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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

Two of the Mechanims Used by Bacteria to Modify the Environment: Quorum Sensing and ACC Deaminase

Hao, Youai January 2009 (has links)
Quorum sensing (QS) cell-cell communication systems are utilized by bacteria to coordinate their behaviour according to cell density. Several different types of QS signal molecules have been identified, among which acyl-homoserine lactones (AHLs) produced by Proteobacteria have been studied to the greatest extent. QS has been shown to be involved in many aspects of bacterial life, including virulence, bioluminescence, symbiosis, antibiotic production, swarming and swimming motility, biofilm formation, conjugation and growth inhibition. Although QS has been studied extensively in cultured microorganisms, little is known about the QS systems of uncultured microorganisms and the roles of these systems in microbial communities. To extend our knowledge of QS systems and to better understand the signalling that takes place in the natural environment, in the first part of this thesis, isolation and characterization of new QS systems from metagenomic libraries constructed using DNA from activated sludge and soil were described. Using an Agrobacterium biosensor strain, three cosmids (QS6-1, QS10-1 and QS10-2) that encode the production of QS signals were identified and DNA sequence analysis revealed that all three clones encode a novel luxI family AHL synthase and a luxR family transcriptional regulator. Thin layer chromatography revealed that these LuxI homolog proteins are able to synthesize multiple AHL signals. Tandem mass spectrometry analysis revealed that LuxIQS6-1 directs the synthesis of at least three AHLs, 3-O-C14:1 HSL, 3-O-C16:1 HSL and 3-O-C14 HSL; LuxIQS10-1 directs the synthesis of at least 3-O-C12 HSL and 3-O-C14 HSL; while LuxIQS10-2 directs the synthesis of at least C8 HSL and C10 HSL. Two possible new AHLs, C14:3 HSL and (?)-hydroxymethyl-3-O-C14 HSL, were also found to be synthesized by LuxIQS6-1. Agrobacterium tumefaciens is a plant pathogen that causes crown gall disease. Its ability to transfer and integrate foreign DNA into plant genome also makes it a useful tool for plant genetic engineering. Ethylene, the gaseous plant hormone, has been reported to be important for both crown gall development and A. tumefaciens mediated transformation efficiency to plants. ACC deaminase, an enzyme that can break down ACC, the direct precursor of ethylene biosynthesis in plants, is a mechanism used by some plant growth promoting bacteria (PGPB) to promote plant growth by reducing stress ethylene levels. In the second part of this thesis, the effect of ACC deaminase on A. tumefaciens induced crown gall development and on A. tumefaciens mediated transformation efficiency was studied. By either introduction of an ACC deaminase encoding gene into the virulent strain A. tumefaciens C58 or co-inoculation of A. tumefaciens C58 with an ACC deaminase containing PGPB P. putida UW4, using different plant systems including tomato plants and castor bean plants, it was found that the presence of an ACC deaminase significantly inhibited crown gall development. It was also found that introduction of an acdS gene into the disarmed A. tumefaciens strain GV3101::pMP90 reduced the ethylene levels evolved by plants during infection and cocultivation process and increased the transformation efficiency of commercialized canola cultivars. The A. tumefaciens D3 strain was reported to contain an ACC deaminase encoding gene (acdS). In this study it was determined that this strain is an avirulent strain and shows plant growth promoting activity. When co-inoculated with A. tumefaciens C58 on castor bean stems, both the wild type and the acdS knockout mutant showed biocontrol activity and were able to significantly inhibit crown gall formation, with the wild type strain showing slightly better tumor inhibition effects. The mutation of acdS and its regulatory gene lrpL in A. tumefaciens D3 was also found to affect QS signal production of this strain, which indicates a cross talk between the two sets of genes.
2

Two of the Mechanims Used by Bacteria to Modify the Environment: Quorum Sensing and ACC Deaminase

