory Aspects Of The Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Dephosphocoenzyme A KinaseWalia, Guneet 11 1900 (has links) (PDF)
The current, grim world-TB scenario, with TB being the single largest infectious disease
killer, warrants a more effective approach to tackle the deadly pathogen, Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. The deadly synergy of this pathogen with HIV and the emergence of drugresistant strains of the organism present a challenge for disease treatment (Russell et al., 2010). Thus, there is a pressing need for newer drugs with faster killing-kinetics which can claim both the actively-multiplying and latent forms of this pathogen causing the oldest known disease to man. This thesis entitled “Mechanistic and Regulatory Aspects of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Dephosphocoenzyme A Kinase” describes one such potential drug target, which holds promise in future drug development, in detail. The development of efficacious antimycobacterials now requires previously unexplored pathways of the pathogen and cofactor biosynthesis pathways present a good starting point. Therefore, the mycobacterial Coenzyme A (CoA) biosynthesis was chosen for investigation, with the last enzyme of this pathway, dephosphocoenzyme A kinase (CoaE) which was shown to be essential for M. tuberculosis survival, as the focus of the present study (Sassetti et al., 2003).
This thesis presents a detailed biochemical and biophysical characterization of the enzymatic mechanism of mycobacterial CoaE, highlighting several hitherto-unknown, unique features of the enzyme. Mutagenic studies described herein have helped identify the critical residues of the kinase involved in substrate recognition, binding and catalysis. Further, a role has been assigned to the UPF0157 domain of unknown function found in the mycobacterial CoaE as well as in several organisms throughout the living kingdom. Detailed insights into the regulatory characteristics of this enzyme from this work further our current understanding of the regulation of the universal CoA biosynthetic pathway and call for the attribution of a greater role to the last enzyme in pathway regulation than has been previously accredited.
The thesis begins with a survey of the current literature available on tuberculosis and where we stand today in our fight against this dreaded pathogen. Chapter 1 details the characteristic features of the causative organism M. tuberculosis, briefly describing its unique genome and the cellular envelope which the organism puts forward as a tough shield to its biology. This is followed by a brief description of the infection cycle in the host, the pathogen-host interplay in the lung macrophages, the deadly alliance of the disease with HIV and our current drug arsenal against tuberculosis. Further, emphasizing on the need for newer, faster-acting anti-mycobacterials, Chapter 1 presents the rationale for choosing the mycobacterial coenzyme A biosynthetic pathway as an effective target for newer drugs. A detailed description of our current understanding of the five steps constituting the pathway follows, including a comparison of all the five enzymatic steps between the human host and the pathogen. This chapter also sets the objectives of the thesis, describing the choice of the last enzyme of the mycobacterial CoA biosynthesis, dephosphocoenzyme A kinase, for detailed investigation. As described in Chapter 1, the mycobacterial CoaE is vastly different from its human counterpart in terms of its domain organization and regulatory features and is therefore a good target for future drug development.
In this thesis, Rv1631, the probable mycobacterial dephosphocoenzyme A kinase annotated in the Tuberculist database (http://genolist.pasteur.fr/TubercuList), has been unequivocally established as the last enzyme of the tubercular CoA biosynthesis through several independent assays detailed in Chapter 2. The gene was cloned from the mycobacterial genomic DNA, expressed in E. coli and the corresponding recombinant protein purified via a single-step affinity purification method. The mechanistic details of the enzymatic reaction phosphorylating dephosphocoenzyme A (DCoA) to the ubiquitous cofactor, Coenzyme A, have been described in this chapter which presents a detailed biochemical and biophysical characterization of the mycobacterial enzyme, highlighting its novel features as well as unknown properties of this class of enzymes belonging to the Nucleoside Tri-Phosphate (NTP) hydrolase superfamily. The kinetics of the reaction have been biochemically elucidated via four separate assays and the energetics of the enzyme-substrate and enzymeproduct interactions have been detailed by isothermal titration Calorimetry (ITC). Further details on the phosphate donor specificity of the kinase and the order of substrate binding to the enzyme provide a complete picture of the enzymatic mechanism of the mycobacterial dephosphocoenzyme A kinase.
