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1.
Protein Sci ; 30(2): 328-338, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33103311

ABSTRACT

Tetrathionate hydrolase (4THase) plays an important role in dissimilatory sulfur oxidation in the acidophilic iron- and sulfur-oxidizing bacterium Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans. The structure of recombinant 4THase from A. ferrooxidans (Af-Tth) was determined by X-ray crystallography to a resolution of 1.95 Å. Af-Tth is a homodimer, and its monomer structure exhibits an eight-bladed ß-propeller motif. Two insertion loops participate in dimerization, and one loop forms a cavity with the ß-propeller region. We observed unexplained electron densities in this cavity of the substrate-soaked structure. The anomalous difference map generated using diffraction data collected at a wavelength of 1.9 Å indicated the presence of polymerized sulfur atoms. Asp325, a highly conserved residue among 4THases, was located near the polymerized sulfur atoms. 4THase activity was completely abolished in the site-specific Af-Tth D325N variant, suggesting that Asp325 plays a crucial role in the first step of tetrathionate hydrolysis. Considering that the Af-Tth reaction occurs only under acidic pH, Asp325 acts as an acid for the tetrathionate hydrolysis reaction. The polymerized sulfur atoms in the active site cavity may represent the intermediate product in the subsequent step.


Subject(s)
Acidithiobacillus/enzymology , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Hydrolases/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Protein Multimerization , Tetrathionic Acid/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hydrolases/metabolism , Hydrolysis , Protein Structure, Quaternary , Protein Structure, Secondary , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism
2.
Res Microbiol ; 171(7): 252-259, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32916217

ABSTRACT

This study reports on the effect of inoculum history, growth substrates, and yeast extract on sodium chloride tolerance of Sulfobacillus thermosulfidooxidans DSM 9293T. The concentrations of NaCl for complete inhibition of Fe2+ oxidation by cells initially grown with ferrous iron sulfate, or tetrathionate, or pyrite as energy sources were 525 mM, 725 mM, and 800 mM, respectively. Noticeably, regardless of NaCl concentrations, oxygen consumption rates of S. thermosulfidooxidans with 20 mM tetrathionate were higher than with 50 mM FeSO4. NaCl concentrations of higher than 400 mM strongly inhibited the iron respiration of S. thermosulfidooxidans. In contrast, the presence of NaCl was shown to stimulate tetrathionate oxidation. This trend was especially pronounced in NaCl-adapted cells where respiration rates at 200 mM NaCl were threefold of those in the absence of NaCl. In NaCl-adapted cultures greater respiration rates for tetrathionate were observed than in non-NaCl-adapted cultures, especially at concentrations ≥ 200 mM NaCl. At concentrations of ≤ 200 mM NaCl, cell growth and iron oxidation were enhanced with the addition of increasing concentrations of yeast extract. Thus, cell numbers in cultures with 0.05% yeast extract were ∼5 times higher than without yeast extract addition. At NaCl concentration as high as 400 mM, however, iron oxidation rates improved compared to control assays without yeast extract, but there was no clear dependence on yeast extract concentrations. The initial growth of bacteria with and without yeast extract in the presence of different NaCl concentrations was shown to impact leaching of copper from chalcopyrite. Copper dissolution was enhanced in the presence of 200 mM NaCl and absence of yeast extract, while the addition of 0.02% yeast extract was shown to promote copper solubilization in the presence of 500 mM NaCl.


