26 results on '"Delumeau, O."'
Search Results
2. Proline metabolism and NAD kinase activity in soybean calli during short- and long-term exposures to light and NaCl
- Author
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Guerrier, G., Delumeau, O., Renard, M., and Laval-Martin, D.
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- 1997
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3. Molecular architecture of the stressosome, a signal integration and transduction hub
- Author
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Marles-Wright, J., primary, Grant, T., additional, Delumeau, O., additional, van Duinen, G., additional, Firbank, S.J., additional, Lewis, P.J., additional, Murray, J.W., additional, Newman, J.A., additional, Quin, M.B., additional, Race, P.R., additional, Rohou, A., additional, Tichelaar, W., additional, van Heel, M., additional, and Lewis, R.J., additional
- Published
- 2008
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4. Structural and Functional Characterisation of partner switching regulating the environmental stress response in Bacillus subtilis
- Author
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Hardwick, S.W., primary, Pane-Farre, J., additional, Delumeau, O., additional, Marles-Wright, J., additional, Murray, J.W., additional, Hecker, M., additional, and Lewis, R.J., additional
- Published
- 2007
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5. Characterization and possible redox regulation of the purified calmodulin-dependent NAD+ kinase from Lycopersicon pimpinellifolium.
- Author
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Montrichard., Françoise, Delumeau, O., Renard, M., and Montrichard, F.
- Subjects
- *
NAD (Coenzyme) , *CURRANT tomato , *PLANT enzymes - Abstract
ABSTRACT The soluble and calmodulin (CaM)-dependent NAD+ kinase from Lycopersicon pimpinellifolium was previously shown to be largely inactivated in isolated cells exposed to a short-term NaCl stress (Delumeau, Morère-Le Paven, Montrichard, Laval-Martin (2000) Plant Cell & Environment 23, 329–336). Nevertheless, the activity could be restored by adding a high dithiothreitol concentration to the protein extract, suggesting that the salt stress triggers an oxidation of the enzyme which leads to its inactivation. It was then interesting to investigate the effect of thiol-modifying reagents and disulphide reductants on the activity of L. pimpinellifolium NAD+ kinase. A three-step purification procedure was then established and allowed isolation of the enzyme which exists under two forms: a monomer and a dimer of a 56 kDa subunit, characterized, respectively, by pIs of 6·8 and 7·1. Isolated NAD+ kinase had a high affinity for CaM, half saturation being obtained for 7 ng mL-1 bovine CaM. The activity of NAD+ kinase was strongly inhibited by thiol-modifying reagents and oxidized glutathione. NAD+ kinase was also found to be air-inactivated, the residual activity being stimulated by disulphide reductants. The most efficient of them is reduced thioredoxin from Escherichia coli which induced a five-fold increase in activity and restored 80% of the initial activity. These results which can be related to those previously observed in vivo suggest that the activity of the L. pimpinellifolium NAD+ kinase, besides its dependence on CaM, is also dependent on the reduction state of the protein which could be regulated by the thioredoxin h/NADP-thioredoxin reductase system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
6. Effect of early trough familiarity on the creep feeding behaviour in suckling piglets and after weaning
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Delumeau, O. and Meunier-Salaün, M.C.
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- 1995
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7. SppI Forms a Membrane Protein Complex with SppA and Inhibits Its Protease Activity in Bacillus subtilis.
- Author
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Henriques G, McGovern S, Neef J, Antelo-Varela M, Götz F, Otto A, Becher D, van Dijl JM, Jules M, and Delumeau O
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- Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Bacillus subtilis drug effects, Bacillus subtilis metabolism, Bacteriocins pharmacology, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Peptide Hydrolases metabolism, Proteolysis, Serine Endopeptidases genetics, Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Protease Inhibitors metabolism, Serine Endopeptidases metabolism
- Abstract
The membrane protease SppA of Bacillus subtilis was first described as a signal peptide peptidase and later shown to confer resistance to lantibiotics. Here, we report that SppA forms octameric complexes with YteJ, a membrane protein of thus-far-unknown function. Interestingly, sppA and yteJ deletion mutants exhibited no protein secretion defects. However, these mutant strains differed significantly in their resistance to antimicrobial peptides. In particular, sppA mutant cells displayed increased sensitivity to the lantibiotics nisin and subtilin and the human lysozyme-derived cationic antimicrobial peptide LP9. Importantly, YteJ was shown to antagonize SppA activity both in vivo and in vitro , and this SppA-inhibitory activity involved the C-terminal domain of YteJ, which was therefore renamed SppI. Most likely, SppI-mediated control is needed to protect B. subtilis against the potentially detrimental protease activity of SppA since a mutant overexpressing sppA by itself displayed defects in cell division. Altogether, we conclude that the SppA-SppI complex of B. subtilis has a major role in protection against antimicrobial peptides. IMPORTANCE Our study presents new insights into the molecular mechanism that regulates the activity of SppA, a widely conserved bacterial membrane protease. We show that the membrane proteins SppA and SppI form a complex in the Gram-positive model bacterium B. subtilis and that SppI inhibits SppA protease activity in vitro and in vivo Furthermore, we demonstrate that the C-terminal domain of SppI is involved in SppA inhibition. Since SppA, through its protease activity, contributes directly to resistance to lantibiotic peptides and cationic antibacterial peptides, we propose that the conserved SppA-SppI complex could play a major role in the evasion of bactericidal peptides, including those produced as part of human innate immune defenses., (Copyright © 2020 Henriques et al.)
