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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Oxygen
starvation
triggers an adaptive stationary-phase response in Mycobacterium smegmatis. During this anaerobic stationary phase, RNA synthesis continues at a low but significant level. Employing a modified expressed-sequence-tag (EST) approach, in combination with the M. tuberculosis genome data and comparative Northern analysis, we have identified the first genes that show an increase in transcription in M. smegmatis cells that have entered anaerobic stationary phase. One gene encodes the counterpart of the M. tuberculosis
NifS
-like protein Rv1464. Two genes are homologues of M. tuberculosis Rv1460 and Rv3368c, of unknown function. Strikingly, several genes induced by oxygen
starvation
encode putative stress protection proteins (counterparts of M. tuberculosis DnaK, Rv0350; betaine-aldehyde dehydrogenase, Rv0768; thioredoxin reductase, Rv3913) and ABC transporters (counterparts of M. tuberculosis Rv1463, Rv1473, Rv3197). We conclude that development of general stress resistance and certain active transport processes might play a role in the survival of oxygen-starved M. smegmatis.
...
PMID:Upregulation of stress response genes and ABC transporters in anaerobic stationary-phase Mycobacterium smegmatis. 1062 50
The yeiL open reading frame located at 48.5 min (2254 kb) in the nfo-fruA region of the Escherichia coli chromosome was predicted to encode a CRP and FNR paralogue capable of forming inter- or intra-molecular disulphide bonds and incorporating one iron-sulphur centre per 25 kDa subunit. Purified MBP-YeiL (a maltose-binding-protein-YeiL fusion protein) was a high-molecular-mass oligomer or aggregate which released unstable monomers (68 kDa) under reducing conditions. The MBP-YeiL protein contained substoichiometric amounts of iron and acid-labile sulphide, and an average of one disulphide bond per monomer. The iron and sulphide contents increased consistent with the acquisition of one [4Fe-4S] cluster per monomer after anaerobic
NifS
-catalysed reconstitution. By analogy with FNR and FLP (the FNR-like protein of Lactobacillus casei) it was suggested that the transcription-regulatory activity of YeiL might be modulated by a sensory iron-sulphur cluster and/or by reversible disulphide bond formation. A yeiL-lacZ transcriptional fusion showed that aerobic yeiL expression increases at least sixfold during stationary phase, requires RpoS, and is positively autoregulated by YeiL, positively activated by Lrp (and IHF in the absence of FNR) and negatively regulated by FNR. A regulatory link between the synthesis of YeiK (a potential nucleoside hydrolase) and YeiL was inferred by showing that the yeiK and yeiL genes are divergently transcribed from overlapping promoters. A 10-15% deficiency in aerobic growth yield and an enhanced loss of viability under nitrogen
starvation
conditions were detected with a yeiL::kan(R) mutant, suggesting that YeiL might function as a post-exponential-phase nitrogen-
starvation
regulator.
...
PMID:YeiL, the third member of the CRP-FNR family in Escherichia coli. 1110 74
The suf and isc operons of Escherichia coli have been implicated in Fe-S cluster assembly. However, it has been unclear why E. coli has two systems for Fe-S cluster biosynthesis. We have examined the regulatory characteristics and mutant phenotypes of both operons to discern if the two operons have redundant functions or if their cellular roles are divergent. Both operons are similarly induced by hydrogen peroxide and the iron chelator 2,2'-dipyridyl, although by different mechanisms. Regulation of the isc operon is mediated by IscR, whereas the suf operon requires OxyR and IHF for the response to oxidative stress and Fur for induction by iron
starvation
. Simultaneous deletion of iscS and most suf genes is synthetically lethal. However, although the suf and isc operons have overlapping functions, they act as distinct complexes because the
SufS
desulphurase alone cannot substitute for the
IscS
enzyme. In addition, suf deletion mutants are more sensitive to iron
starvation
than isc mutants, and the activity of the Fe-S enzyme gluconate dehydratase is diminished in the suf mutant during iron
starvation
. These findings are consistent with the model that the isc operon encodes the housekeeping Fe-S cluster assembly system in E. coli, whereas the suf operon is specifically adapted to synthesize Fe-S clusters when iron or sulphur metabolism is disrupted by iron
starvation
or oxidative stress.
...