Subject(s)
Bioreactors/microbiology , Clostridiales/metabolism , Copper/metabolism , Salt Tolerance/physiology , Sodium Chloride/pharmacology , Clostridiales/drug effects , Clostridiales/growth & development , Ferrous Compounds/metabolism , Iron/metabolism , Osmotic Fragility/physiology , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygen/metabolism , Oxygen Consumption/physiology , Sulfides/metabolism , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism
3.
Microbiology (Reading) ; 166(4): 386-397, 2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31999239

ABSTRACT

Chemolithotrophic sulfur oxidation represents a significant part of the biogeochemical cycling of this element. Due to its long evolutionary history, this ancient metabolism is well known for its extensive mechanistic and phylogenetic diversification across a diverse taxonomic spectrum. Here we carried out whole-genome sequencing and analysis of a new betaproteobacterial isolate, Pusillimonas ginsengisoli SBSA, which is found to oxidize thiosulfate via the formation of tetrathionate as an intermediate. The 4.7 Mb SBSA genome was found to encompass a soxCDYZAXOB operon, plus single thiosulfate dehydrogenase (tsdA) and sulfite : acceptor oxidoreductase (sorAB) genes. Recombination-based knockout of tsdA revealed that the entire thiosulfate is first converted to tetrathionate by the activity of thiosulfate dehydrogenase (TsdA) and the Sox pathway is not functional in this bacterium despite the presence of all necessary sox genes. The ∆soxYZ and ∆soxXA knockout mutants exhibited a wild-type-like phenotype for thiosulfate/tetrathionate oxidation, whereas ∆soxB, ∆soxCD and soxO::KanR mutants only oxidized thiosulfate up to tetrathionate intermediate and had complete impairment in tetrathionate oxidation. The substrate-dependent O2 consumption rate of whole cells and the sulfur-oxidizing enzyme activities of cell-free extracts, measured in the presence/absence of thiol inhibitors/glutathione, indicated that glutathione plays a key role in SBSA tetrathionate oxidation. The present findings collectively indicate that the potential glutathione : tetrathionate coupling in P. ginsengisoli involves a novel enzymatic component, which is different from the dual-functional thiol dehydrotransferase (ThdT), while subsequent oxidation of the sulfur intermediates produced (e.g. glutathione : sulfodisulfane molecules) may proceed via the iterative action of soxBCD .


Subject(s)
Alcaligenaceae/metabolism , Chemoautotrophic Growth/genetics , Sulfur/metabolism , Alcaligenaceae/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Genome, Bacterial/genetics , Glutathione/metabolism , Mutation , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxidoreductases/genetics , Oxygen/metabolism , Sulfhydryl Compounds/metabolism , Sulfites/metabolism , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Thiosulfates/metabolism
4.
Biodegradation ; 29(6): 511-524, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30141069

ABSTRACT

Many industrial activities produce H2S, which is toxic at high levels and odorous at even very low levels. Chemolithotrophic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria are often used in its remediation. Recently, we have reported that many heterotrophic bacteria can use sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase and persulfide dioxygenase to oxidize H2S to thiosulfate and sulfite. These bacteria may also potentially be used in H2S biotreatment. Here we report how various heterotrophic bacteria with these enzymes were cultured with organic compounds and the cells were able to rapidly oxidize H2S to zero-valence sulfur and thiosulfate, causing no apparent acidification. Some also converted the produced thiosulfate to tetrathionate. The rates of sulfide oxidation by some of the tested bacteria in suspension, ranging from 8 to 50 µmol min-1 g-1 of cell dry weight at pH 7.4, sufficient for H2S biotreatment. The immobilized bacteria removed H2S as efficiently as the bacteria in suspension, and the inclusion of Fe3O4 nanoparticles during immobilization resulted in increased efficiency for sulfide removal, in part due to chemical oxidation H2S by Fe3O4. Thus, heterotrophic bacteria may be used for H2S biotreatment under aerobic conditions.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/metabolism , Heterotrophic Processes , Hydrogen Sulfide/metabolism , Sulfides/metabolism , Bacteria/cytology , Bacteria/growth & development , Bacteria/ultrastructure , Biodegradation, Environmental , Cells, Immobilized/metabolism , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Oxidation-Reduction , Phylogeny , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Thiosulfates/metabolism
5.
ACS Infect Dis ; 4(1): 39-45, 2018 01 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28918634

