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Query: UMLS:C0026918 (
Mycobacterium
)
52,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
DNA and RNA helicases of superfamily I are characterized by seven conserved motifs. The five N-terminal motifs are separated from the two C-terminal ones by a spacer that is highly variable in both sequence and length, suggesting the existence of two distinct domains. Using computer methods for protein sequence analysis, we show that PhoH, an ATP-binding protein that is conserved in Escherichia coli and
Mycobacterium
leprae, is homologous to the putative N-terminal domain of the helicases, whereas the putative E. coli protein YjhR is homologous to the C-terminal domain. These findings suggest that the N-and C-terminal domains of superfamily I helicases have distinct activities, with only the N-terminal domain having the ATPase activity. It is speculated that PhoH and YjhR have evolved from helicases through deletion of the portions of the
helicase
genes coding for the C- and N-terminal domain, respectively.
...
PMID:Two domains of superfamily I helicases may exist as separate proteins. 877 Dec 13
The present study was aimed at fingerprinting pharmacoproteomic alterations of the
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis H37Rv strain induced by antitubercular drugs isoniazid (INH), ethambutol (EMB), and SQ109 [N-geranyl-N'-(2-adamantyl)ethane-1,2-diamine, a novel 1,2-diamine-based EMB analog], providing new understanding of pharmacoproteomic mechanisms of each and exploring new drug targets. The three drugs produced significant down-regulation of 13 proteins, including immunogenic ModD, Mpt64, with proteins from the Pro-Glu family being inhibited the most. Alternatively, the three drugs up-regulated 17 proteins, including secreted antigenic proteins ESAT-6 and CFP-10. Among these, ESAT-6 and AphC were most affected by INH, whereas EMB had the greatest effect on ESAT-6. All three drugs produced only moderate up-regulation of aerobic and iron metabolism proteins, i.e., electron transfer flavoprotein Fix A and Fix B, and ferritin-like protein BfrB, suggesting that the interruption of microbacterial energy metabolism is not a primary mechanism of action. INH suppressed ATP-dependent DNA/RNA helicase, but up-regulated beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase. These effects may contribute to its bactericidal effects. In contrast, EMB and SQ109 did just the opposite: these drugs up-regulated the
helicase
and down-regulated the synthase. For most of the H37Rv proteins, similar pharmacoproteomic patterns were found for both EMB and SQ109. None of the drugs significantly regulated expression of chaperonins GroES, GroEL2, and Dnak, suggesting that these drugs do not affect chaperone-mediated nascent polypeptide folding and sorting. The present study identified proteins directly modulated by the actions of INH, EMB, and SQ109 and distinguished INH activity from the diamine antitubercular compounds that inhibit M. tuberculosis H37Rv.
...
PMID:Pharmacoproteomic effects of isoniazid, ethambutol, and N-geranyl-N'-(2-adamantyl)ethane-1,2-diamine (SQ109) on Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv. 1608 58
UvrD is a
helicase
that is widely conserved in gram-negative bacteria. A uvrD homologue was identified in
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis on the basis of the homology of its encoded protein with Escherichia coli UvrD, with which it shares 39% amino acid identity, distributed throughout the protein. The gene was cloned, and a histidine-tagged form of the protein was expressed and purified to homogeneity. The purified protein had in vitro ATPase activity that was dependent upon the presence of DNA. Oligonucleotides as short as four nucleotides were sufficient to promote the ATPase activity. The DNA helicase activity of the enzyme was only fueled by ATP and dATP. UvrD preferentially unwound 3'-single-stranded tailed duplex substrates over 5'-single-stranded ones, indicating that the protein had a duplex-unwinding activity with 3'-to-5' polarity. A 3' single-stranded DNA tail of 18 nucleotides was required for effective unwinding. By using a series of synthetic oligonucleotide substrates, we demonstrated that M. tuberculosis UvrD has an unwinding preference towards nicked DNA duplexes and stalled replication forks, representing the likely sites of action in vivo. The potential role of M. tuberculosis UvrD in maintenance of bacterial genomic integrity makes it a promising target for drug design against M. tuberculosis.
...
