Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.13.3 (histidine kinase)
2,405 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chemotaxis of enteric bacteria in spatial gradients toward a source of chemoattractant is accomplished by increases in the length of swimming runs up the gradient. Biochemical components of the intracellular signal pathway have been identified, but mechanisms for achieving the high response sensitivity remain unknown. Binding of attractant ligand to its receptor inactivates a receptor-associated histidine kinase, CheA, which phosphorylates the signal protein CheY. The reduction in phospho-CheY, CheY-P, levels prolongs swimming runs. Here, the stimulus-response relation has been determined by measurement of excitation responses mediated by the Tar receptor to defined concentration jumps of the attractant, aspartate, administered within milliseconds by photolysis of a photolabile precursor. The bacteria responded to <1% changes in Tar occupancy when adapted to aspartate over concentrations spanning three orders of magnitude. Response amplitudes increased approximately logarithmically with stimulus strength, extending responsiveness over a greater stimulus range. The extent and form of this relation indicates that, in contrast to mechanisms for adaptive recovery, excitation signal generation involves amplification based on cooperative interactions. These interactions could entail inactivation of multiple receptor-CheA signaling complexes and/or simultaneous activation of CheY-P dephosphorylation.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1999 Sep 28
PMID:Response tuning in bacterial chemotaxis. 1050 Jan 2

The absA locus in Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) was identified because mutations in it uncoupled sporulation from antibiotic synthesis: absA mutants failed to produce any of the four antibiotics characteristic of S. coelicolor. These mutants are now shown to contain point mutations in the absA1 gene which encodes the histidine kinase sensor-transmitter protein of a two-component signalling system. The absA1 non-antibiotic-producing mutants, which are unpigmented, spontaneously acquire pigmented colony sectors. Genetic analysis established that the pigmented sectors contain second-site suppressive mutations, sab (for suppressor of abs). Phenotypic characterization showed that sab strains produce all four antibiotics; some overproduce antibiotics and are designated Pha, for precocious hyperproduction of antibiotics. A set of sab mutations responsible for suppression was localized by plasmid-mediated and protoplast fusion mapping techniques to the vicinity of the absA locus. DNA cloned from this region was used to construct phage that could transduce sab mutations. Sequence analysis of sab strains defined sab mutations in both the absA1 gene and the absA2 gene; the latter encodes the two-component system's response regulator.
Microbiology (Reading) 1999 Sep
PMID:Genetic suppression analysis of non-antibiotic-producing mutants of the Streptomyces coelicolor absA locus. 1051 87

In bacteria, adaptive responses to environmental stimuli are often initiated by two-component signal transduction systems (TCS). The prototypical TCS comprises two proteins: a histidine kinase (HK, hk) and a response regulator (RR rr). Recent research has suggested that compounds that inhibit two-component systems might have good antibacterial activity. In order to identify TCS that are crucial for growth or virulence of Streptococcus pneumoniae, we have examined the genomic sequence of a virulent S. pneumoniae strain for genes that are related to known histidine kinases or response regulators. Altogether 13 histidine kinases and 13 response regulators have been identified. The protein sequences encoded by these genes were compared with sequences deposited in public databases. This analysis revealed that two of the 13 pneumococcal TCSs have been described before (ciaRH and comDE) and two are homologous to the yycFG and the phoRP genes of Bacillus subtilis. All the pneumococcal response regulators contain putative DNA binding motifs within the C-terminal output domain, implying that they are involved in transcriptional control. Two of these response regulators are obviously the first representatives of a new subfamily containing an AraC-type DNA-binding effector domain. To assess the regulatory role of these transcription factors, we disrupted each of the 13 response regulator genes by insertional mutagenesis. All the viable mutant strains with disrupted response regulator genes were further characterized with regard to growth in vitro, competence, and experimental virulence. Two response regulator genes could not be inactivated, indicating that they may regulate essential cellular functions. The possibility of using these systems as targets for the development of novel antibacterials will be discussed.
Gene 1999 Sep 03
PMID:Domain organization and molecular characterization of 13 two-component systems identified by genome sequencing of Streptococcus pneumoniae. 1052 54