ABSTRACT

Complications arising from antibiotic-resistant bacteria are becoming one of the key issues in modern medicine. Members of drug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae spp. include opportunistic pathogens (e.g., Salmonella spp.) that are among the leading causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Overgrowth of these bacteria is considered a hallmark of intestinal dysbiosis. Microcins (small antimicrobial peptides) produced by some gut commensals can potentially cure these conditions by inhibiting these pathogens and have been proposed as a viable alternative to antibiotic treatment. In this proof-of-concept work, we leverage this idea to develop a genetically engineered prototype probiotic to inhibit Salmonella spp. upon exposure to tetrathionate, a molecule produced in the inflamed gut during the course of Salmonella infection. We developed a plasmid-based system capable of conferring the ability to detect and utilize tetrathionate, while at the same time producing microcin H47. We transferred this plasmid-based system to Escherichia coli and demonstrated the ability of the engineered strain to inhibit growth of Salmonella in anaerobic conditions while in the presence of tetrathionate, with no detectable inhibition in the absence of tetrathionate. In direct competition assays between the engineered E. coli and Salmonella, the engineered E. coli had a considerable increase in fitness advantage in the presence of 1 mM tetrathionate as compared to the absence of tetrathionate. In this work, we have demonstrated the ability to engineer a strain of E. coli capable of using an environmental signal indicative of intestinal inflammation as an inducing molecule, resulting in production of a microcin capable of inhibiting the organism responsible for the inflammation.


Subject(s)
Antibiosis , Genetic Engineering , Peptides/metabolism , Probiotics , Salmonella/genetics , Salmonella/metabolism , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides , Disk Diffusion Antimicrobial Tests , Gene Order , Peptides/genetics , Plasmids/genetics
6.
Microbiol Res ; 205: 1-7, 2017 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28942835

ABSTRACT

Molecular mechanisms of chemolithotrophic tetrathionate oxidation are not clearly understood. Here we used transposon(Tn5-mob)-insertion mutagenesis to search for novel tetrathionate oxidation genes in the facultatively chemolithoautotrophic betaproteobacterium Advenella kashmirensis that not only oxidizes tetrathionate, but also produces the same as an intermediate during thiosulfate oxidation. Genome-wide random insertion of Tn5-mob occurred at a frequency of one per 104 donor E. coli cells. A library of 8000 transconjugants yielded five tetrathionate-oxidation-impaired mutants, of which, the one named Ak_Tn_16 was studied here in detail. When grown chemolithoautotrophically on thiosulfate, Ak_Tn_16 converted the total thiosulfate supplied to equivalent amount of tetrathionate, exactly in the same way as the wild type. It could not, however, oxidize the intermediary tetrathionate to sulfate; Ak_Tn_16 could not also oxidize tetrathionate when it was supplied as the starting chemolithotrophic substrate. In the Ak_Tn_16 genome, Tn5-mob was found to have transposed in a novel soxO gene, located just-upstream of soxB, within the sox gene cluster. SoxO was predicted, via iterative threading assembly simulation, to be a glutathione-disulfide (GSSG) reductase. When Ak_Tn_16 was grown in tetrathionate-based chemolithoautotrophic medium supplemented with reduced glutathione (GSH) its tetrathionate-oxidation deficiency, remarkably, was ameliorated. Implications for a key role of GSH in tetrathionate oxidation are discussed in the light of other molecular evidences available for A. kashmirensis.