PMID:Characterization of the helicase activity and substrate specificity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis UvrD. 1715 74
Hexameric DnaB
helicase
unwinds the DNA double helix during replication of genetic material in bacteria. DnaB is an essential bacterial protein; therefore, it is an important potential target for antibacterial drug discovery. We report a crystal structure of the N-terminal region of DnaB from the pathogen
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis (MtDnaBn), determined at 2.0 A resolution. This structure provides atomic resolution details of formation of the hexameric ring of DnaB by two distinct interfaces. An extensive hydrophobic interface stabilizes a dimer of MtDnaBn by forming a four-helix bundle. The other, less extensive, interface is formed between the dimers, connecting three of them into a hexameric ring. On the basis of crystal packing interactions between MtDnaBn rings, we suggest a model of a
helicase
-primase complex that explains previously observed effects of DnaB mutations on DNA priming.
...
PMID:Hexameric ring structure of the N-terminal domain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis DnaB helicase. 1847 67
Mycobacterial UvrD2 is a DNA-dependent ATPase with 3' to 5'
helicase
activity. UvrD2 is an atypical
helicase
, insofar as its N-terminal ATPase domain resembles the superfamily I helicases UvrD/PcrA, yet it has a C-terminal HRDC domain, which is a feature of RecQ-type superfamily II helicases. The ATPase and HRDC domains are connected by a CxxC-(14)-CxxC tetracysteine module that defines a new clade of UvrD2-like bacterial helicases found only in Actinomycetales. By characterizing truncated versions of
Mycobacterium
smegmatis UvrD2, we show that whereas the HRDC domain is not required for ATPase or
helicase
activities in vitro, deletion of the tetracysteine module abolishes duplex unwinding while preserving ATP hydrolysis. Replacing each of the CxxC motifs with a double-alanine variant AxxA had no effect on duplex unwinding, signifying that the domain module, not the cysteines, is crucial for function. The
helicase
activity of a truncated UvrD2 lacking the tetracysteine and HRDC domains was restored by the DNA-binding protein Ku, a component of the mycobacterial NHEJ system and a cofactor for DNA unwinding by the paralogous mycobacterial
helicase
UvrD1. Our findings indicate that coupling of ATP hydrolysis to duplex unwinding can be achieved by protein domains acting in cis or trans. Attempts to disrupt the M. smegmatis uvrD2 gene were unsuccessful unless a second copy of uvrD2 was present elsewhere in the chromosome, indicating that UvrD2 is essential for growth of M. smegmatis.
...
PMID:Domain requirements for DNA unwinding by mycobacterial UvrD2, an essential DNA helicase. 1870 26
In this study, we investigated the role of the nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway in mycobacterial DNA repair.
Mycobacterium
smegmatis lacking the NER excinuclease component uvrB or the
helicase
uvrD1 gene and a double knockout lacking both genes were constructed, and their sensitivities to a series of DNA-damaging agents were analyzed. As anticipated, the mycobacterial NER system was shown to be involved in the processing of bulky DNA adducts and interstrand cross-links. In addition, it could be shown to exert a protective effect against oxidizing and nitrosating agents. Interestingly, inactivation of uvrB and uvrD1 significantly increased marker integration frequencies in gene conversion assays. This implies that in mycobacteria (which lack the postreplicative mismatch repair system) NER, and particularly the UvrD1
helicase
, is involved in the processing of a subset of recombination-associated mismatches.
...
PMID:Characterization of the mycobacterial NER system reveals novel functions of the uvrD1 helicase. 1901 Oct 38
XPB, the largest subunit of the eukaryotic transcription factor TFIIH, is essential for both initiation of transcription by RNA polymerase II and nucleotide excision repair (NER). XPB belongs to the SF2 superfamily of monomeric helicases. XPB
helicase
is thought to have evolved in eukaryotes; however, a gene highly homologous to human XPB can be found in a number of bacteria. This report is the first biochemical characterization of XPB homologues from bacteria, specifically those from
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis and Kineococcus radiotolerans. Similarly to eukaryotic XPB, bacterial XPB are ATP-dependent 3' --> 5' DNA helicases. The ATPase activity of these XPB helicases is DNA-dependent, requiring a minimum of 4-nucleotide long single-stranded DNA (ssDNA). The maximum rates of ATP hydrolysis are about 10 and 50 molecules per minute by one XPB monomer on a 21-nucleotide ssDNA oligomer and on 5-kb long circular ssDNA, respectively. The ATP hydrolysis by the bacterial XPBs is coupled to their translocation along single-stranded DNA. The hydrolytic activity is strongly dependent on both the nature of a nucleotide triphosphate and that of a divalent metal. The inefficient ATP hydrolysis by bacterial XPB is consistent with nonprocessive functions of its eukaryotic homologue in locally remodeling DNA during transcription initiation and NER.