Hao, Youai January 2009 (has links)
Quorum sensing (QS) cell-cell communication systems are utilized by bacteria to coordinate their behaviour according to cell density. Several different types of QS signal molecules have been identified, among which acyl-homoserine lactones (AHLs) produced by Proteobacteria have been studied to the greatest extent. QS has been shown to be involved in many aspects of bacterial life, including virulence, bioluminescence, symbiosis, antibiotic production, swarming and swimming motility, biofilm formation, conjugation and growth inhibition. Although QS has been studied extensively in cultured microorganisms, little is known about the QS systems of uncultured microorganisms and the roles of these systems in microbial communities. To extend our knowledge of QS systems and to better understand the signalling that takes place in the natural environment, in the first part of this thesis, isolation and characterization of new QS systems from metagenomic libraries constructed using DNA from activated sludge and soil were described. Using an Agrobacterium biosensor strain, three cosmids (QS6-1, QS10-1 and QS10-2) that encode the production of QS signals were identified and DNA sequence analysis revealed that all three clones encode a novel luxI family AHL synthase and a luxR family transcriptional regulator. Thin layer chromatography revealed that these LuxI homolog proteins are able to synthesize multiple AHL signals. Tandem mass spectrometry analysis revealed that LuxIQS6-1 directs the synthesis of at least three AHLs, 3-O-C14:1 HSL, 3-O-C16:1 HSL and 3-O-C14 HSL; LuxIQS10-1 directs the synthesis of at least 3-O-C12 HSL and 3-O-C14 HSL; while LuxIQS10-2 directs the synthesis of at least C8 HSL and C10 HSL. Two possible new AHLs, C14:3 HSL and (?)-hydroxymethyl-3-O-C14 HSL, were also found to be synthesized by LuxIQS6-1. Agrobacterium tumefaciens is a plant pathogen that causes crown gall disease. Its ability to transfer and integrate foreign DNA into plant genome also makes it a useful tool for plant genetic engineering. Ethylene, the gaseous plant hormone, has been reported to be important for both crown gall development and A. tumefaciens mediated transformation efficiency to plants. ACC deaminase, an enzyme that can break down ACC, the direct precursor of ethylene biosynthesis in plants, is a mechanism used by some plant growth promoting bacteria (PGPB) to promote plant growth by reducing stress ethylene levels. In the second part of this thesis, the effect of ACC deaminase on A. tumefaciens induced crown gall development and on A. tumefaciens mediated transformation efficiency was studied. By either introduction of an ACC deaminase encoding gene into the virulent strain A. tumefaciens C58 or co-inoculation of A. tumefaciens C58 with an ACC deaminase containing PGPB P. putida UW4, using different plant systems including tomato plants and castor bean plants, it was found that the presence of an ACC deaminase significantly inhibited crown gall development. It was also found that introduction of an acdS gene into the disarmed A. tumefaciens strain GV3101::pMP90 reduced the ethylene levels evolved by plants during infection and cocultivation process and increased the transformation efficiency of commercialized canola cultivars. The A. tumefaciens D3 strain was reported to contain an ACC deaminase encoding gene (acdS). In this study it was determined that this strain is an avirulent strain and shows plant growth promoting activity. When co-inoculated with A. tumefaciens C58 on castor bean stems, both the wild type and the acdS knockout mutant showed biocontrol activity and were able to significantly inhibit crown gall formation, with the wild type strain showing slightly better tumor inhibition effects. The mutation of acdS and its regulatory gene lrpL in A. tumefaciens D3 was also found to affect QS signal production of this strain, which indicates a cross talk between the two sets of genes.
3

Phenotypes of Salmonella SdiA in Mice and Pigs

Swearingen, Matt Charles 01 October 2013 (has links)
No description available.
4

Testing the Hypothesis of Quorum Sensing in Vibrio fischeri : Luminescence, Motility, and Biofilm

Srinivasa Sandeep, S January 2017 (has links) (PDF)
The individual behaviour of prokaryotic organisms such as bacteria often gives rise to complexity that is commonly associated with multicellular behaviour. The transition from unicellular to multicellular behaviour occurs in response to chemical signals, called autoinducers, which bacteria generate and receive internally within a given population. These autoinducers control the gene expression necessary for the emergence of group-behaviour-phenotype. This phenomenon is called quorum sensing (QS). An example of the quorum sensing control of gene regulation has been the luminescence (lux) operon in Vibrio fischeri. The luxI and ainS quorum signalling systems work in conjunction to regulate luminescence in V. fischeri. LuxI and AinS are acyl-synthases that catalyse the production of the autoinducers C6-HSL and C8-HSL respectively. These autoinducers bind to LuxR, a transcriptional activator of the lux operon, which activates expression of the lux genes causing an increase in luminescence. It was shown that quorum signalling also affects motility and biofilm formation in bacteria. However, the evidence with respect to these phenotypes is conflicting and inconclusive, the reason being the state of quorum is ambiguously defined. It is not properly known whether the observed collective behaviour is purely a result of physical crowding of bacteria, or that both chemical signalling and crowding contribute to this phenomenon. This work attempts to address these issues by studying luminescence, motility, and biofilm, a diverse set of behaviours, yet closely linked to each other in V. fischeri-squid symbiosis. We studied the luminescence response of V. fischeri to both endogenous and externally added signals at per-cell and population level. Experiments with ES114, a wild-type strain of V. fischeri, and ainS mutant showed that (i) luminescence per cell does not mutually correlate with the cell-density, indicating that bacteria do not show greater response to the signal at higher densities; (ii) the activity of the lux signalling circuit shows a strong dependence on the growth stage, (iii) the cells do not show enhanced growth, i.e., they do not derive fitness benefits at higher densities in response to the signal. We anticipated that the culture with a higher cell-density should exhibit greater per-cell-luminescence. However, we found that the luminescence curve of the culture with lower density crosses that of the cultures with higher densities during the exponential phase. Kinetic modelling of the luxI mRNA expression showed that the expression profile qualitatively agrees with the luminescence trend observed in the cultures, supporting the observation that growth-phase plays a major role in regulating the luminescence gene expression. We also studied the effect of autoinducers on motility of V. fischeri. V. fischeri uses flagella to move into the inner crypts of the light organ of the squid. The bacterium secretes autoinducers, encounters secretions of the light organ, and slows down during the final stage of colonization process. Studies have shown that flagellar elaboration is repressed as a consequence of ainS signalling. However, those studies were soft-agar migration assays and carried out with the mutant strain of ainS. We measured real-time planktonic motility of ES114 and the signalling mutant strains of V. fischeri in response to autoinducers added exogenously at different concentrations. We found that the autoinducers do not affect the motility of the strains. We also showed that reduction in motility is purely a consequence of physical crowding of bacteria, and chemical signalling may not be involved in the process. It was shown that reduction in motility leads to biofilm formation. Motile bacteria must lose flagella in order to form biofilm, and signalling controls biofilm formation in many species. Our study on motility showed that reduction in motility occurs because of physical crowding in V. fischeri. Hence, we explored the possibility that physical crowding might lead to formation of biofilm rather than signalling in this species. We quantified exopolysaccharide production by crystal violet assay, which revealed that planktonic cells produce exopolysaccharides, in addition to biofilm cells. The study revealed that V. fischeri cells always produce exopolysaccharides irrespective of their physiological state. We examined the effect of signalling on biofilm in ES114 and the mutant strains using gene-expression analysis. We quantified the expression of various genes involved in biofilm formation and found that both ES114 and the mutants expressed rscS and sypP indicating that exopolysaccharide production is not under the control of autoinducers. Therefore, we hypothesized that biofilm formation in V. fischeri may be a result of physical agglomeration of cells. Our observations indicate that the state of quorum is inadequately defined and there is no direct measure of the underlying process. Multicellular behaviour in V. fischeri is regulated by a complex interplay of cell-density, signalling, and other factors such as the growth phase of the culture, indicating that the state of quorum employs different mechanisms to regulate various phenotypes. Our study reveals that QS is an intricate process, and the accepted mechanisms for QS are incomplete at best.
5