Subject(s)
Alcaligenaceae/genetics , Alcaligenaceae/metabolism , Glutathione Reductase/genetics , Oxidation-Reduction , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Base Sequence , Chemoautotrophic Growth/genetics , Chemoautotrophic Growth/physiology , DNA Transposable Elements , DNA, Bacterial , Escherichia coli/genetics , Genes, Bacterial/genetics , Glutathione/metabolism , Mutagenesis, Insertional , Sequence Analysis , Sulfur/metabolism , Thiosulfates/metabolism
7.
Nat Biotechnol ; 35(7): 653-658, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28553941

ABSTRACT

Bacteria can be engineered to function as diagnostics or therapeutics in the mammalian gut but commercial translation of technologies to accomplish this has been hindered by the susceptibility of synthetic genetic circuits to mutation and unpredictable function during extended gut colonization. Here, we report stable, engineered bacterial strains that maintain their function for 6 months in the mouse gut. We engineered a commensal murine Escherichia coli strain to detect tetrathionate, which is produced during inflammation. Using our engineered diagnostic strain, which retains memory of exposure in the gut for analysis by fecal testing, we detected tetrathionate in both infection-induced and genetic mouse models of inflammation over 6 months. The synthetic genetic circuits in the engineered strain were genetically stable and functioned as intended over time. The durable performance of these strains confirms the potential of engineered bacteria as living diagnostics.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Gastroenteritis/diagnosis , Gastroenteritis/microbiology , Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Animals , Cell Survival , Escherichia coli/isolation & purification , Female , Genetic Engineering/methods , Intestines , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL
8.
Biochemistry ; 54(33): 5121-4, 2015 Aug 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26252619

ABSTRACT

Tetrathionate, a polythionate oxidation product of microbial hydrogen sulfide and reactive oxygen species from immune cells in the gut, serves as a terminal electron acceptor to confer a growth advantage for Salmonella and other enterobacteria. Here we show that the rat liver selenoenzyme thioredoxin reductase (Txnrd1, TR1) efficiently reduces tetrathionate in vitro. Furthermore, lysates of selenium-supplemented murine macrophages also displayed activity toward tetrathionate, while cells lacking TR1 were unable to reduce tetrathionate. These studies suggest that upregulation of TR1 expression, via selenium supplementation, may modulate the gut microbiome, particularly during inflammation, by regulating the levels of tetrathionate.


Subject(s)
Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Thioredoxin-Disulfide Reductase/metabolism , Animals , Liver/enzymology , Oxidation-Reduction , Rats , Selenium/metabolism
9.
J Bacteriol ; 196(12): 2255-64, 2014 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24727223

ABSTRACT

Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans is a major participant in consortia of microorganisms used for bioleaching. It can obtain energy from the oxidation of Fe(2+), H2, S(0), and various reduced inorganic sulfur compounds (RISCs). Tetrathionate is a key intermediate during RISC oxidation, hydrolyzed by tetrathionate hydrolase (TetH), and used as sole energy source. In this study, a tetH knockout (ΔtetH) mutant and a tetH overexpression strain were constructed and characterized. The tetH overexpression strain grew better on sulfur and tetrathionate and possessed a higher rate of tetrathionate utilization and TetH activity than the wild type. However, its cell yields on tetrathionate were much lower than those on sulfur. The ΔtetH mutant could not grow on tetrathionate but could proliferate on sulfur with a lower cell yield than the wild type's, which indicated that tetrathionate hydrolysis is mediated only by TetH, encoded by tetH. The ΔtetH mutant could survive in ferrous medium with an Fe(2+) oxidation rate similar to that of the wild type. For the tetH overexpression strain, the rate was relatively higher than that of the wild type. The reverse transcription-quantitative PCR (qRT-PCR) results showed that tetH and doxD2 acted synergistically, and doxD2 was considered important in thiosulfate metabolism. Of the two sqr genes, AFE_0267 seemed to play as important a role in sulfide oxidation as AFE_1792. This study not only provides a substantial basis for studying the function of the tetH gene but also may serve as a model to clarify other candidate genes involved in sulfur oxidation in this organism.