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- 2020
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8. Molecular and Physiological Logics of the Pyruvate-Induced Response of a Novel Transporter in Bacillus subtilis .
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Charbonnier T, Le Coq D, McGovern S, Calabre M, Delumeau O, Aymerich S, and Jules M
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- Bacillus subtilis drug effects, Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Carbon metabolism, Catabolite Repression, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Glucose metabolism, Malates metabolism, Membrane Transport Proteins genetics, Mutation, Operon, Pyruvic Acid pharmacology, Regulatory Elements, Transcriptional, Bacillus subtilis physiology, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Membrane Transport Proteins metabolism, Pyruvic Acid metabolism
- Abstract
At the heart of central carbon metabolism, pyruvate is a pivotal metabolite in all living cells. Bacillus subtilis is able to excrete pyruvate as well as to use it as the sole carbon source. We herein reveal that ysbAB (renamed pftAB ), the only operon specifically induced in pyruvate-grown B. subtilis cells, encodes a hetero-oligomeric membrane complex which operates as a facilitated transport system specific for pyruvate, thereby defining a novel class of transporter. We demonstrate that the LytST two-component system is responsible for the induction of pftAB in the presence of pyruvate by binding of the LytT response regulator to a palindromic region upstream of pftAB We show that both glucose and malate, the preferred carbon sources for B. subtilis , trigger the binding of CcpA upstream of pftAB , which results in its catabolite repression. However, an additional CcpA-independent mechanism represses pftAB in the presence of malate. Screening a genome-wide transposon mutant library, we find that an active malic enzyme replenishing the pyruvate pool is required for this repression. We next reveal that the higher the influx of pyruvate, the stronger the CcpA-independent repression of pftAB , which suggests that intracellular pyruvate retroinhibits pftAB induction via LytST. Such a retroinhibition challenges the rational design of novel nature-inspired sensors and synthetic switches but undoubtedly offers new possibilities for the development of integrated sensor/controller circuitry. Overall, we provide evidence for a complete system of sensors, feed-forward and feedback controllers that play a major role in environmental growth of B. subtilis IMPORTANCE Pyruvate is a small-molecule metabolite ubiquitous in living cells. Several species also use it as a carbon source as well as excrete it into the environment. The bacterial systems for pyruvate import/export have yet to be discovered. Here, we identified in the model bacterium Bacillus subtilis the first import/export system specific for pyruvate, PftAB, which defines a novel class of transporter. In this bacterium, extracellular pyruvate acts as the signal molecule for the LytST two-component system (TCS), which in turn induces expression of PftAB. However, when the pyruvate influx is high, LytST activity is drastically retroinhibited. Such a retroinhibition challenges the rational design of novel nature-inspired sensors and synthetic switches but undoubtedly offers new possibilities for the development of integrated sensor/controller circuitry., (Copyright © 2017 Charbonnier et al.)
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- 2017
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9. Revisiting the in vivo GlnR-binding sites at the genome scale in Bacillus subtilis.
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Randazzo P, Aucouturier A, Delumeau O, and Auger S
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- Repressor Proteins genetics, Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Binding Sites genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial genetics, Genes, Bacterial genetics, Transcription, Genetic genetics
- Abstract
Background: In Bacillus subtilis, two major transcriptional factors, GlnR and TnrA, are involved in a sophisticated network of adaptive responses to nitrogen availability. GlnR was reported to repress the transcription of the glnRA, tnrA and ureABC operons under conditions of excess nitrogen. As GlnR and TnrA regulators share the same DNA binding motifs, a genome-wide mapping of in vivo GlnR-binding sites was still needed to clearly define the set of GlnR/TnrA motifs directly bound by GlnR., Methods: We used chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled with hybridization to DNA tiling arrays (ChIP-on-chip) to identify the GlnR DNA-binding sites, in vivo, at the genome scale., Results: We provide evidence that GlnR binds reproducibly to 61 regions on the chromosome. Among those, 20 regions overlap the previously defined in vivo TnrA-binding sites. In combination with real-time in vivo transcriptional profiling using firefly luciferase, we identified the alsT gene as a new member of the GlnR regulon. Additionally, we characterized the GlnR secondary regulon, which is composed of promoter regions harboring a GlnR/TnrA box and bound by GlnR in vivo. However, the growth conditions revealing a GlnR-dependent regulation for this second category of genes are still unknown., Conclusions: Our findings show an extended overlap between the GlnR and TnrA in vivo binding sites. This could allow efficient and fine tuning of gene expression in response to nitrogen availability. GlnR appears to be part of complex transcriptional regulatory networks, which involves interactions between different regulatory proteins.