...
PMID:DNA-dependent ATPase activity of bacterial XPB helicases. 1919 47
Helicases appear to be important for genome stability of dormant
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis responsible for latent tuberculosis infection and big proportion of active disease cases caused by reactivation. It was demonstrated that in both M. tuberculosis and
Mycobacterium
smegmatis, a
helicase
termed UvrD2 is essential for bacterial growth making it a promising target to fight tuberculosis. In many cases expression of soluble and active mycobacterial proteins in Escherichia coli is a complicated issue. In this work we for the first time report a non-trivial expression procedure in E. coli, leading to soluble UvrD2 from M. tuberculosis which possesses DNA-dependent ATP-ase activity.
...
PMID:Expression, purification and characterization of UvrD2 helicase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. 1976 23
In the pathogenic
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis H37Rv, the causative agent of tuberculosis, the genetic and biochemical mechanisms for initiation of DNA replication are largely unknown. In the present study, we have characterized the physical interactions between M. tuberculosis DnaA and DnaB using both in vivo methods, such as bacterial two-hybrid assays, and in vitro techniques, such as surface plasmon resonance (SPR) and Pull-down/Western blotting. The full-length N-terminus (1-206 residues) of DnaB was found to interact with DnaA, while the shorter N-terminal domain of DnaB (1-125 residues), which lacked the linker region, did not. Further SPR and electrophoretic mobility shift assays indicated that the N-terminus (1-206 residues) of DnaB also had a critical role in regulating DnaA complex formation at the origin of replication (OriC). This regulatory effect was not obviously observed for DNA substrates containing only two DnaA-boxes. This is the first report showing a physical interaction between DnaA and replicative
helicase
DnaB from M. tuberculosis and the role in subsequent DnaA-OriC interactions. The findings reported here further the understanding of the regulatory mechanisms for initiation of DNA replication in this important human pathogen.
...
PMID:Characterization of physical interaction between replication initiator protein DnaA and replicative helicase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv. 1996 12
Molecular motors such as helicases/translocases are capable of translocating along the single-stranded nucleic acids and unwinding DNA or RNA duplex substrates using the energy derived from their ATPase activity. The bacterial transcription terminator, Rho, is a hexameric
helicase
and releases RNA from the transcription elongation complexes by an unknown mechanism. It has been proposed, but not directly demonstrated, that kinetic energy obtained from its molecular motor action (
helicase
/translocase activities) is instrumental in dissociating the transcription elongation complex. Here we report a hexameric Rho analogue (Rv1297, M. tb. Rho) from
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis having poor RNA-dependent ATP hydrolysis and inefficient DNA-RNA unwinding activities. However, compared to Escherichia coli Rho, it exhibited very robust and earlier transcription termination from the elongation complexes of E. coli RNA polymerase. Bicyclomycin, an inhibitor of ATPase as well as RNA release activities of E. coli Rho, inhibited the ATPase activity of M. tb. Rho with comparable efficiency but was not efficient in inhibiting its transcription termination function. Unlike E. coli Rho, M. tb. Rho was capable of releasing RNA in the presence of nonhydrolyzable analogues of ATP quite efficiently. Also, this termination function most likely does not require NusG, an RNA-release facilitator, as this Rho was incapable of binding to NusG either of M. tb. (Rv0639) or E. coli. These results strongly suggest that the ATPase activity of M. tb. Rho is uncoupled from its transcription termination function and this function may not be dependent on its
helicase
/translocase activity.
...
PMID:A bacterial transcription terminator with inefficient molecular motor action but with a robust transcription termination function. 2002 69
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