Subject(s)
Acidithiobacillus/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial/physiology , Acidithiobacillus/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Energy Metabolism/physiology , Gene Deletion , Oxidation-Reduction , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism
10.
PLoS Pathog ; 9(4): e1003267, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23637594

ABSTRACT

Chemotaxis enhances the fitness of Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) during colitis. However, the chemotaxis receptors conferring this fitness advantage and their cognate signals generated during inflammation remain unknown. Here we identify respiratory electron acceptors that are generated in the intestinal lumen as by-products of the host inflammatory response as in vivo signals for methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs). Three MCPs, including Trg, Tsr and Aer, enhanced the fitness of S. Typhimurium in a mouse colitis model. Aer mediated chemotaxis towards electron acceptors (energy taxis) in vitro and required tetrathionate respiration to confer a fitness advantage in vivo. Tsr mediated energy taxis towards nitrate but not towards tetrathionate in vitro and required nitrate respiration to confer a fitness advantage in vivo. These data suggest that the energy taxis receptors Tsr and Aer respond to distinct in vivo signals to confer a fitness advantage upon S. Typhimurium during inflammation by enabling this facultative anaerobic pathogen to seek out favorable spatial niches containing host-derived electron acceptors that boost its luminal growth.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Chemotaxis , Colitis/microbiology , Energy Metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Salmonella Infections, Animal/microbiology , Salmonella typhimurium/pathogenicity , Animals , Carrier Proteins/metabolism , Colitis/immunology , Electron Transport , Female , Inflammation , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism , Intestines/microbiology , Methyl-Accepting Chemotaxis Proteins , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Inbred CBA , Neutrophils/immunology , Nitrates/metabolism , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Receptors, Cell Surface/metabolism , Salmonella Infections, Animal/immunology , Salmonella typhimurium/immunology , Salmonella typhimurium/physiology , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism
11.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 79(1): 113-20, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23064330

ABSTRACT

Thiosulfate dehydrogenase is known to play a significant role in thiosulfate oxidation in the acidophilic, obligately chemolithoautotroph, Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans. Enzyme activity measured using ferricyanide as the electron acceptor was detected in cell extracts of A. ferrooxidans ATCC 23270 grown on tetrathionate or sulfur, but no activity was detected in ferrous iron-grown cells. The enzyme was enriched 63-fold from cell extracts of tetrathionate-grown cells. Maximum enzyme activity (13.8 U mg(-1)) was observed at pH 2.5 and 70°C. The end product of the enzyme reaction was tetrathionate. The enzyme reduced neither ubiquinone nor horse heart cytochrome c, which serves as an electron acceptor. A major protein with a molecular mass of ∼25 kDa was detected in the partially purified preparation. Heme was not detected in the preparation, according to the results of spectroscopic analysis and heme staining. The open reading frame of AFE_0042 was identified by BLAST by using the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the protein. The gene was found within a region that was previously noted for sulfur metabolism-related gene clustering. The recombinant protein produced in Escherichia coli had a molecular mass of ∼25 kDa and showed thiosulfate dehydrogenase activity, with maximum enzyme activity (6.5 U mg(-1)) observed at pH 2.5 and 50°C.


Subject(s)
Acidithiobacillus/enzymology , Acidithiobacillus/metabolism , Oxidoreductases/genetics , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Cloning, Molecular , Enzyme Stability , Escherichia coli/genetics , Ferrous Compounds/metabolism , Gene Expression , Heme/analysis , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Molecular Weight , Open Reading Frames , Oxidoreductases/chemistry , Oxidoreductases/isolation & purification , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/isolation & purification , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Spectrum Analysis , Sulfur/metabolism , Temperature
12.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 108(42): 17480-5, 2011 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21969563

ABSTRACT

Conventional wisdom holds that microbes support their growth in vertebrate hosts by exploiting a large variety of nutrients. We show here that use of a specific nutrient (ethanolamine) confers a marked growth advantage on Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) in the lumen of the inflamed intestine. In the anaerobic environment of the gut, ethanolamine supports little or no growth by fermentation. However, S. Typhimurium is able to use this carbon source by inducing the gut to produce a respiratory electron acceptor (tetrathionate), which supports anaerobic growth on ethanolamine. The gut normally converts ambient hydrogen sulfide to thiosulfate, which it then oxidizes further to tetrathionate during inflammation. Evidence is provided that S. Typhimurium's growth advantage in an inflamed gut is because of its ability to respire ethanolamine, which is released from host tissue, but is not utilizable by competing bacteria. By inducing intestinal inflammation, S. Typhimurium sidesteps nutritional competition and gains the ability to use an abundant simple substrate, ethanolamine, which is provided by the host.