Temoporfin (meta-tetra (hydroxyphenyl)chlorin; mTHPC) potentiated a 100-fold higher cytotoxic effect than hematoporphyrin derivative (HPD) on two nasopharyngeal carcinoma cell lines (HK1 and CNE2) in terms of the overall photodynamic therapy (PDT) dose. The cellular uptake, evaluated by flow cytometry and spectrophotometry demonstrated that mTHPC exhibited higher uptake ability than HPD. Confocal laser scanning microscopy detection for both the sensitizer and mitochondria probe on the same cell images revealed that both drugs accumulated diffusely in the cytoplasm and that mitochrondria is a target organelle. Photo-activation ruptured the mitochrondria, with more pronounced mitochondrial damage being observed in mTHPC-PDT course. This correlated well with the cell photokilling efficiency of mTHPC.
Cancer Lett 2000 Sep 01
PMID:Cellular uptake, subcellular localization and photodamaging effect of temoporfin (mTHPC) in nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells: comparison with hematoporphyrin derivative. 1093 72

The Cpx envelope stress response of Escherichia coli is controlled by a two-component regulatory system that senses misfolded proteins in extracytoplasmic compartments and responds by inducing the expression of envelope protein folding and degrading factors. We have proposed that in the absence of envelope stress the pathway is maintained in a downregulated state, in part through interactions between the periplasmic inhibitor molecule CpxP and the sensing domain of the histidine kinase CpxA. In this study, we show that depletion of the periplasmic contents of the cell by spheroplast formation does indeed lead to induction of the Cpx envelope stress response. Further, removal of CpxP is an important component of this induction because tethering an MBP-CpxP fusion protein to the spheroplast inner membranes prevents full activation by this treatment. Spheroplast formation has previously been demonstrated to induce the expression of a periplasmic protein of unknown function, Spy. Analysis of spy expression in response to spheroplast formation by Western blot analysis and by lacZ operon fusion in various cpx mutant backgrounds demonstrated that spy is a member of the Cpx regulon. Interestingly, although the only known spy homologue is cpxP, Spy does not appear to perform the same function as CpxP as it is not involved in inhibiting the Cpx envelope stress response. Rather, deletion of spy leads to activation of the sigmaE stress response. Because the sigmaE response is specifically affected by alterations in outer membrane protein biogenesis, we think it possible that Spy may be involved in this process.
Mol Microbiol 2000 Sep
PMID:Tethering of CpxP to the inner membrane prevents spheroplast induction of the cpx envelope stress response. 1097 35

The phytochrome Cph1 from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC6803 forms holoprotein adducts with close spectral similarity to plant phytochromes when autoassembled in vitro with bilin chromophores. Cph1 is a 85-kDa protein that acts as a light-regulated histidine kinase seemingly involved in 'two-component' signalling. This paper describes the improvement of Cph1 purification, estimation of the extinction coefficient of holo-Cph1, spectral analyses of the assembly procedure and studies on quaternary structure. During assembly with the natural chromophore phycocyanobilin (PCB), a red-shifted intermediate is observed. A similar result was obtained when phycoerythrobilin was used as chromophore. As shown by SDS/PAGE and Zn2+ fluorescence, the covalent attachment of PCB is blocked by 1 mM iodoacetamide, a cysteine-derivatizing agent. When PCB was incubated with blocked apo-Cph1, again a shoulder at longer wavelengths appeared. It is therefore proposed that the long-wavelength-absorbing form represents the protonated, noncovalently bound bilin. Biliverdin, which is neither protonated nor covalently attached, undergoes spectral changes in its blue-absorbing band upon incubation with apo-Cph1. On the basis of these data we therefore propose a three-step model for phytochrome autoassembly. Size-exclusion chromatography revealed different mobilities for the apoprotein, red-absorbing Cph1-PCB and far-red-absorbing Cph1-PCB. The major peaks of both holoprotein adducts had apparent molecular masses approximately 200 kDa, a result in agreement with the notion that autophosphorylation in sensory histidine kinases requires dimerization. When Cph1-PCB was further purified by preparative native electrophoresis, the mobility on size-exclusion chromatography was approximately 100 kDa, and it was found to have lost its kinase activity, results implying that the material had lost its capacity to dimerize.
Eur J Biochem 2001 Sep
PMID:Phytochrome Cph1 from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC6803. Purification, assembly, and quaternary structure. 1153 8

