Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.3.1.184 (LasR)
897 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cell-to-cell signaling involving N-acyl-homoserine lactone compounds termed autoinducers (AIs) is instrumental to virulence factor production and biofilm development by Pseudomonas aeruginosa. In order to determine the importance of cell-to-cell signaling during the colonization of mechanically ventilated patients, we collected 442 P. aeruginosa pulmonary isolates from 13 patients. Phenotypic characterization showed that 81% of these isolates produced the AI-dependent virulence factors elastase, protease, and rhamnolipids. We identified nine genotypically distinct P. aeruginosa strains. Six of these strains produced AIs [N-butanoyl-homoserine lactone or N-(3-oxo-dodecanoyl)-homoserine lactone] and extracellular virulence factors (elastase, total exoprotease, rhamnolipid, hydrogen cyanide, or pyocyanin) in vitro. Three of the nine strains were defective in the production of both AIs and extracellular virulence factors. Two of these strains had mutational defects in both the lasR and rhlR genes, which encode the N-acyl-homoserine lactone-dependent transcriptional regulators LasR and RhlR, respectively. The third of these AI-deficient strains was only mutated in the lasR gene. Our observations suggest that most, but not all, strains colonizing intubated patients are able to produce virulence factors and that mutations affecting the cell-to-cell signaling circuit are preferentially located in the transcriptional regulator genes.
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PMID:Characterization of cell-to-cell signaling-deficient Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains colonizing intubated patients. 1476 16

The Burkholderia cepacia epidemic strain marker (BCESM) is a useful epidemiological marker for virulent B. cenocepacia strains that infect patients with cystic fibrosis. However, there was no evidence that the original marker, identified by random amplified polymorphic DNA fingerprinting, contributed to pathogenicity. Here we demonstrate that the BCESM is part of a novel genomic island encoding genes linked to both virulence and metabolism. The BCESM was present on a 31.7-kb low-GC-content island that encoded 35 predicted coding sequences (CDSs): an N-acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) synthase gene (cciI) and corresponding transcriptional regulator (cciR), representing the first time cell signaling genes have been found on a genomic island; fatty acid biosynthesis genes; an IS66 family transposase; transcriptional regulator CDSs; amino acid metabolism genes; and a group of hypothetical genes. Mutagenesis of the AHL synthase, amidase (amiI), and porin (opcI) genes on the island was carried out. Testing of the isogenic mutants in a rat model of chronic lung infection demonstrated that the amidase played a role in persistence, while the AHL synthase and porin were both involved in virulence. The island, designated the B. cenocepacia island (cci), is the first genomic island to be defined in the B. cepacia complex and its discovery validates the original epidemiological correlation of the BCESM with virulent CF strains. The features of the cci, which overlap both pathogenicity and metabolism, expand the concept of bacterial pathogenicity islands and illustrate the diversity of accessory functions that can be acquired by lateral gene transfer in bacteria.
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PMID:The Burkholderia cepacia epidemic strain marker is part of a novel genomic island encoding both virulence and metabolism-associated genes in Burkholderia cenocepacia. 1497 60

In Gram-negative bacteria, intercellular communication and virulence regulation is mediated by the diffusible chemical signal acyl-homoserine-L-lactone (AHL). The AHL synthase enzymes produce a variety of AHLs from the substrates S-adenosyl-L-methionine and acyl-acyl carrier protein. LasI, the AHL synthase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, has low solubility and has failed to crystallize despite extensive crystallization trials. Based on the previously determined structure of the AHL synthase EsaI, active soluble LasI was produced by re-engineering residues in a tight turn to produce a type I' beta-turn. The resulting protein is active, more stable than the wild-type LasI and has been crystallized in the cubic space group F23, with unit-cell parameters a = b = c = 154.90 A.
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PMID:Crystallization of Pseudomonas aeruginosa AHL synthase LasI using beta-turn crystal engineering. 1499 79

Many plant-associated bacteria produce and utilize diffusible N-acyl-homoserine lactones (AHLs) to regulate the expression of specific bacterial genes and operons. AHL-mediated regulation utilizes two genes that encode proteins similar to the LuxI/LuxR system originally studied in the marine symbiont Vibrio fischeri. The LuxI-type proteins are AHL synthases that assemble the diffusible AHL signal. The LuxR-type proteins are AHL-responsive transcriptional regulatory proteins. LuxR proteins control the transcription of specific bacterial genes in response to the levels of AHL signal. To date, AHL-mediated gene regulation has been identified in a broad range of gram-negative bacteria, most of which are host-associated. However, it seems unlikely that such a widely conserved regulatory mechanism would be limited only to host-microbe interactions. These signals probably play central roles in ecological interactions among organisms in microbial communities by affecting communication among bacterial populations as well as between bacterial populations and their eukaryotic hosts.
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PMID:Homoserine lactone-mediated gene regulation in plant-associated bacteria. 1501 98

