Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.3.1.184 (
LasR
)
897
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Virulence of the plant pathogen Erwinia carotovora subsp. carotovora is dependent on the production and secretion of a complex arsenal of plant cell wall-degrading enzymes. Production of these exoenzymes is controlled by a global regulatory mechanism. A virulent mutants in one of the regulatory loci, expI, show a pleiotropic defect in the growth phase-dependent transcriptional activation of exoenzyme gene expression. The expI gene encodes a 26 kDa
polypeptide
that is structurally and functionally related to the luxI gene product of Vibrio fischeri. Functional similarity of expI and luxI has been demonstrated by reciprocal genetic complementation experiments.
LuxI
controls bioluminescence in V.fischeri in a growth phase-dependent manner by directing the synthesis of the diffusible autoinducer, N-(3-oxohexanoyl) homoserine lactone. E.c. subsp. carotovora expI+ strains or Escherichia coli harboring the cloned expI gene excrete a small diffusible signal molecule that complements the expI mutation of Erwinia as well as a luxI mutation of V.fischeri. This extracellular complementation can also be achieved by E.coli harboring the luxI gene from V.fischeri or by adding the synthetic V.fischeri autoinducer. Both the production of the plant tissue-macerating exoenzymes and the ability of the bacteria to propagate in planta are restored in expI mutants by autoinducer addition. These data suggest that the same signal molecule is employed in control of such diverse processes as virulence in a plant pathogen and bioluminescence in a marine bacterium, and may represent a general mechanism by which bacteria modulate gene expression in response to changing environmental conditions.
...
PMID:A small diffusible signal molecule is responsible for the global control of virulence and exoenzyme production in the plant pathogen Erwinia carotovora. 850 72
Many bacteria use acyl homoserine lactone signals to monitor cell density in a type of gene regulation termed quorum sensing and response. Synthesis of these signals is directed by homologs of the luxi gene of Vibrio fischeri. This communication resolves two critical issues concerning the synthesis of the V. fischeri signal. (i) The luxI product is directly involved in signal synthesis-the protein is an
acyl homoserine lactone synthase
; and (ii) the substrates for acyl homoserine lactone synthesis are not amino acids from biosynthetic pathways or fatty acid degradation products, but rather they are S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) and an acylated acyl carrier protein (ACP) from the fatty acid biosynthesis pathway. We purified a maltose binding protein-
LuxI
fusion
polypeptide
and showed that, when provided with the appropriate substrates, it catalyzes the synthesis of an acyl homoserine lactone. In V. fischeri, luxi directs the synthesis of N-(3-oxohexanoyl) homoserine lactone and hexanoyl homoserine lactone. The purified maltose binding protein-
LuxI
fusion protein catalyzes the synthesis of hexanoyl homoserine lactone from hexanoyl-ACP and SAM. There is a high level of specificity for hexanoyl-ACP over ACPs with differing acyl group lengths, and hexanoyl homoserine lactone was not synthesized when SAM was replaced with other amino acids, such as methionine, S-adenosylhomocysteine, homoserine, or homoserine lactone, or when hexanoyl-SAM was provided as the substrate. This provides direct evidence that the
LuxI protein
is an auto-inducer synthase that catalyzes the formation of an amide bond between SAM and a fatty acyl-ACP and then catalyzes the formation of the acyl homoserine lactone from the acyl-SAM intermediate.
...
PMID:Generation of cell-to-cell signals in quorum sensing: acyl homoserine lactone synthase activity of a purified Vibrio fischeri LuxI protein. 879 Mar 60
Synthesis of the Vibrio fischeri autoinducer, a signal involved in the cell density-dependent activation of bioluminescence, is directed by the luxI gene product. The
LuxI protein
catalyzes the synthesis of N-acyl-homoserine lactones from S-adenosylmethionine and acylated-acyl carrier protein. We have gained an appreciation of the
LuxI
regions and amino acid residues involved in autoinducer synthesis by isolating and analyzing mutations generated by random and site-specific mutagenesis of luxI. By random mutagenesis we isolated 13 different single amino acid substitutions in the
LuxI
polypeptide
. Eleven of these substitutions resulted in no detectable
autoinducer synthase
activity, while the remaining two amino acid substitutions resulted in reduced but detectable activity. The substitutions that resulted in no detectable
autoinducer synthase
activity mapped to two small regions of
LuxI
. In Escherichia coli, wild-type luxI showed dominance over all of the mutations. Because autoinducer synthesis has been proposed to involve formation of a covalent bond between an acyl group and an active-site cysteine, we constructed site-directed mutations that altered each of the three cysteine residues in
LuxI
. All of the cysteine mutants retained substantial activity as an
autoinducer synthase
in E. coli. Based on the analysis of random mutations we propose a model in which there are two critical regions of
LuxI
, at least one of which is an intimate part of an active site, and based on the analysis of site-directed mutations we conclude that an active-site cysteine is not essential for
autoinducer synthase
activity.
...
PMID:Mutational analysis of the Vibrio fischeri LuxI polypeptide: critical regions of an autoinducer synthase. 924 78
Many members of the LuxR family of acyl-homoserine lactone (acyl-HSL)-dependent quorum-sensing transcriptional activators are thought to have the unusual characteristics of requiring the signal ligand during
polypeptide
synthesis to fold into an active conformation and of binding signal extraordinarily tightly. This is the case for the N-3-oxo-dodecanoyl-HSL-dependent Pseudomonas aeruginosa virulence regulator
LasR
. We present evidence that
LasR
can fold into an active conformation in vivo in the absence of the acyl-HSL ligand. We also present evidence indicating that in the cellular environment,
LasR
and N-3-oxo-dodecanoyl-HSL readily dissociate. After dissociation,
LasR
can remain in a properly folded conformation capable of reassociating with signal. We present a new model for the folding and signal binding of
LasR
and other members of the family of transcription factors to which
LasR
belongs. Our findings have important implications concerning the cellular responses to decreased environmental concentrations of signals and have implications about potential quorum-sensing inhibition strategies.
...
PMID:Reversible signal binding by the Pseudomonas aeruginosa quorum-sensing signal receptor LasR. 2132 39