Following on the leads generated in Chapter 2 on the unexpected strong binding of CTP to the enzyme but its inability to serve as a phosphate donor to CoaE, enzymatic assays
described in Chapter 3 helped in the identification of a hitherto unknown, novel regulator of the last enzyme of CoA biosynthesis, the cellular metabolite CTP. This chapter outlines the remarkable interplay between the regulator, CTP and the leading substrate, dephosphocoenzyme A, possibly employed by the cell to modulate enzymatic activity. The interesting twist to the regulatory mechanisms of CoaE added by the involvement of various oligomeric forms of the enzyme and the influence of the regulator and the leading substrate on the dynamic equilibrium between the trimer and the monomer is further detailed. This reequilibration of the oligomeric states of the enzyme effected by the ligands and its role in activity regulation is further substantiated by the fact that CoaE oligomerization is not cysteine-mediated. Further, the effects of the cellular metabolites on the enzyme have been corroborated by limited proteolysis, CD and fluorescence studies which helped elucidate the conformational changes effected by CTP and DCoA on the enzyme. Thus, the third chapter discusses the novel regulatory features employed by the pathogen to regulate metabolite flow through a critical biosynthetic pathway. Results presented in this chapter highlight the fact
that greater importance should be attributed to the last step of CoA biosynthesis in the overall pathway regulation mechanisms than has been previously accorded.
The availability of only three crystal structures for a critical enzyme like
dephosphocoenzyme A kinase (those from Escherichia. coli, Haemophilus influenzae and Thermus thermophilus) is indeed surprising (Obmolova et al., 2001; O’Toole et al., 2003; Seto et al., 2005). In search of a structural basis for the dynamic regulatory interplay between the leading substrate, DCoA and the regulator, CTP, a computational approach was adopted. Interestingly, the mycobacterial enzyme, unlike its other counterparts from the prokaryotic kingdom, is a bi-domain protein of which the C-terminal domain has no assigned function. Thus both the N- and C-terminal domains were independently modeled, stitched together and energy minimized to generate a three-dimensional picture of the mycobacterial dephosphocoenzyme A kinase, as described in Chapter 4. Ligand-docking analyses and a comprehensive analysis of the interactions of each ligand with the enzyme, in terms of the residues interacted with and the strength of the interaction, presented in this chapter provide interesting insights into the CTP-mediated regulation of CoaE providing a final confirmation of the enzymatic inhibition effected by CTP. These homology modeling and ligand-docking studies reveal that CTP binds the enzyme at the site overlapping with that occupied by the leading substrate, thereby potentially obscuring the active site and preventing catalysis. Further, very close structural homology of the modeled full-length enzyme to uridylmonophosphate/cytidylmonophosphate kinases, deoxycytidine kinases and cytidylate kinases from several different sources, with RMSD values in the range of 2.8-3 Å further lend credence to the strong binding of CTP detailed in Chapter 2 and the regulation of enzymatic activity described in Chapter 3. Computational analyses on the mycobacterial CoaE detailed in this chapter further threw up some interesting features of
dephosphocoenzyme A kinases, such as the universal DXD motif in these enzymes, which appears to play a crucial role in catalysis as has been assessed in the next chapter.