Subject(s)
Colitis/metabolism , Colitis/microbiology , Ethanolamine/metabolism , Metagenome/physiology , Salmonella Infections, Animal/metabolism , Salmonella Infections, Animal/microbiology , Salmonella typhimurium/metabolism , Salmonella typhimurium/pathogenicity , Animals , Colitis/pathology , Female , Genes, Bacterial , Mice , Mice, 129 Strain , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Multigene Family , Mutation , Salmonella Infections, Animal/pathology , Salmonella typhimurium/genetics , Salmonella typhimurium/growth & development , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Typhoid Fever/metabolism , Typhoid Fever/microbiology , Typhoid Fever/pathology , Virulence/genetics , Virulence/physiology
13.
Gut Microbes ; 2(1): 58-60, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21637020

ABSTRACT

Salmonella is a common cause of food poisoning. However, after ingestion the pathogen has to compete with resident microbes that already occupy the intestinal lumen (microbiota), which poses a challenge for Salmonella to successfully colonize this niche. Recent data show that Salmonella elicits help from the host immune response to beat the competition. After arriving in the intestine, Salmonella elicits acute intestinal inflammation. The respiratory burst of neutrophils that transmigrate into the intestinal lumen during inflammation oxidizes endogenous sulfur compounds to generate a respiratory electron acceptor, tetrathionate. As a result, Salmonella can use tetrathionate respiration to outgrow the fermenting microbiota in the anaerobic environment of the gut, which promotes transmission of the pathogen. This principle might be used by other gut microbes and contribute to changes in the microbiota composition observed during inflammation.


Subject(s)
Gastrointestinal Tract/immunology , Inflammation/microbiology , Intestinal Mucosa/microbiology , Salmonella/pathogenicity , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Animals , Gastrointestinal Tract/microbiology , Humans , Inflammation/immunology , Intestinal Mucosa/immunology , Metagenome , Mice , Neutrophils/immunology , Neutrophils/metabolism , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Salmonella/classification , Salmonella/enzymology , Salmonella/immunology , Salmonella Infections/immunology , Salmonella Infections/microbiology , Salmonella typhimurium/enzymology , Salmonella typhimurium/immunology , Salmonella typhimurium/pathogenicity
14.
Biochimie ; 93(5): 962-8, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21354256

ABSTRACT

Tissue deposition of fibrillar protein aggregates called amyloid is the root cause of several degenerative diseases. Thus identification of compounds which can prevent or reduce protein aggregation can serve as a potential therapeutic target. In the present study we have shown inhibitory effect of sodium tetrathionate toward Hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) amyloidogenesis at pH 2.0. Our study reveals that without sulfonation, sodium tetrathionate prevents amyloid fibril progression. Moreover, it shows that formation of disulfide bonds rather than exposure of hydrophobic surface in protein plays a critical role in initiating fibrillation process. Inhibitory effect of reducing agent ß-mercaptoethanol toward fibrillation process also confirms the involvement of disulfide bond in initiating HEWL amyloidogenesis. These results provide important information toward understanding key interactions that guide amyloidogenesis, which may facilitate development of potential therapeutics.