Gene expression control for synthetic patterning of bacterial populations and plants

Boehm, Christian Reiner January 2017 (has links)
The development of shape in multicellular organisms has intrigued human minds for millenia. Empowered by modern genetic techniques, molecular biologists are now striving to not only dissect developmental processes, but to exploit their modularity for the design of custom living systems used in bioproduction, remediation, and regenerative medicine. Currently, our capacity to harness this potential is fundamentally limited by a lack of spatiotemporal control over gene expression in multicellular systems. While several synthetic genetic circuits for control of multicellular patterning have been reported, hierarchical induction of gene expression domains has received little attention from synthetic biologists, despite its fundamental role in biological self-organization. In this thesis, I introduce the first synthetic genetic system implementing population-based AND logic for programmed hierarchical patterning of bacterial populations of Escherichia coli, and address fundamental prerequisites for implementation of an analogous genetic circuit into the emergent multicellular plant model Marchantia polymorpha. In both model systems, I explore the use of bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase as a gene expression engine to control synthetic patterning across populations of cells. In E. coli, I developed a ratiometric assay of bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase activity, which I used to systematically characterize different intact and split enzyme variants. I utilized the best-performing variant to build a three-color patterning system responsive to two different homoserine lactones. I validated the AND gate-like behavior of this system both in cell suspension and in surface culture. Then, I used the synthetic circuit in a membrane-based spatial assay to demonstrate programmed hierarchical patterning of gene expression across bacterial populations. To prepare the adaption of bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase-driven synthetic patterning from the prokaryote E. coli to the eukaryote M. polymorpha, I developed a toolbox of genetic elements for spatial gene expression control in the liverwort: I analyzed codon usage across the transcriptome of M. polymorpha, and used insights gained to design codon-optimized fluorescent reporters successfully expressed from its nuclear and chloroplast genomes. For targeting of bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase to these cellular compartments, I functionally validated nuclear localization signals and chloroplast transit peptides. For spatiotemporal control of bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase in M. polymorpha, I characterized spatially restricted and inducible promoters. For facilitated posttranscriptional processing of target transcripts, I functionally validated viral enhancer sequences in M. polymorpha. Taking advantage of this genetic toolbox, I introduced inducible nuclear-targeted bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase into M. polymorpha. I showed implementation of the bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase/PT7 expression system accompanied by hypermethylation of its target nuclear transgene. My observations suggest operation of efficient epigenetic gene silencing in M. polymorpha, and guide future efforts in chassis engineering of this multicellular plant model. Furthermore, my results encourage utilization of spatiotemporally controlled bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase as a targeted silencing system for functional genomic studies and morphogenetic engineering in the liverwort. Taken together, the work presented enhances our capacity for spatiotemporal gene expression control in bacterial populations and plants, facilitating future efforts in synthetic morphogenesis for applications in synthetic biology and metabolic engineering.

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