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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The Role of hhbp in Heme Uptake in Haemophilus ducreyi

Alsenani, Qusai January 2016 (has links)
Haemophilus ducreyi is a gram-negative and heme-dependent bactreia. H. ducreyi is the responsible of causing chancroid, a sexually transmitted infection forming genital ulcers. Infection with H. ducreyi is associated with an increased risk of acquiring HIV-1 as well as increasing the risk of the HIV-1 transmission. Heme acquisition in H. ducreyi occur through a receptor mediated process in which it start with binding of hemoglobin and heme to their cognate outer membrane receptors, HgbA and TdhA, respectively. The receptors are energized by the TonB complex. Following that the deposition of heme into the periplasmic area is unclear. Profiling of the periplasmic proteome of the H. ducreyi resulted in the identification of a periplasmic- binding protein that highly expressed in heme limitation conditions, and it has been called hHbp. This protein is encoded by a gene resides in a locus of four genes displaying genetic features of an ABC transporter. The gene cluster is organized as an operon comprising an internal membrane protein (IntPro), a sulphate reductase gamma subunit (dsvC), a heme dependant periplasmic bind-ing protein (hHBP), and an ATPase. The purified periplasmic binding protein, hHbp, bind heme in a dose-dependent and saturable manner. Moreover, the binding between heme and hHbp was specifically competitively inhibited by heme. The proposal planned to cre-ate an isogenic hhbp mutant by insertional inactivation using a kanamycin cassette, to genotypically and phenotypically characterize the mutant and thereby to confirm the cru-cial role of the hhbp gene in heme transport in H. ducreyi. Several attempts to ligate a kanamycin resistance cassette into hhbp to construct such a mutant were unsuccessful de-spite the systematic alteration of the ligation conditions and the use of kanamycin re-sistant genes derived from a variety of different plasmids. The explanations for this fail-ure are uncertain. In future work, two other approaches to construct an hhbp mutant in-clude the FRT-FLP recombinase technology and the use of overlapping extension PCR with a chloramphenicol cassette.

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