It is interesting to note that the P-loop-containing nucleoside monophosphate kinases
(NMPK), with which the dephosphocoenzyme A kinases share significant homology, have three catalytic domains, the nucleotide-binding domain, the acceptor substrate-binding domain and the lid domain. Computational analyses detailed in Chapter 4 including the structural and sequential homology studies, helped in the delineation of the three domains in the mycobacterial enzyme as well as highly conserved residues potentially involved in crucial roles for substrate binding and catalysis. Therefore important residues from all three domains of the mycobacterial CoaE were chosen for mutagenesis to study their contributions to catalysis. Conservative and non-conservative replacements of these residues detailed in Chapter 5 helped in the identification of crucial residues involved in phosphate donor, ATP binding (Lys14 and Arg140); leading substrate, DCoA binding (Leu113); stabilization of the phosphoryl transfer reaction (Asp32 and Arg140) and catalysis (Asp32). Thus, the results reported here present a first attempt to identify the previously unknown functional roles of highly conserved residues in dephosphocoenzyme A kinases. Chapter 5 also delineates the dependence of this kinase on the divalent cation, magnesium, for catalysis, describing a comparison of the kinetic activity by the wild type and the mutants, in the presence and absence of Mg2+. Therefore, this chapter presents a thorough molecular dissection of the roles played by crucial amino acids of the protein and the results herein can serve as a good starting point for targeted drug development approaches.
As described above, another unusual characteristic of the mycobacterial CoaE is the fact that it carries a domain of unknown function, UPF0157, C-terminal to the N-terminal dephosphocoenzyme A kinase domain. The function of this unique C-terminal domain carried by the mycobacterial CoaE has been explored in Chapter 6. The failure of the Nterminal domain (NTD) to be expressed and purified in the soluble fraction in the absence of a domain at its C-terminus (either the mycobacterial CoaE CTD or GST from the pETGEXCT vector) pointed out a possible chaperonic activity for the CTD. A universal chaperonic activity by this domain in the cell was ruled out by carrying out established chaperone assays with insulin, abrin and -crystallin. In order to delineate the CTD sequence involved in the NTD-specific chaperoning activity, deletion mutagenesis helped establish the residues 35-50 (KIACGHKALRVDHIG) of the CTD in the N-terminal domain-specific assistance in folding. Chapter 6 further details the several other potential roles of the mycobacterial CTD probed, including the 4’-phosphopantethienyl transfer, SAM-dependent methyltransferase activity, activation of the NTD via phospholipids among others. Thus the results presented in this chapter are a first attempt at investigating the role of this domain found in several unique architectures in several species across the living kingdom.
Chapter 7 is an attempt to stitch together and summarize the results presented in all the preceding chapters, giving an overview of our present understanding of the mycobacterial CoaE and its novel features.
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Mechanistic And Functional Insights Into Mycobacterium Bovis BCG Induced Expression Of Cyclooxygenase-2 : Implications For Immune Evasion StrategiesBansal, Kushagra 07 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Mycobacteria are multifaceted pathogens capable of causing both acute disease as well as an asymptomatic latent infection. Protective immunity against pathogenic mycobacteria depends principally on cell-mediated immunity executed by efficient anti-infectious functions of type 1 T helper (Th1) subset of CD4+ T cells. The polarization of Th1 responses is orchestrated by IL-12 secreted by antigen presenting cells (APCs) such as macrophages and dendritic cells (DCs). A hallmark of Th1 type CD4+ T cells is the production of IFN-γ that activates plethora of innate cell-mediated immunity. It is well
known that cytokines such as IFN-γ, IL-12 and TNF-α are required for control of mycobacterial infection in humans as well as in mice. However, it remains unclear that why the immune response controls mycobacteria, but does not eradicate infection suggesting critical roles for series of survival strategies employed by pathogenic mycobacteria. In general, these evasion strategies include blockade of phagosome-lysosome fusion, secretion of ROI antagonistic proteins like superoxide dismutase & catalase, inhibition of processing of its antigens for presentation to T cells, induced secretion of immunosuppressive cytokines like IL-10 and TGF-β etc. that ultimately suppress the secretion of IL-12 and IFN-γ from APCs and T cells respectively, culminating in a skewed Th1/Th2 balance towards unprotective Th2 responses. Th2 cells secrete IL-4, IL-5, IL-9, IL-10 and IL-13 but are deficient in clearing intracellular infections including pathogenic mycobacteria. This eventually leads to inhibition of host’s immuno-protective responses with concomitant increase in the vulnerability to chronic mycobacterial infection.
