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1.
mBio ; 2(5)2011.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21954306

RESUMO

UNLABELLED: The pathogenesis of avian necrotic enteritis involves NetB, a pore-forming toxin produced by virulent avian isolates of Clostridium perfringens type A. To determine the location and mobility of the netB structural gene, we examined a derivative of the tetracycline-resistant necrotic enteritis strain EHE-NE18, in which netB was insertionally inactivated by the chloramphenicol and thiamphenicol resistance gene catP. Both tetracycline and thiamphenicol resistance could be transferred either together or separately to a recipient strain in plate matings. The separate transconjugants could act as donors in subsequent matings, which demonstrated that the tetracycline resistance determinant and the netB gene were present on different conjugative elements. Large plasmids were isolated from the transconjugants and analyzed by high-throughput sequencing. Analysis of the resultant data indicated that there were actually three large conjugative plasmids present in the original strain, each with its own toxin or antibiotic resistance locus. Each plasmid contained a highly conserved 40-kb region that included plasmid replication and transfer regions that were closely related to the 47-kb conjugative tetracycline resistance plasmid pCW3 from C. perfringens. The plasmids were as follows: (i) a conjugative 49-kb tetracycline resistance plasmid that was very similar to pCW3, (ii) a conjugative 82-kb plasmid that contained the netB gene and other potential virulence genes, and (iii) a 70-kb plasmid that carried the cpb2 gene, which encodes a different pore-forming toxin, beta2 toxin. IMPORTANCE: The anaerobic bacterium Clostridium perfringens can cause an avian gastrointestinal disease known as necrotic enteritis. Disease pathogenesis is not well understood, although the plasmid-encoded pore-forming toxin NetB, is an important virulence factor. In this work, we have shown that the plasmid that carries the netB gene is conjugative and has a 40-kb region that is very similar to replication and transfer regions found within each of the sequenced conjugative plasmids from C. perfringens. We also showed that this strain contained two additional large plasmids that were also conjugative and carried a similar 40-kb region. One of these plasmids encoded beta2 toxin, and the other encoded tetracycline resistance. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a bacterial strain that carries three closely related but different independently conjugative plasmids. These results have significant implications for our understanding of the transmission of virulence and antibiotic resistance genes in pathogenic bacteria.


Assuntos
Toxinas Bacterianas/genética , Clostridium perfringens/genética , Clostridium perfringens/isolamento & purificação , Farmacorresistência Bacteriana , Enterocolite Necrosante/microbiologia , Enterotoxinas/genética , Plasmídeos , Antibacterianos/farmacologia , Clostridium perfringens/efeitos dos fármacos , Clostridium perfringens/patogenicidade , Conjugação Genética , DNA Bacteriano/química , DNA Bacteriano/genética , Técnicas de Inativação de Genes , Transferência Genética Horizontal , Humanos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Mutagênese Insercional , Análise de Sequência de DNA
2.
J Phys Chem A ; 112(50): 12896-903, 2008 Dec 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18593141

RESUMO

The key step in the mechanism of the Palladium-catalyzed homocoupling of arylboronic acids ArB(OH)(2)(Ar = 4-Z-C(6)H(4) with Z = MeO, H, CN) in the presence of dioxygen, leading to symmetrical biaryls, has been elucidated by using density functional theory. In particular, by starting from the peroxo complex O(2)PdL(2)(L = PPh(3)), generated in the reaction of dioxygen with the Pd(0) catalyst, the fundamental role played by an intermediate formed by coordination of one oxygen atom of the peroxo complex to the oxophilic boron atom of the arylboronic acid has been pointed out. This adduct reacts with a second molecule of arylboronic acid to generate a cis-Ar-Pd(OOB(OH)(2))L(2) complex that can form the stable intermediate trans-Ar-Pd(OH)L(2) (experimentally characterized) through a sequence of hydrolysis and isomerization reactions. All theoretical insights are in agreement and do substantiate the experimentally postulated mechanism. Furthermore, direct comparison of experimental and computed spectroscopic parameters (here, (31)P chemical shifts) allows us to confirm the formation of the intermediate.

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