Quorum-sensing systems provide Pseudomonas aeruginosa with a sensitive regulatory mechanism that allows for the induction of several phenotypic genes in a cell density fashion. In this work, a mathematical model of the acylated homoserine lactones regulatory network system in P. aeruginosa has been developed. It is the first integrated model to consider both quorum-sensing systems. The model has allowed us to disentangle the complex behavior exhibited by the system as the concentration of extracellular OdDHL is increased. At either low or high levels of extracellular OdDHL, the bacterium remains in an uninduced or induced state, respectively. At moderate levels, the behavior is characterized by several states. Here, the bacteria can switch suddenly from an uninduced to an induced phenotype in response to small changes in the concentration of extracellular OdDHL. Additionally, we have been able to address the roles of RsaL and Vfr as regulators of the quorum-sensing system. An important result from this analysis suggests that RsaL will increase the concentration of extracellular OdDHL required to induce the system, and it is a key regulator of the inhibition of the quorum-sensing system under low cell densities. Most importantly, our results suggest that Vfr has strong regulatory effects on the system as an increased affinity between the LasR/OdDHL complex, and the lasR promoter leads to significant qualitative changes in induction patterns. We also show experimental data that demonstrate that Vfr is required for signal production in the early phase of growth, but that in the latter stages of growth, the vfr mutant is able to synthesize wild-type levels of signal.
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PMID:The role of regulators in the expression of quorum-sensing signals in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 1504 27

Quorum sensing (QS) is a cell density-dependent signaling mechanism used by many bacteria to control gene expression. Several recent reports indicate that the signaling molecules (autoinducers) that mediate QS in Pseudomonas aeruginosa may also modulate gene expression in host cells; however, the mechanisms are largely unknown. Here we show that two P. aeruginosa autoinducers, N-3-oxododecanoyl-homoserine lactone and N-butyryl-homoserine lactone, can both enter eukaryotic cells and activate artificial chimeric transcription factors based on their cognate transcriptional activators, LasR and RhlR, respectively. The autoinducers promoted nuclear localization of chimeric proteins containing the full LasR or RhlR coding region, and the LasR-based proteins were capable of activating transcription of a LasR-dependent luciferase gene. Responsiveness to autoinducer required the N-terminal autoinducer-binding domains of LasR and RhlR. Truncated proteins consisting of only the C-terminal helix-turn-helix DNA-binding domains of both proteins attached to a nuclear localization signal efficiently translocated to the nucleus in the absence of autoinducer, and truncated LasR-based proteins functioned as constitutively active transcription factors. Chimeric LasR proteins were only activated by their cognate autoinducer ligand and not by N-butyryl-L-homoserine lactone. These data provide evidence that autoinducer molecules from human pathogens can enter mammalian cells and suggest that autoinducers may influence gene expression in host cells by interacting with and activating as-yet-unidentified endogenous proteins.
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PMID:Pseudomonas aeruginosa autoinducer enters and functions in mammalian cells. 1506 29

In Pseudomonas aeruginosa, virulence determinants and biofilm formation are coordinated via a hierarchical quorum sensing cascade, which involves the transcriptional regulators LasR and RhlR and their cognate homoserine lactone activators C12-HSL [N-(3-oxododecanoyl)-L-homoserine lactone] and c4-hsl (n-butanoyl-L-homoserine lactone), which are produced by LasI and RhlI, respectively. The exoenzyme S regulon of P. aeruginosa, comprises genes for a type III secretion system and for four anti-host effector proteins (ExoS, T, U and Y), which are translocated into host cells. It is a reasonable assumption that this ExoS regulon should be downregulated in the biofilm growth state and thus should also be under the regulatory control of the Las/Rhl system. Therefore, an exoS'-gfp reporter construct was used, and the influence of the Las and Rhl quorum sensing systems and the effect of the stationary-phase sigma factor RpoS on regulation of the exoS gene was examined. Evidence is provided for downregulation of exoS during biofilm formation of P. aeruginosa PAO1. The rhlI mutant PDO100 and rhlR mutant PDO111, but not the lasI mutant PDO-JP1, showed approximately twofold upregulation of the exoS'-gfp reporter in comparison to PAO1. Upregulation of exoS'-gfp in the PDO100 mutant could be repressed to normal level by adding C4-HSL autoinducer, indicating a negative regulatory effect of RhlR/C4-HSL on exoS expression. As RhlR/C4-HSL is also involved in regulation of RpoS, the P. aeruginosa rpoS mutant SS24 was examined and the exoS'-gfp reporter was found to be fivefold upregulated in comparison to PAO1. For the first time evidence is reported for a regulatory cascade linking RhlR/RhlI and RpoS with the expression of the anti-host effector ExoS, part of the exoenzyme S regulon. Moreover, these data suggest that the exoenzyme S regulon may be downregulated in P. aeruginosa biofilms.
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PMID:Expression of Pseudomonas aeruginosa exoS is controlled by quorum sensing and RpoS. 1507 94