In this intricate process, modulation of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) levels, a key enzyme catalyzing the rate-limiting step in the inducible production of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), by mycobacteria like Mycobacterium bovis BCG assumes critical importance in influencing the overall host immune response. PGE2, an immunosuppressive member of prostaglandin family, is known to restrain production of IL-12, as well as reactive oxygen intermediates. PGE2-mediated inhibition of IL-12R, diminishes IL-12 responsiveness of macrophages and dendritic cells. PGE2 also inhibits the secretion of IFN-γ, which is important in activating T cells and macrophages. In contrast, PGE2 promotes IL-10 production by macrophages, dendritic cells and Th1-to-Th2 shift of acquired immune responses by inhibiting IL-2 and enhancing IL-4 production. Albeit, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) signaling pathways are generally believed to be involved, little is known about the signaling molecules playing significant roles upstream of MAPK and NF-κB pathways during mycobacteria triggered COX-2 expression. Further, information on early receptor proximal signaling mechanisms essential during mycobacteria mediated induction of COX-2 remains scanty.
In this regard, signaling cascade triggered upon recognition of mycobacterial components by pattern recognition receptors (PRR) signify as critical event in overall regulation of cell fate decisions. PRR like Toll like receptor (TLR2) and nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 2 (NOD2) are two nonredundant recognition mechanisms of pathogenic mycobacteria. Several components of mycobacteria have been identified as being responsible for TLR2-dependent activation including 19-kDa lipoprotein, lipomannan etc.; while NOD2 recognizes mycobacterial peptidoglycans through its interaction with muramyl dipeptide (MDP). Interestingly, although mycobacteria reside within phagolysosomes of the infected macrophages, many cell wall antigens like lipoarabinomannan (LAM), phosphatidyl-myo-inositol mannosides (PIM), trehalose 6,6′-dimycolate (TDM; cord factor), PE/PPE family proteins etc., are released and traffic out of the mycobacterial phagosome platform into endocytic compartments. Importantly, these antigens could gain access to the extracellular environment in the form of exocytosed vesicles. In this perspective, PIM represents a variety of phosphatidyl-myo-inositol mannosides (PIM) 1-6 containing molecules and are integral component of the mycobacterial envelope. Further, PIM2 is a known TLR2 agonist and reported to activate NF-κB, AP-1, and MAPK suggesting that mycobacterial envelope antigen PIM2 could modulate the inflammatory responses similar to mycobacteria bacilli. In this context, we explored the signaling events modulated by M. bovis BCG, and role for TLR2 and NOD2 in this intricate process, to trigger the expression of COX-2 in macrophages.
Our studies demonstrated that M. bovis BCG triggered TLR2-dependent signaling leads to COX-2 expression and PGE2 secretion in vitro in macrophages and in vivo in mice. Further, the presence of PGE2 could be demonstrated in sera or CSF of tuberculosis patients. Similarly, mycobacterial TLR2 agonist PIM2 and NOD2 ligand MDP triggered COX-2 expression in macrophages. The induced COX-2 expression in macrophages either by M. bovis BCG or PIM2 or MDP was dependent on NF-κB activation, which was in turn
mediated by iNOS/NO and Wnt-β-Catenin dependent participation of the members of Notch1-PI3K signaling cascade. Importantly, loss of iNOS activity either in iNOS null macrophages or by pharmacological intervention in wild type macrophages severely abrogated M. bovis BCG ability to trigger the generation of Notch1 intracellular domain (NICD) as well as activation of PI3K signaling cascade. On contrary, treatment of macrophages with SIN-1, an NO donor, resulted in a rapid increase in generation of NICD, activation of PI3K pathway as well as the expression of COX-2. Interestingly, pharmacological inhibition as well as siRNA mediated knockdown of Wnt-β-Catenin signaling compromised ability of M. bovis BCG to induce activation of Notch1-PI3K signaling and drive COX-2 expression. Concomitantly, activation of Wnt-β-Catenin signaling by LiCl triggered activation of Notch1 and PI3K pathway as well as COX-2 expression. Stable expression of NICD in RAW 264.7 macrophages resulted in augmented expression of COX-2. Further, signaling perturbation experiments suggested involvement of the cross-talk of Notch1 with PI3K signaling cascade. In this perspective, we propose TLR2 and NOD2 as two major receptors involved in mycobacteria mediated activation of Notch1PI3K signaling, and the activation of iNOS/NO and Wnt-β-Catenin signaling axis as obligatory early receptor proximal signaling events during mycobacteria induced COX-2 expression in macrophages.