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- 2017
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10. Termination factor Rho: From the control of pervasive transcription to cell fate determination in Bacillus subtilis.
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Bidnenko V, Nicolas P, Grylak-Mielnicka A, Delumeau O, Auger S, Aucouturier A, Guerin C, Repoila F, Bardowski J, Aymerich S, and Bidnenko E
- Subjects
- Bacillus subtilis genetics, Biofilms growth & development, Cell Movement genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Gene Regulatory Networks genetics, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Spores, Bacterial genetics, Transcriptome genetics, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Rho Factor genetics, Transcription Factors genetics, Transcription Termination, Genetic, Transcription, Genetic
- Abstract
In eukaryotes, RNA species originating from pervasive transcription are regulators of various cellular processes, from the expression of individual genes to the control of cellular development and oncogenesis. In prokaryotes, the function of pervasive transcription and its output on cell physiology is still unknown. Most bacteria possess termination factor Rho, which represses pervasive, mostly antisense, transcription. Here, we investigate the biological significance of Rho-controlled transcription in the Gram-positive model bacterium Bacillus subtilis. Rho inactivation strongly affected gene expression in B. subtilis, as assessed by transcriptome and proteome analysis of a rho-null mutant during exponential growth in rich medium. Subsequent physiological analyses demonstrated that a considerable part of Rho-controlled transcription is connected to balanced regulation of three mutually exclusive differentiation programs: cell motility, biofilm formation, and sporulation. In the absence of Rho, several up-regulated sense and antisense transcripts affect key structural and regulatory elements of these differentiation programs, thereby suppressing motility and biofilm formation and stimulating sporulation. We dissected how Rho is involved in the activity of the cell fate decision-making network, centered on the master regulator Spo0A. We also revealed a novel regulatory mechanism of Spo0A activation through Rho-dependent intragenic transcription termination of the protein kinase kinB gene. Altogether, our findings indicate that distinct Rho-controlled transcripts are functional and constitute a previously unknown built-in module for the control of cell differentiation in B. subtilis. In a broader context, our results highlight the recruitment of the termination factor Rho, for which the conserved biological role is probably to repress pervasive transcription, in highly integrated, bacterium-specific, regulatory networks.
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- 2017
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11. Tracking the Elusive Function of Bacillus subtilis Hfq.
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Rochat T, Delumeau O, Figueroa-Bossi N, Noirot P, Bossi L, Dervyn E, and Bouloc P
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- Bacillus subtilis genetics, Host Factor 1 Protein genetics, Transcriptome, Bacillus subtilis metabolism, Host Factor 1 Protein metabolism, Phenotype
- Abstract
RNA-binding protein Hfq is a key component of the adaptive responses of many proteobacterial species including Escherichia coli, Salmonella enterica and Vibrio cholera. In these organisms, the importance of Hfq largely stems from its participation to regulatory mechanisms involving small non-coding RNAs. In contrast, the function of Hfq in Gram-positive bacteria has remained elusive and somewhat controversial. In the present study, we have further addressed this point by comparing growth phenotypes and transcription profiles between wild-type and an hfq deletion mutant of the model Gram-positive bacterium, Bacillus subtilis. The absence of Hfq had no significant consequences on growth rates under nearly two thousand metabolic conditions and chemical treatments. The only phenotypic difference was a survival defect of B. subtilis hfq mutant in rich medium in stationary phase. Transcriptomic analysis correlated this phenotype with a change in the levels of nearly one hundred transcripts. Albeit a significant fraction of these RNAs (36%) encoded sporulation-related functions, analyses in a strain unable to sporulate ruled out sporulation per se as the basis of the hfq mutant's stationary phase fitness defect. When expressed in Salmonella, B. subtilis hfq complemented the sharp loss of viability of a degP hfq double mutant, attenuating the chronic σE-activated phenotype of this strain. However, B. subtilis hfq did not complement other regulatory deficiencies resulting from loss of Hfq-dependent small RNA activity in Salmonella indicating a limited functional overlap between Salmonella and B. subtilis Hfqs. Overall, this study confirmed that, despite structural similarities with other Hfq proteins, B. subtilis Hfq does not play a central role in post-transcriptional regulation but might have a more specialized function connected with stationary phase physiology. This would account for the high degree of conservation of Hfq proteins in all 17 B. subtilis strains whose genomes have been sequenced.
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- 2015
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12. ε, a new subunit of RNA polymerase found in gram-positive bacteria.