Subject(s)
Amyloid/metabolism , Cystine/metabolism , Indicators and Reagents/metabolism , Muramidase/metabolism , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Amyloid/chemistry , Amyloid/ultrastructure , Animals , Chickens , Cystine/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/metabolism , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Kinetics , Microscopy, Atomic Force , Muramidase/chemistry , Muramidase/ultrastructure , Protein Binding , Protein Folding , Protein Multimerization , Protein Unfolding
16.
Nature ; 467(7314): 426-9, 2010 Sep 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20864996

ABSTRACT

Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) causes acute gut inflammation by using its virulence factors to invade the intestinal epithelium and survive in mucosal macrophages. The inflammatory response enhances the transmission success of S. Typhimurium by promoting its outgrowth in the gut lumen through unknown mechanisms. Here we show that reactive oxygen species generated during inflammation react with endogenous, luminal sulphur compounds (thiosulphate) to form a new respiratory electron acceptor, tetrathionate. The genes conferring the ability to use tetrathionate as an electron acceptor produce a growth advantage for S. Typhimurium over the competing microbiota in the lumen of the inflamed gut. We conclude that S. Typhimurium virulence factors induce host-driven production of a new electron acceptor that allows the pathogen to use respiration to compete with fermenting gut microbes. Thus the ability to trigger intestinal inflammation is crucial for the biology of this diarrhoeal pathogen.


Subject(s)
Cell Respiration , Electrons , Gastrointestinal Tract/microbiology , Gastrointestinal Tract/pathology , Salmonella typhimurium/metabolism , Animals , Colitis/metabolism , Colitis/microbiology , Electron Transport , Female , Gastrointestinal Tract/metabolism , Inflammation/metabolism , Inflammation/microbiology , Inflammation/pathology , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism , Intestinal Mucosa/microbiology , Intestinal Mucosa/pathology , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Salmonella typhimurium/growth & development , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Thiosulfates/metabolism
17.
Environ Microbiol ; 12(10): 2688-99, 2010 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20482741

ABSTRACT

A new pathway of dimethylsulfide (DMS) metabolism was identified in a novel species of Gammaproteobacteria, Methylophaga thiooxidans sp. nov., in which tetrathionate (S(4)O(6)(2-)) was the end-product of DMS oxidation. Inhibitor evidence indicated that DMS degradation was initiated by demethylation, catalysed by a corrinoid demethylase. Thiosulfate was an intermediate, which was oxidized to tetrathionate by a cytochrome-linked thiosulfate dehydrogenase. Thiosulfate oxidation was coupled to ATP synthesis, and M. thiooxidans could also use exogenous thiosulfate as an energy source during chemolithoheterotrophic growth on DMS or methanol. Cultures grown on a variety of substrates oxidized thiosulfate, indicating that thiosulfate oxidation was constitutive. The observations have relevance to interactions among sulfur-metabolizing bacteria in the marine environment. The production of tetrathionate from an organosulfur precursor is previously undocumented and represents a potential step in the biogeochemical sulfur cycle, providing a 'shunt' across the cycle.


Subject(s)
Environmental Pollutants/metabolism , Piscirickettsiaceae/metabolism , Sulfides/metabolism , Sulfur/metabolism , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Biotransformation , Ecological and Environmental Phenomena , Methyltransferases/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Piscirickettsiaceae/classification , Piscirickettsiaceae/genetics , Thiosulfates/metabolism
18.
Res Microbiol ; 160(10): 767-74, 2009 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19782750