Functional characterization of mycobacterial antigens that are potent modulators of host immune responses to pathogens by virtue of induced expression of COX-2 assumes critical importance for deciphering pathogenesis of mycobacterial diseases as well as to identify novel therapeutic targets to combat the disease. In this context, a group of novel antigens carried by M. tuberculosis that are expressed upon infection of macrophages belong to PE and PPE family of proteins. Ten percent of the coding capacity of M. tuberculosis genome is devoted to the PE and PPE gene family members, exemplified by the presence of Pro-Glu (PE) and Pro-Pro-Glu (PPE) motifs near the N-terminus of their gene products. Many members of the PE family exhibit multiple copies of polymorphic guanine-cytosine– rich sequences (PGRS) at the C-terminal end, which are designated as the PE_PGRS family of proteins. A number of PE/PPE proteins associate with the cell wall and are known to induce strong T & B cell responses in humans. However information related to effects of PE/PPE antigens on the maturation and functions of human dendritic cells and eventual modulation of T cell responses as well as underlying signaling events remains obscure.
Our results demonstrated that two cell wall associated/secretory PE_PGRS proteins PE_PGRS 17, PE_PGRS 11 and PPE family protein PPE 34 recognize TLR2, induce maturation and activation of human dendritic cells and enhance the ability of dendritic cells to stimulate CD4+ T cells. In addition, tuberculosis patients were found to have a high frequency of T cells specific to PE_PGRS and PPE antigens. We further found that PE/PPE proteins-mediated activation of dendritic cells involves participation of ERK1/2, p38 MAPK and NF-κB signaling pathways. While, PE_PGRS antigens-matured dendritic cells secreted high amounts of inflammatory cytokine IL-12, PPE 34 triggered maturation of dendritic cells was associated with secretion of high amounts of anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 but not the Th1-polarizing cytokine IL-12. Consistent with these results, PPE 34-matured dendritic cells favored secretion of IL-4, IL-5 and IL-10 from CD4+ T cells and contributed to Th2 skewed cytokine balance ex vivo in healthy individuals and in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis. Interestingly, PPE 34-skewed Th2 immune response involved induced expression of COX-2 in dendritic cells. Our results suggest that by inducing differential maturation and activation of human dendritic cells, PE/PPE proteins could potentially modulate the initiation of host immune responses against mycobacteria.
Taken together, our observations clearly signify the potential role for TLR2 and NOD2 triggering by M. bovis BCG in activating receptor proximal Notch1-PI3K signaling during induced COX-2/PGE2 expression which represents a crucial immune subversion mechanism employed by mycobacteria in order to suppress or attenuate host immune responses. Further, differential maturation of human dendritic cells by PE_PGRS and PPE antigens as well as their ability to stimulate CD4+ T cells towards Th1 and Th2 phenotype respectively, improves our understanding about host-mycobacteria interactions and clearly paves a way towards the development of novel combinatorial therapeutics.