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Keller AN, Yang X, Wiedermannová J, Delumeau O, Krásný L, and Lewis PJ
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- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Protein Conformation, Protein Subunits, Bacillus subtilis enzymology, DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases chemistry, DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases metabolism
- Abstract
RNA polymerase in bacteria is a multisubunit protein complex that is essential for gene expression. We have identified a new subunit of RNA polymerase present in the high-A+T Firmicutes phylum of Gram-positive bacteria and have named it ε. Previously ε had been identified as a small protein (ω1) that copurified with RNA polymerase. We have solved the structure of ε by X-ray crystallography and show that it is not an ω subunit. Rather, ε bears remarkable similarity to the Gp2 family of phage proteins involved in the inhibition of host cell transcription following infection. Deletion of ε shows no phenotype and has no effect on the transcriptional profile of the cell. Determination of the location of ε within the assembly of RNA polymerase core by single-particle analysis suggests that it binds toward the downstream side of the DNA binding cleft. Due to the structural similarity of ε with Gp2 and the fact they bind similar regions of RNA polymerase, we hypothesize that ε may serve a role in protection from phage infection., (Copyright © 2014, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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13. Phosphorylation of Bacillus subtilis gene regulator AbrB modulates its DNA-binding properties.
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Kobir A, Poncet S, Bidnenko V, Delumeau O, Jers C, Zouhir S, Grenha R, Nessler S, Noirot P, and Mijakovic I
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- Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacterial Proteins genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Phosphorylation, Transcription Factors genetics, Bacillus subtilis metabolism, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Transcription Factors metabolism
- Abstract
AbrB is a global gene regulator involved in transition phase phenomena in Bacillus subtilis. It participates in a complex regulatory network governing the expression of stationary-phase functions. AbrB was previously found to be phosphorylated on serine 86 located close to its C-terminal oligomerization domain. Here we report that AbrB can be phosphorylated by three B. subtilis serine/threonine kinases expressed during the transition and stationary phase: PrkC, PrkD and YabT. Our in vitro findings suggest that AbrB phosphorylation impedes its DNA binding and abolishes binding cooperativity. In vivo we established that a phospho-mimetic mutation abrB S86D leads to a significant loss of AbrB control over several key target functions: exoprotease production, competence development and sporulation. A wider transcriptome analysis of abrB S86D and S86A mutant strains revealed deregulation of a large number of target genes. We therefore propose that AbrB phosphorylation serves as an additional input for fine-tuning the activity of this ambiactive gene regulator., (© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2014
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14. An early cytoplasmic step of peptidoglycan synthesis is associated to MreB in Bacillus subtilis.
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Rueff AS, Chastanet A, Domínguez-Escobar J, Yao Z, Yates J, Prejean MV, Delumeau O, Noirot P, Wedlich-Söldner R, Filipe SR, and Carballido-López R
- Subjects
- Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Cell Wall metabolism, Models, Molecular, Mutation, Peptidoglycan genetics, Signal Transduction, Bacillus subtilis metabolism, Cytoplasm metabolism, Peptidoglycan biosynthesis
- Abstract
MreB proteins play a major role during morphogenesis of rod-shaped bacteria by organizing biosynthesis of the peptidoglycan cell wall. However, the mechanisms underlying this process are not well understood. In Bacillus subtilis, membrane-associated MreB polymers have been shown to be associated to elongation-specific complexes containing transmembrane morphogenetic factors and extracellular cell wall assembly proteins. We have now found that an early intracellular step of cell wall synthesis is also associated to MreB. We show that the previously uncharacterized protein YkuR (renamed DapI) is required for synthesis of meso-diaminopimelate (m-DAP), an essential constituent of the peptidoglycan precursor, and that it physically interacts with MreB. Highly inclined laminated optical sheet microscopy revealed that YkuR forms uniformly distributed foci that exhibit fast motion in the cytoplasm, and are not detected in cells lacking MreB. We propose a model in which soluble MreB organizes intracellular steps of peptidoglycan synthesis in the cytoplasm to feed the membrane-associated cell wall synthesizing machineries., (© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2014
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15. Genome-wide identification of genes directly regulated by the pleiotropic transcription factor Spx in Bacillus subtilis.
- Author
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Rochat T, Nicolas P, Delumeau O, Rabatinová A, Korelusová J, Leduc A, Bessières P, Dervyn E, Krásny L, and Noirot P
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, Binding Sites, Consensus Sequence, DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases metabolism, Diamide toxicity, Genome, Bacterial, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Regulon, Stress, Physiological genetics, Sulfhydryl Reagents toxicity, Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Transcription Factors metabolism, Transcription, Genetic
- Abstract
The transcriptional regulator Spx plays a key role in maintaining the redox homeostasis of Bacillus subtilis cells exposed to disulfide stress. Defects in Spx were previously shown to lead to differential expression of numerous genes but direct and indirect regulatory effects could not be distinguished. Here we identified 283 discrete chromosomal sites potentially bound by the Spx-RNA polymerase (Spx-RNAP) complex using chromatin immunoprecipitation of Spx. Three quarters of these sites were located near Sigma(A)-dependent promoters, and upon diamide treatment, the fraction of the Spx-RNAP complex increased in parallel with the number and occupancy of DNA sites. Correlation of Spx-RNAP-binding sites with gene differential expression in wild-type and Δspx strains exposed or not to diamide revealed that 144 transcription units comprising 275 genes were potentially under direct Spx regulation. Spx-controlled promoters exhibited an extended -35 box in which nucleotide composition at the -43/-44 positions strongly correlated with observed activation. In vitro transcription confirmed activation by oxidized Spx of seven newly identified promoters, of which one was also activated by reduced Spx. Our study globally characterized the Spx regulatory network, revealing its role in the basal expression of some genes and its complex interplay with other stress responses.