ABSTRACT

Mesophilic iron and sulfur-oxidizing acidophiles are readily found in acid mine drainage sites and bioleaching operations, but relatively little is known about their activities at suboptimal temperatures and in cold environments. The purpose of this work was to characterize the oxidation of elemental sulfur (S(0)), tetrathionate (S4O6(2-)) and ferrous iron (Fe2+) by the psychrotolerant Acidithiobacillus strain SS3. The rates of elemental sulfur and tetrathionate oxidation had temperature optima of 20 degrees and 25 degrees C, respectively, determined using a temperature gradient incubator that involved narrow (1.1 degrees C) incremental increases from 5 degrees to 30 degrees C. Activation energies calculated from the Arrhenius plots were 61 and 89 kJ mol(-1) for tetrathionate and 110 kJ mol(-1) for S(0) oxidation. The oxidation of elemental sulfur produced sulfuric acid at 5 degrees C and decreased the pH to approximately 1. The low pH inhibited further oxidation of the substrate. In media with both S(0) and Fe2+, oxidation of elemental sulfur did not commence until all available ferrous iron was oxidized. These data on sequential oxidation of the two substrates are in keeping with upregulation and downregulation of several proteins previously noted in the literature. Ferric iron was reduced to Fe2+ in parallel with elemental sulfur oxidation, indicating the presence of a sulfur:ferric iron reductase system in this bacterium.


Subject(s)
Acidithiobacillus/metabolism , Cold Temperature , Ferrous Compounds/metabolism , Sulfur/metabolism , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Cations, Divalent/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction
19.
Biosci Biotechnol Biochem ; 73(6): 1381-6, 2009 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19502725

ABSTRACT

When tetrathionate-grown Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans ATCC 23270 cells were incubated with ferric ions and tetrathionate at pH 3.0, ferrous ions were produced enzymatically. Fe(3+)-reductase, which catalyzes Fe(3+) reduction with tetrathionate, was purified to homogeneity not only from tetrathionate-grown, but also from sulfur- and iron-grown A. ferrooxidans ATCC 23270 cells. The results for apparent molecular weight measured by SDS-PAGE (52.3 kD) and the N-terminal amino acid sequences of the purified enzymes from iron-, sulfur, and tetrathionate-grown cells (AVAVPMDSTG) indicate that Fe(3+)-reductase corresponds to tetrathionate hydrolase. The evidence that tetrathionate-grown A. ferrooxidans ATCC 23270 cells have high iron-oxidizing activity at the early log phase, comparable to that of iron-grown ATCC 23270 cells, is supported by our finding that tetrathionate hydrolase produces Fe(2+) from tetrathionate during growth on tetrathionate. This is the first report on ferric reductase activity associated with tetrathionate hydrolase.


Subject(s)
Ferrous Compounds/metabolism , Hydrolases/metabolism , Sulfur/metabolism , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism , Thiobacillus/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Culture Media , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Thiobacillus/enzymology , Thiobacillus/growth & development
20.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 74(18): 5686-94, 2008 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18658286

ABSTRACT

Acidithiobacillus caldus is a moderately thermophilic, acidophilic bacterium that has been reported to be the dominant sulfur oxidizer in stirred-tank processes used to treat gold-bearing arsenopyrite ores. It is also widely distributed in heap reactors used for the extraction of metals from ores. Not only are these bacteria commercially important, they have an interesting physiology, the study of which has been restricted by the nonavailability of defined mutants. A recently reported conjugation system based on the broad-host-range IncW plasmids pSa and R388 was used to transfer mobilizable narrow-host-range suicide plasmid vectors containing inactivated and partially deleted chromosomal genes from Escherichia coli to A. caldus. Through the dual use of a selectable kanamycin resistance gene and a hybridization probe made from a deleted portion of the target chromosomal gene, single- and double-recombinant mutants of A. caldus were isolated. The functionality of the gene inactivation system was shown by the construction of A. caldus arsB and tetH mutants, and the effects of these mutations on cell growth in the presence of arsenic and by means of tetrathionate oxidation were demonstrated.


Subject(s)
Acidithiobacillus/genetics , Conjugation, Genetic , Mutagenesis , Acidithiobacillus/drug effects , Acidithiobacillus/growth & development , Arsenites/pharmacology , Chromosomes, Bacterial , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Escherichia coli/genetics , Gene Targeting , Genes, Bacterial , Genetic Markers , Genetic Vectors , Plasmids , Tetrathionic Acid/metabolism
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