Pseudomonas syringae forms large cell aggregates that are more stress tolerant than solitary cells during epiphytic growth on plants. The differential survival of aggregates on leaves suggests that epiphytic fitness traits may be controlled in a density-dependent manner via cell-cell signaling. We investigated this hypothesis in P. syringae B728a. Synthesis of N-acyl-homoserine lactone (AHL), 3-oxo-hexanoyl homoserine lactone, and the expression of the gene encoding AHL synthase ahlI were maximal at high cell concentrations. The expression of the AHL regulator ahlR, in contrast, was similar at all cell concentrations. A screen of Tn5 mutants revealed that P. syringae B728a requires a novel transcriptional activator for AHL production. This regulator, which belongs to the TetR family, was also required for epiphytic fitness and has been designated AefR (for AHL and epiphytic fitness regulator). The expression of ahlI was greatly reduced in both aefR- and gacA- mutants and was completely restored in either mutant after addition of exogenous AHL. In contrast, the expression of aefR was not reduced in either gacS- or gacA- mutants. Thus, AefR appears to positively regulate AHL production independently of the regulators GacS/GacA and also controls traits in P. syringae B728a that are required for epiphytic colonization.
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PMID:Regulation of AHL production and its contribution to epiphytic fitness in Pseudomonas syringae. 1514 56

Vibrio fischeri possesses two acyl-homoserine lactone quorum-sensing systems, ain and lux, both of which are involved in the regulation of luminescence gene expression and are required for persistent colonization of the squid host, Euprymna scolopes. We have previously demonstrated that the ain system induces luminescence at cell densities that precede lux system activation. Our data suggested that the ain system both relieves repression and initially induces the lux system, thereby achieving sequential induction of gene expression by these two systems. Analysis of the V. fischeri genome revealed the presence of a putative third system based on the enzyme LuxS, which catalyzes the synthesis of the Vibrio harveyi autoinducer 2 (AI-2). In this study, we investigated the impact of V. fischeri LuxS on luminescence and colonization competence in comparison to that of the ain system. Similar to the ain system, inactivation of the AI-2 system decreased light production in culture, but not in the squid host. However, while an ainS mutant produces no detectable light in culture, a luxS mutant expressed approximately 70% of wild-type luminescence levels. A mutation in luxS alone did not compromise symbiotic competence of V. fischeri; however, levels of colonization of an ainS luxS double mutant were reduced to 50% of the already diminished level of ainS mutant colonization, suggesting that these two systems regulate colonization gene expression synergistically through a common pathway. Introduction of a luxO mutation into the luxS and ainS luxS background could relieve both luminescence and colonization defects, consistent with a model in which LuxS, like AinS, regulates gene expression through LuxO. Furthermore, while luxS transcription appeared to be constitutive and the AI-2 signal concentration did not change dramatically, our data suggest that ainS transcription is autoregulated, resulting in an over 2,000-fold increase in signal concentration as culture density increased. Taken together, these data indicate that V. fischeri LuxS affects both luminescence regulation and colonization competence; however, its quantitative contribution is small when compared to that of the AinS signal.
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PMID:Vibrio fischeri LuxS and AinS: comparative study of two signal synthases. 1517 1

Cell-cell communication via the production and detection of chemical signal molecules has been the focus of a great deal of research over the past decade. One class of chemical signals widely used by proteobacteria consists of N-acyl-homoserine lactones, which are synthesized by proteins related to LuxI of Vibrio fischeri and are detected by proteins related to the V. fischeri LuxR protein. A related marine bacterium, Vibrio harveyi, communicates using two chemical signals, one of which, autoinducer-2 (AI-2), is a furanone borate diester that is synthesized by the LuxS protein and detected by a periplasmic protein called LuxP. Evidence from a number of laboratories suggests that AI-2 may be used as a signal by diverse groups of bacteria, and might permit intergeneric signalling. These two families of signalling systems have been studied from the perspectives of physiology, ecology, biochemistry, and more recently, structural biology. Here, we review the biochemistry and structural biology of both acyl-homoserine-lactone-dependent and AI-2-dependent signalling systems.
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PMID:Chemical communication in proteobacteria: biochemical and structural studies of signal synthases and receptors required for intercellular signalling. 1525 90


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