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Transcription In Mycobacteria : From Initiation To ElongationChina, Arnab 03 1900 (has links) (PDF)
The global re-emergence of TB and other mycobacterial infections have underscored the need for a thorough investigation of the biology of the causative agent, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, at the molecular level. The peculiar features of the bacterium such as slow growth rate, dormancy, unique cell wall composition and resistance towards phagocytosis by macrophages demands a detailed understanding of different essential molecular processes including transcription in this genus. Sequencing of several mycobacterial genomes provided an impetus for understanding the gene function and regulation of this formidable pathogen. Transcriptional regulation is one of the major mechanisms controlling gene expression. While a number of transcription units, promoters, sigma factors, and gene functions were identified and characterized, key features of transcription process are yet to be understood.
The current study aims to understand some of the facets of transcription initiation and elongation in mycobacteria. The thesis is divided into five chapters. Chapter 1 introduces the bacterial transcription process. It starts with the description of the central molecule in transcription -the RNA polymerase (RNAP) and its catalytic mechanism. In the next section, each step of the transcription initiation, elongation and termination has been discussed. The mechanistic details as well as the different cellular factors involved in the regulation of the transcription have been discussed. The final part gives an overview of the transcription machinery of the mycobacteria, describing the promoter specificity and regulation of different sigma factors and other transcription factors known till date in mycobacteria. The scope and the objectives of the thesis are presented at the end of this chapter.
In Chapter 2, a method of purification of RNAP from mycobacteria for optimized promoter -polymerase interactions is described. In vitro transcription analysis is important to understand the mechanism of transcription. Various assays for the analysis of initiation, elongation and termination form the basis for better understanding of the process. Purified RNAP with high specific activity is necessary to carry out a variety of these specific reactions. The RNAP purified from Mycobacterium smegmatis from exponential phase showed low σA-promoter specificity in promoter -polymerase interaction studies. This is due to the presence of a large number of sigma factors during exponential phase and under-representation of σA required for house - keeping transcription. In vivo reconstitution of RNAP holoenzyme with σA and its purification procedure which resulted in a holoenzyme with stoichiometric σA content is described in this chapter. The reconstituted holoenzyme showed enhanced promoter -specific binding and transcription activity compared to the enzyme isolated using standard procedure.
Chapter 3 is aimed at the comparison of promoter - specific events during transcription initiation in mycobacteria. DNA -protein interactions that occur during transcription initiation play an important role in regulating gene expression. To initiate transcription, RNAP binds to promoters in a sequence -specific fashion. This is followed by a series of steps governed by the equilibrium binding and kinetic rate constants, which in turn determine the overall efficiency of the transcription process. The first detailed kinetic analysis of promoter - RNAP interactions during transcription initiation in the σA-dependent promoters PrrnAPCL1, PrrnB and Pgyr of M. smegmatis are presented in this chapter. The promoters show comparable equilibrium binding affinity but differ significantly in open complex formation, kinetics of isomerization and promoter clearance. Furthermore, the two rrn promoters exhibit varied kinetic properties during transcription initiation and appear to be subjected to different modes of regulation. In addition to the distinct kinetic patterns, each one of the house -keeping promoters studied has its own rate-limiting step in the initiation pathway, indicating the differences in their regulation.