- Published
- 2012
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16. Condition-dependent transcriptome reveals high-level regulatory architecture in Bacillus subtilis.
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Nicolas P, Mäder U, Dervyn E, Rochat T, Leduc A, Pigeonneau N, Bidnenko E, Marchadier E, Hoebeke M, Aymerich S, Becher D, Bisicchia P, Botella E, Delumeau O, Doherty G, Denham EL, Fogg MJ, Fromion V, Goelzer A, Hansen A, Härtig E, Harwood CR, Homuth G, Jarmer H, Jules M, Klipp E, Le Chat L, Lecointe F, Lewis P, Liebermeister W, March A, Mars RA, Nannapaneni P, Noone D, Pohl S, Rinn B, Rügheimer F, Sappa PK, Samson F, Schaffer M, Schwikowski B, Steil L, Stülke J, Wiegert T, Devine KM, Wilkinson AJ, van Dijl JM, Hecker M, Völker U, Bessières P, and Noirot P
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Physiological, Algorithms, Binding Sites, Gene Expression Profiling, Gene Regulatory Networks, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, RNA, Antisense genetics, RNA, Antisense metabolism, RNA, Bacterial genetics, RNA, Bacterial metabolism, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Regulon, Sigma Factor metabolism, Terminator Regions, Genetic, Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacillus subtilis physiology, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Transcription, Genetic, Transcriptome
- Abstract
Bacteria adapt to environmental stimuli by adjusting their transcriptomes in a complex manner, the full potential of which has yet to be established for any individual bacterial species. Here, we report the transcriptomes of Bacillus subtilis exposed to a wide range of environmental and nutritional conditions that the organism might encounter in nature. We comprehensively mapped transcription units (TUs) and grouped 2935 promoters into regulons controlled by various RNA polymerase sigma factors, accounting for ~66% of the observed variance in transcriptional activity. This global classification of promoters and detailed description of TUs revealed that a large proportion of the detected antisense RNAs arose from potentially spurious transcription initiation by alternative sigma factors and from imperfect control of transcription termination.
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- 2012
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17. The dynamic protein partnership of RNA polymerase in Bacillus subtilis.
- Author
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Delumeau O, Lecointe F, Muntel J, Guillot A, Guédon E, Monnet V, Hecker M, Becher D, Polard P, and Noirot P
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- Affinity Labels, Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacterial Proteins analysis, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Chromatography, Affinity, DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases analysis, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Multiprotein Complexes analysis, Multiprotein Complexes metabolism, Protein Subunits analysis, Protein Subunits metabolism, Proteomics, RNA, Bacterial analysis, RNA, Bacterial metabolism, RNA, Untranslated, Sigma Factor analysis, Sigma Factor metabolism, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Bacillus subtilis enzymology, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases metabolism
- Abstract
In prokaryotes, transcription results from the activity of a 400 kDa RNA polymerase (RNAP) protein complex composed of at least five subunits (2α, β, β', ω). To ensure adequate responses to changing environmental cues, RNAP activity is tightly controlled by means of interacting regulatory proteins. Here, we report the affinity-purification of the Bacillus subtilis RNAP complexes from cells in different growth states and stress conditions, and the quantitative assessment by mass spectrometry of the dynamic changes in the composition of the RNAP complex. The stoichiometry of RNA polymerase was determined by a comparison of two mass spectrometry-based quantification methods: a label-based and a label-free method. The validated label-free method was then used to quantify the proteins associated with RNAP. The levels of sigma factors bound to RNAP varied during growth and exposure to stress. Elongation factors, helicases such as HelD and PcrA, and novel unknown proteins were also associated with RNAP complexes. The content in 6S RNAs of purified RNAP complexes increased at the onset of the stationary phase. These quantitative variations in the protein and RNA composition of the RNAP complexes well correlate with the known physiology of B. subtilis cells under different conditions., (Copyright © 2011 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2011
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18. Molecular architecture of the "stressosome," a signal integration and transduction hub.