The archetypal two-component signal transduction systems include a sensor histidine kinase and a response regulator, which consists of a receiver CheY-like domain and a DNA-binding domain. Sequence analysis of the sensor kinases and response regulators encoded in complete bacterial and archaeal genomes revealed complex domain architectures for many of them and allowed the identification of several novel conserved domains, such as PAS, GAF, HAMP, GGDEF, EAL, and HD-GYP. All of these domains are widely represented in bacteria, including 19 copies of the GGDEF domain and 17 copies of the EAL domain encoded in the Escherichia coli genome. In contrast, these novel signaling domains are much less abundant in bacterial parasites and in archaea, with none at all found in some archaeal species. This skewed phyletic distribution suggests that the newly discovered complexity of signal transduction systems emerged early in the evolution of bacteria, with subsequent massive loss in parasites and some horizontal dissemination among archaea. Only a few proteins containing these domains have been studied experimentally, and their exact biochemical functions remain obscure; they may include transformations of novel signal molecules, such as the recently identified cyclic diguanylate. Recent experimental data provide the first direct evidence of the participation of these domains in signal transduction pathways, including regulation of virulence genes and extracellular enzyme production in the human pathogens Bordetella pertussis and Borrelia burgdorferi and the plant pathogen Xanthomonas campestris. Gene-neighborhood analysis of these new domains suggests their participation in a variety of processes, from mercury and phage resistance to maintenance of virulence plasmids. It appears that the real picture of the complexity of phosphorelay signal transduction in prokaryotes is only beginning to unfold.
FEMS Microbiol Lett 2001 Sep 11
PMID:Novel domains of the prokaryotic two-component signal transduction systems. 1155 34

OmpR is the response regulator of a two-component regulatory system that controls the expression of the porin genes ompF and ompC in Escherichia coli. This regulator consists of two domains joined by a flexible linker region. The amino-terminal domain is phosphorylated by the sensor kinase EnvZ, and the carboxyl-terminal domain binds DNA via a winged helix-turn-helix motif. In vitro studies have shown that amino-terminal phosphorylation enhances the DNA binding affinity of OmpR and, conversely, that DNA binding by the carboxyl terminus increases OmpR phosphorylation. In the present work, we demonstrate that the linker region contributes to this communication between the two domains of OmpR. Changing the specific amino acid composition of the linker alters OmpR function, as does increasing or decreasing its length. Three linker mutants give rise to an OmpF(+) OmpC(-) phenotype, but the defects are not due to a shared molecular mechanism. Currently, functional homology between response regulators is predicted based on similarities in the amino and carboxyl-terminal domains. The results presented here indicate that linker length and composition should also be considered. Furthermore, classification of response regulators in the same subfamily does not necessarily imply that they share a common response mechanism.
J Biol Chem 2002 Sep 06
PMID:The linker region plays an important role in the interdomain communication of the response regulator OmpR. 1207 36

Helicobacter pylori encodes three two-component systems and two orphan response regulators (RRs) that are predicted to be involved in transcriptional regulation. The HP1043 gene encodes an essential OmpR-like RR, 1043RR, for which no histidine kinase has been identified. Gel filtration and cross-linking experiments on the purified 1043RR protein reveals that this protein is a dimer and in vivo dimerization assays localize the dimerization to the N-terminal regulatory domain. DNA-binding studies have revealed two targets for specific binding of the 1043RR protein and moreover, phosphorylation of the protein was not needed for the activation of binding. Footprinting analysis demonstrated that the 1043RR protein binds to its own promoter, P(1043), overlapping the -35 promoter element from positions -17 to -45, suggesting that this protein is autoregulatory. In addition, it binds at a similar location, spanning nucleotides from positions -22 to -51 at the promoter of the methyl-accepting chemotaxis tlpB gene, P(tlpB). A possible inverted repeat was identified in the binding sites of both promoters. In an attempt to overexpress 1043RR in H. pylori, the 10-fold induction in transcription of a second copy of HP1043 with use of an inducible promoter failed to increase cellular levels of the RR protein, suggesting that 1043RR is tightly regulated at a posttranscriptional level. The P(1043) and P(tlpB) promoters were demonstrated to be coordinately regulated in response to growth phase in H. pylori. The essential role of HP1043 in encoding a cell cycle regulator is discussed.
J Bacteriol 2002 Sep
PMID:Growth phase-dependent regulation of target gene promoters for binding of the essential orphan response regulator HP1043 of Helicobacter pylori. 1216 5

A full length cDNA (CrCKR1) encoding a hybrid histidine kinase was isolated from a Catharanthus roseus cDNA library. The kinase belongs to the subfamily of cytokinin receptors represented by CRE1/AHK4/WOL in Arabidopsis thaliana. In cell suspensions, the expression of CrCKR1 is not affected by various stress and hormonal treatments but is stimulated in cells continuously exposed to cytokinin. In plants, CrCKR1 is strongly expressed only in the petals of mature flowers. These data suggest that CrCKR1 could take part in the mechanisms leading to the production of secondary metabolites in C. roseus.
J Exp Bot 2002 Sep
PMID:Expression analysis in plant and cell suspensions of CrCKR1, a cDNA encoding a histidine kinase receptor homologue in Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don. 1217 39


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