Moving the focus of the thesis from transcription initiation to elongation, a transcript cleavage factor of M. tuberculosis has been characterized in Chapter 4. After initiation of transcription, a number of proteins participate during elongation and termination by modifying the properties of the RNAP. Gre proteins are one such class of transcription elongation factors which are conserved across bacteria. They regulate transcription by binding near the secondary channel of RNAP, projecting their N-terminal coiled-coil domain into the active center and stimulating hydrolysis of the newly synthesized RNA by RNAP in the backtracked elongation complexes. Rv1080c is a putative gre factor homolog (MtbGre) present in M. tuberculosis.The protein enhanced the efficiency of promoter clearance by lowering the abortive transcription and also rescued the arrested and paused elongation complexes efficiently in the GC rich mycobacterial template. The Gre factor of M. smegmatis encoded by the gene MSMEG_5263 also showed biochemical properties similar to the M. tuberculosis protein. Although the mycobacterial Gre is similar in domain organization and shared the key residues for catalysis and RNAP interaction with Escherichia coli Gre proteins, it could not complement the E. coli strain deficient in Gre factors. Moreover, MtbGre failed to rescue E. coli RNAP stalled elongation complexes, indicating the importance of specific protein - protein interactions for transcript cleavage. Decrease in the level of MtbGre also reduced the bacterial survival by several fold indicating its essential role in mycobacteria and suggesting that a single Gre copes up with the burden of transcription fidelity of the genome.
Chapter 5 describes the studies carried out to identify Gre factor homologs in mycobacteria and deciphering their function during transcription. Gre factors are members of a growing family of proteins which regulate RNAP through secondary channel. Apart from the Gre factor, putative members of this class of proteins are identified in both M. smegmatis and M. tuberculosis.The closest homologue of the canonical Gre factor of M. tuberculosis in its genome is Rv3788. The protein has Gre factor like domain organization and possess the key acidic residues required for transcript cleavage activity and the putative hydrophobic RNAP interacting residues in the C-terminus similar to MtbGre. Despite having these common features, Rv3788 did not stimulate transcript cleavage. In contrast, it turns out to be a transcription inhibitor by preventing the binding of NTPs to the enzyme. The transcription inhibition is not promoter specific, and is mediated by its binding to RNAP through the secondary channel with its N-terminus coiled coil domain. Like M. tuberculosis, the fast growing non-pathogenic mycobacteria M. smegmatis also has an ORF (MSMEG_6292) which is homologous to its canonical Gre factor and it interacts with RNAP in a similar manner. However, this protein did not exert any transcript cleavage or inhibitory activities but could compete with the Gre factor for binding to RNAP. The Gre factor homologs in mycobacteria may be involved in regulation by inhibiting transcription or by blocking the RNAP secondary channel from other RNAP active site modulators.
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A combinatorial approach to query the PknG interactome of Mycobacterium tuberculosisZegarra León, Zegarra León 18 July 2019 (has links)
La capacidad de Mycobacterium tuberculosis para sobrevivir dentro del macrófago contribuye grandemente a su patogenicidad, latencia y persistencia durante la infección. Este bacilo induce alteraciones en el ambiente intrafagosomal e inhibe la maduración del fagosoma, favoreciendo su supervivencia intracelular. M. tuberculosis PknG secuestra al macrófago precisamente al evitar la fusión fagosoma-lisosoma. En este sentido, PknG representa una familia de dianas novedosas para enfrentar la necesidad de nuevos antimicrobianos para la tuberculosis latente. Aquí, apuntamos a: (i) elucidar la base estructural-molecular del ATP y Mg2+ como cofactores de PknG; (ii) caracterizar los parámetros cinéticos que gobiernan la formación del complejo PknG:ATP; e, (iii) identificar péptidos capaces de unirse a PknG para investigar experimentalmente su interactoma usando enfoques combinatorios como “Phage Display”. Nuestros resultados confirman que PknG se une exclusivamente al ATP con una constante de disociación (KD) de 108.8 22.9 µM. El Mg2+ estabiliza térmicamente a PknG de forma ATP-dependiente. Análisis de estado pre-estacionario muestran que la unión y disociación del ATP es rápida en el complejo PknG:ATP. Usando PknGN-Ext, TPR resolvimos la estructura cristalina en el estado unido al ADP