- Author
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Marles-Wright J, Grant T, Delumeau O, van Duinen G, Firbank SJ, Lewis PJ, Murray JW, Newman JA, Quin MB, Race PR, Rohou A, Tichelaar W, van Heel M, and Lewis RJ
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Bacillus subtilis metabolism, Bacillus subtilis ultrastructure, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Bacterial Proteins ultrastructure, Cryoelectron Microscopy, Crystallography, X-Ray, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Models, Biological, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Multiprotein Complexes metabolism, Multiprotein Complexes ultrastructure, Phosphoproteins metabolism, Phosphoproteins ultrastructure, Phosphorylation, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases metabolism, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ultrastructure, Protein Structure, Secondary, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Sigma Factor metabolism, Bacillus subtilis chemistry, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Multiprotein Complexes chemistry, Phosphoproteins chemistry, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases chemistry, Signal Transduction
- Abstract
A commonly used strategy by microorganisms to survive multiple stresses involves a signal transduction cascade that increases the expression of stress-responsive genes. Stress signals can be integrated by a multiprotein signaling hub that responds to various signals to effect a single outcome. We obtained a medium-resolution cryo-electron microscopy reconstruction of the 1.8-megadalton "stressosome" from Bacillus subtilis. Fitting known crystal structures of components into this reconstruction gave a pseudoatomic structure, which had a virus capsid-like core with sensory extensions. We suggest that the different sensory extensions respond to different signals, whereas the conserved domains in the core integrate the varied signals. The architecture of the stressosome provides the potential for cooperativity, suggesting that the response could be tuned dependent on the magnitude of chemophysical insult.
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- 2008
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19. Structural and functional characterization of partner switching regulating the environmental stress response in Bacillus subtilis.
- Author
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Hardwick SW, Pané-Farré J, Delumeau O, Marles-Wright J, Murray JW, Hecker M, and Lewis RJ
- Subjects
- Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Crystallography, X-Ray, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Models, Molecular, Mutation genetics, Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases chemistry, Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases genetics, Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases metabolism, Phosphorylation, Protein Binding, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases chemistry, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases genetics, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases metabolism, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Surface Plasmon Resonance, Bacillus subtilis chemistry, Bacillus subtilis metabolism
- Abstract
The general stress response of Bacillus subtilis and close relatives provides the cell with protection from a variety of stresses. The upstream component of the environmental stress signal transduction cascade is activated by the RsbT kinase that switches binding partners from a 25 S macromolecular complex, the stressosome, to the RsbU phosphatase. Once the RsbU phosphatase is activated by interacting with RsbT, the alternative sigma factor, sigmaB, directs transcription of the general stress regulon. Previously, we demonstrated that the N-terminal domain of RsbU mediates the binding of RsbT. We now describe residues in N-RsbU that are crucial to this interaction by experimentation both in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, crystal structures of the N-RsbU mutants provide a molecular explanation for the loss of interaction. Finally, we also characterize mutants in RsbT that affect binding to both RsbU and a simplified, binary model of the stressosome and thus identify overlapping binding surfaces on the RsbT "switch."
- Published
- 2007
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20. High-molecular-weight complexes of RsbR and paralogues in the environmental signaling pathway of Bacillus subtilis.
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Delumeau O, Chen CC, Murray JW, Yudkin MD, and Lewis RJ
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacillus subtilis metabolism, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Microscopy, Electron, Molecular Sequence Data, Molecular Weight, Multiprotein Complexes chemistry, Multiprotein Complexes ultrastructure, Phosphoproteins genetics, Phosphorylation, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases metabolism, Sequence Alignment, Silver Staining, Bacillus subtilis physiology, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Multiprotein Complexes metabolism, Phosphoproteins metabolism, Signal Transduction
- Abstract
Bacillus subtilis has developed an intricate signal transduction cascade to respond to the imposition of a variety of stresses on the cell. Reversible protein phosphorylation and the formation of alternative protein-protein complexes modulate the activity of sigma(B), the RNA polymerase sigma factor subunit responsible for the transcription of the general stress response genes. Some of the regulators of sigma(B), such as RsbR and RsbS, are known to associate in a 25S complex, called the stressosome, that can bind RsbT until RsbT phosphorylates target residues in RsbR and RsbS. To date, the RsbR-RsbS complex appears to be the most upstream component of the sigma(B) regulatory pathway. This large structure is thought to play an important role in sensing and/or integrating signals from different physical stresses. The roles of the paralogues of RsbR that are found in B. subtilis remain unclear. We describe here how the RsbR paralogues copurify with RsbR from B. subtilis cell lysates, and we demonstrate in vitro that the paralogues form large complexes either with RsbS or with a prepurified RsbR-RsbS binary complex. We conclude from these biochemical studies that stressosomes in B. subtilis cells contain minimally RsbS and all of the RsbT-phosphorylatable RsbR paralogues.
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- 2006
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21. Structure of a nonheme globin in environmental stress signaling.
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Murray JW, Delumeau O, and Lewis RJ
- Subjects
- Bacillus subtilis metabolism, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Crystallization, Phosphoproteins genetics, Phosphoproteins metabolism, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Sigma Factor metabolism, Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial genetics, Models, Molecular, Phosphoproteins chemistry, Signal Transduction genetics
- Abstract
RsbR is a regulator of sigma(B), the RNA polymerase sigma factor subunit responsible for transcribing the general stress response genes when environmental stress is imposed on Bacillus subtilis. The C-terminal domain of RsbR and its paralogues is a substrate for the kinase function of another sigma(B) regulator, RsbT, but the amino acid sequence of the N-terminal domain of RsbR does not reveal any obvious biochemical function. RsbR, its paralogues, and other regulators of sigma(B), including RsbS and RsbT, form large signaling complexes, called stressosomes. We have determined and present here the crystal structure of the N-terminal domain of RsbR. Unexpectedly, this structure belongs to the globin fold superfamily, but there is no bound cofactor. The globin domain from globin-coupled sensory systems replaces the N-terminal domain of RsbR in some bacteria, indicating a common genetic ancestry for RsbR and the globin family. We suggest that the globin fold has been "recycled" in RsbR and that one more activity can be included in the repertoire of globin functions, namely the ability to bind signaling macromolecules such as RsbT.
- Published
- 2005
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22. Phosphorylation and RsbX-dependent dephosphorylation of RsbR in the RsbR-RsbS complex of Bacillus subtilis.
- Author
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Chen CC, Yudkin MD, and Delumeau O
- Subjects
- Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacillus subtilis physiology, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Mutagenesis, Site-Directed, Mutation, Phosphoproteins chemistry, Phosphoproteins genetics, Phosphorylation, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases genetics, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases metabolism, Sigma Factor metabolism, Bacillus subtilis enzymology, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Phosphoproteins metabolism, Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases metabolism, Signal Transduction
- Abstract
In the pathway that controls sigmaB activity, the RsbR-RsbS complex plays an important role by trapping RsbT, a positive regulator of sigmaB of Bacillus subtilis. We have proposed that at the onset of stress, RsbR becomes phosphorylated, resulting in an enhanced activity of RsbT towards RsbS. RsbT is then free to interact with and activate RsbU, which in turn ultimately activates sigmaB. In this study with purified proteins, we used mutant RsbR proteins to analyze the role of its phosphorylatable threonine residues. The results show that the phosphorylation of either of the two RsbT-phosphorylatable threonine residues (T171 and T205) in RsbR enhanced the kinase activity of RsbT towards RsbS. However, it appeared that RsbT preferentially phosphorylates T171. We also present in vitro evidence that identifies RsbX as a potential phosphatase for RsbR T205.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Functional and structural characterization of RsbU, a stress signaling protein phosphatase 2C.
- Author
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Delumeau O, Dutta S, Brigulla M, Kuhnke G, Hardwick SW, Völker U, Yudkin MD, and Lewis RJ
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Bacillus subtilis metabolism, Bacterial Proteins physiology, Crystallography, X-Ray, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Hydrogen Bonding, Models, Biological, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Phenotype, Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases metabolism, Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases physiology, Plasmids metabolism, Protein Binding, Protein Conformation, Protein Phosphatase 2C, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases chemistry, Protein Structure, Secondary, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Sequence Homology, Amino Acid, Signal Transduction, Time Factors, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Phosphoprotein Phosphatases chemistry, Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases chemistry
- Abstract
RsbU is a positive regulator of the activity of sigmaB, the general stress-response sigma factor of Gram+ microorganisms. The N-terminal domain of this protein has no significant sequence homology with proteins of known function, whereas the C-terminal domain is similar to the catalytic domains of PP2C-type phosphatases. The phosphatase activity of RsbU is stimulated greatly during the response to stress by associating with a kinase, RsbT. This association leads to the induction of sigmaB activity. Here we present data on the activation process and demonstrate in vivo that truncations in the N-terminal region of RsbU are deleterious for the activation of RsbU. This conclusion is supported by comparisons of the phosphatase activities of full-length and a truncated form of RsbU in vitro. Our determination of the crystal structure of the N-terminal domain of RsbU from Bacillus subtilis reveals structural similarities to the regulatory domains from ubiquitous protein phosphatases and a conserved domain of sigma-factors, illuminating the activation processes of phosphatases and the evolution of "partner switching." Finally, the molecular basis of kinase recruitment by the RsbU phosphatase is discussed by comparing RsbU sequences from bacteria that either possess or lack RsbT., (Copyright 2004 American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.)
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A supramolecular complex in the environmental stress signalling pathway of Bacillus subtilis.