mientras que demostramos que el ATP imposibilita la cristalización. Los análisis bioinformáticos de las librerías enriquecidas por Phage Display identificaron 57 potenciales peptidos que interactuarían con PknG. Una comparación cercana con el proteoma de M. tuberculosis proporcionó un subconjunto de 20 proteínas que podrían interactuar con PknG. Nuestros resultados confirmaron cinco proteínas asociadas a PknG previamente reportadas: PknG, DnaK chaperona, transportador ABC Rv1747, Proteína Ribosomal L23 y Factor de Elongación Tu, resaltando la validez de nuestra plataforma para descubrir el interactoma de PknG. Así, nuestros resultados revelan interacciones proteína-proteína putativas que podrían participar en la supervivencia micobacteriana, mientras que también proporcionan bases sólidas para desarrollar drogas antituberculosas al interrumpir estas interacciones o explotar estos peptidos tipo compuesto líder. / The ability of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to survive inside the macrophage greatly contributes to its pathogenicity, latency and persistence during infection. This bacillus induces alterations in the intraphagosomal environment and inhibits phagosome maturation, thus promoting mycobacterial survival. M. tuberculosis PknG hijacks the macrophage precisely by avoiding phagosome-lysosome fusion. In this sense, PknG represents a family of novel targets to cope with the need for new antimicrobials for latent tuberculosis. Here, we aimed to: (i) elucidate the structural-molecular basis of ATP and Mg2+ as PknG cofactors; (ii) characterize the kinetic parameters governing PknG:ATP complex formation; and, (iii) identify PknG-binding peptides to experimentally query PknG’s interactome using combinatorial approach such as Phage Display. Our results confirm that PknG exclusively binds to ATP with a dissociation constant (KD) of 108.8 22.9 µM. Mg2+ thermally stabilizes PknG in an ATP-dependent manner. Pre-steady-state analyses show that ATP binding and dissociation are rapid in the PknG:ATP complex. Using PknGN-Ext, TPR we solved the ADP-state crystal structure while showing that ATP precludes crystallization. Phage Display and bioinformatic analyses identified 57 potential PknG binders. A close comparison to the M. tuberculosis proteome provided a subset of 20 proteins that may interact with PknG. Our results confirmed five previously reported PknG-associated proteins: PknG, DnaK chaperone, ABC transporter Rv1747, Ribosomal Protein L23 and Elongation Factor Tu, highlighting our platform’s validity to uncover the PknG interactome. Altogether, our results reveal putative protein-protein interactions that may play a role in mycobacterial survival, while also providing solid bases for the development of anti-tuberculosis drugs by disrupting these interactions or exploiting these lead-like peptide molecules. / Tesis
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Cell Cycle Associated Gene Expression Predicts Function in MycobacteriaBandekar, Aditya C. 07 April 2020 (has links)
While the major events in prokaryotic cell cycle progression are likely to be coordinated with transcriptional and metabolic changes, these processes remain poorly characterized. Unlike many rapidly-growing bacteria, DNA replication and cell division are temporally-resolved in mycobacteria, making these slow-growing organisms a potentially useful system to investigate the prokaryotic cell cycle. To determine if cell-cycle dependent gene regulation occurs in mycobacteria, we characterized the temporal changes in the transcriptome of synchronously replicating populations of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). By enriching for genes that display a sinusoidal expression pattern, we discover 485 genes that oscillate with a period consistent with the cell cycle. During cytokinesis, the timing of gene induction could be used to predict the timing of gene function, as mRNA abundance was found to correlate with the order in which proteins were recruited to the developing septum. Similarly, the expression pattern of primary metabolic genes could be used to predict the relative importance of these pathways for different cell cycle processes. Pyrimidine synthetic genes peaked during DNA replication and their depletion caused a filamentation phenotype that phenocopied defects in this process. In contrast, the IMP dehydrogenase guaB2 dedicated to guanosine synthesis displayed the opposite expression pattern and its depletion perturbed septation. Together, these data imply obligate coordination between primary metabolism and cell division, and identify periodically regulated genes that can be related to specific cell biological functions.
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