- Author
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Chen CC, Lewis RJ, Harris R, Yudkin MD, and Delumeau O
- Subjects
- Bacterial Proteins genetics, Chromatography, Affinity, Chromatography, Gel, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Macromolecular Substances, Microscopy, Electron, Phosphoprotein Phosphatases metabolism, Phosphoproteins genetics, Phosphoproteins isolation & purification, Phosphoproteins metabolism, Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases genetics, Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases metabolism, Phosphorylation, Protein Binding, Protein Kinases metabolism, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases genetics, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases isolation & purification, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases metabolism, Bacillus subtilis metabolism, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Regulon, Signal Transduction
- Abstract
SigmaB, an alternative sigma-factor of Bacillus subtilis, mediates the response of the cell to a variety of physical insults. Within the environmental stress signalling pathway RsbU, a protein phosphatase, is stimulated by its interaction with the protein kinase RsbT. In the absence of stress RsbT is expected to be trapped by an alternative binding partner, RsbS. Here, we have demonstrated that RsbS alone cannot act as an alternative partner for RsbT, but instead requires the presence of RsbR to create a high molecular mass RsbR:RsbS complex (approximately 1 MDa) able to capture RsbT. In this complex the phosphorylation state of RsbS, and not that of RsbR, controlled the binding to RsbT, whose kinase activity towards RsbS could be counterbalanced by the activity of RsbX, the phosphatase for RsbS-P. The RsbR:RsbS complex recruited RsbT from a mixture of RsbT and RsbU. The phosphorylated form of RsbR in the complex enhanced the kinase activity of RsbT towards RsbS. This supramolecular complex thus has the functional properties of an alternative partner for RsbT. Electron micrographs of this complex are presented, and the purification of the RsbR:RsbS complex from cellular extracts provides evidence for the existence of such a complex in vivo.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Binding of sigma(A) and sigma(B) to core RNA polymerase after environmental stress in Bacillus subtilis.
- Author
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Rollenhagen C, Antelmann H, Kirstein J, Delumeau O, Hecker M, and Yudkin MD
- Subjects
- Adenosine Triphosphatases genetics, Adenosine Triphosphatases metabolism, Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacillus subtilis metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Heat-Shock Proteins genetics, Heat-Shock Proteins metabolism, Hot Temperature, Protein Binding, Regulon, Surface Plasmon Resonance, Transcription, Genetic, Bacillus subtilis drug effects, Bacillus subtilis physiology, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases metabolism, Ethanol pharmacology, Sigma Factor metabolism
- Abstract
In Bacillus subtilis, the alternative sigma factor sigma(B) is activated in response to environmental stress or energy depletion. The general stress regulon under the control of sigma(B) provides the cell with multiple stress resistance. Experiments were designed to determine how activated sigma(B) replaces sigma(A) as a constituent of the RNA polymerase holoenzyme. Studies of the transcription of the sigma(A)-dependent stress gene clpE under sigma(B)-inducing conditions showed that expression was higher in a sigB mutant background than in the wild type. The relative affinities of sigma(A) and sigma(B) for binding to the core RNA polymerase (E) were determined by means of indirect surface plasmon resonance. The results showed that the affinity of sigma(B) for E was 60-fold lower than that of sigma(A). Western blot analyses with antibodies against sigma(A), sigma(B), and E showed that, after exposure to ethanol stress, the concentration of sigma(B) was only twofold higher than those of sigma(A) and E. Thus, the concentration of sigma(B) after stress is not high enough to compensate for its relatively low affinity for E, and it seems that additional mechanisms must be invoked to account for the binding of sigma(B) to E after stress.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Protein-protein interactions that regulate the energy stress activation of sigma(B) in Bacillus subtilis.
- Author
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Delumeau O, Lewis RJ, and Yudkin MD
- Subjects
- Adenosine Triphosphate metabolism, Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacillus subtilis metabolism, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Binding, Competitive, Carrier Proteins genetics, Carrier Proteins metabolism, Heat-Shock Response, Kinetics, Protein Binding, Sigma Factor genetics, Bacillus subtilis physiology, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases, Sigma Factor metabolism
- Abstract
Sigma(B) is an alternative sigma factor that controls the general stress response in Bacillus subtilis. In the absence of stress, sigma(B) is negatively regulated by anti-sigma factor RsbW. RsbW is also a protein kinase which can phosphorylate RsbV. When cells are stressed, RsbW binds to unphosphorylated RsbV, produced from the phosphorylated form of RsbV by two phosphatases (RsbU and RsbP) which are activated by stress. We now report the values of the K(m) for ATP and the K(i) for ADP of RsbW (0.9 and 0.19 mM, respectively), which reinforce the idea that the kinase activity of RsbW is directly regulated in vivo by the ratio of these nucleotides. RsbW, purified as a dimer, forms complexes with RsbV and sigma(B) with different stoichiometries, i.e., RsbW(2)-RsbV(2) and RsbW(2)-sigma(B)(1). As determined by surface plasmon resonance, the dissociation constants of the RsbW-RsbV and RsbW-sigma(B) interactions were found to be similar (63 and 92 nM, respectively). Nonetheless, an analysis of the complexes by nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in competition assays suggested that the affinity of RsbW(2) for RsbV is much higher than that for sigma(B). The intracellular concentrations of RsbV, RsbW (as a monomer), and sigma(B) measured before stress were similar (1.5, 2.6, and 0.9 micro M, respectively). After ethanol stress they all increased. The increase was greatest for RsbV, whose concentration reached 13 micro M, while those of RsbW (as a monomer) and sigma(B) reached 11.8 and 4.9 micro M, respectively. We conclude that the higher affinity of RsbW for RsbV than for sigma(B), rather than a difference in the concentrations of RsbV and sigma(B), is the driving force that is responsible for the switch of RsbW to unphosphorylated RsbV.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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