PMID:A suf operon requirement for Fe-S cluster assembly during iron starvation in Escherichia coli. 1510 90
Owing to the versatile electronic properties of iron and sulfur, iron sulfur (Fe/S) clusters are perfectly suited for sensing changes in environmental conditions and regulating protein properties accordingly. Fe/S proteins have been recruited in a wide array of diverse biological processes, including electron transfer chains, metabolic pathways and gene regulatory circuits. Chemistry has revealed the great diversity of Fe/S clusters occurring in proteins. The question now is to understand how iron and sulfur come together to form Fe/S clusters and how these clusters are subsequently inserted into apoproteins. Iron, sulfide and reducing conditions were found to be sufficient for successful maturation of many apoproteins in vitro, opening the possibility that insertion might be a spontaneous event. However, as in many other biological pathways such as protein folding, genetic analyses revealed that Fe/S cluster biogenesis and insertion depend in vivo upon auxiliary proteins. This was brought to light by studies on Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase, which, in particular, led to the concept of scaffold proteins, the role of which would be to allow transient assembly of Fe/S cluster. These studies paved the way toward the identification of the ISC and SUF systems, subjects of the present review that allow Fe/S cluster assembly into apoproteins of most organisms. Despite the recent discovery of the SUF and ISC systems, remarkable progress has been made in our understanding of their molecular composition and biochemical mechanisms. Such a rapid increase in our knowledge arose from a convergent interest from researchers engaged in unrelated fields and whose complementary expertise covered most experimental approaches used in biology. Also, the high conservation of ISC and SUF systems throughout a wide array of organisms helped cross-feeding between studies. The ISC system is conserved in eubacteria and most eukaryotes, while the SUF system arises in eubacteria, archaea, plants and parasites. ISC and SUF systems share a common core function made of a
cysteine desulfurase
, which acts as a sulfur donor, and scaffold proteins, which act as sulfur and iron acceptors. The ISC and SUF systems also exhibit important differences. In particular, the ISC system includes an Hsp70/Hsp40-like pair of chaperones, while the SUF system involves an unorthodox ATP-binding cassette (ABC)-like component. The role of these two sets of ATP-hydrolyzing proteins in Fe/S cluster biogenesis remains unclear. Both systems are likely to target overlapping sets of apoproteins. However, regulation and phenotypic studies in E. coli, which synthesizes both types of systems, leads us to envisage ISC as the house-keeping one that functions under normal laboratory conditions, while the SUF system appears to be required in harsh environmental conditions such as oxidative stress and iron
starvation
. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the ISC system is located in the mitochondria and its function is necessary for maturation of both mitochondrial and cytosolic Fe/S proteins. Here, we attempt to provide the first comprehensive review of the ISC and SUF systems since their discovery in the mid and late 1990s. Most emphasis is put on E. coli and S. cerevisiae models with reference to other organisms when their analysis provided us with information of particular significance. We aim at covering information made available on each Isc and Suf component by the different experimental approaches, including physiology, gene regulation, genetics, enzymology, biophysics and structural biology. It is our hope that this parallel coverage will facilitate the identification of both similarities and specificities of ISC and SUF systems.
...
PMID:How Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae build Fe/S proteins. 1622 78
Selenium (Se) is an essential element for many organisms but is toxic at higher levels. CpNifS is a chloroplastic
NifS
-like protein in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) that can catalyze the conversion of cysteine into alanine and elemental sulfur (S0) and of selenocysteine into alanine and elemental Se (Se0). We overexpressed CpNifS to investigate the effects on Se metabolism in plants. CpNifS overexpression significantly enhanced selenate tolerance (1.9-fold) and Se accumulation (2.2-fold). CpNifS overexpressors showed significantly reduced Se incorporation into protein, which may explain their higher Se tolerance. Also, sulfur accumulation was enhanced by approximately 30% in CpNifS overexpressors, both on media with and without selenate. Root transcriptome changes in response to selenate mimicked the effects observed under sulfur
starvation
. There were only a few transcriptome differences between CpNifS-overexpressing plants and wild type, besides the 25- to 40-fold increase in CpNifS levels. Judged from x-ray analysis of near edge spectrum, both CpNifS overexpressors and wild type accumulated mostly selenate (Se(VI)). In conclusion, overexpression of this plant
NifS
-like protein had a pronounced effect on plant Se metabolism. The observed enhanced Se accumulation and tolerance of CpNifS overexpressors show promise for use in phytoremediation.
...
PMID:Overexpression of AtCpNifS enhances selenium tolerance and accumulation in Arabidopsis. 1624 44
Iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters are key metal cofactors of metabolic, regulatory, and stress response proteins in most organisms. The unique properties of these clusters make them susceptible to disruption by iron
starvation
or oxidative stress. Both iron and sulfur can be perturbed under stress conditions, leading to Fe-S cluster defects. Bacteria and higher plants contain a specialized system for Fe-S cluster biosynthesis under stress, namely the Suf pathway. In Escherichia coli the Suf pathway consists of six proteins with functions that are only partially characterized. Here we describe how the
SufS
and SufE proteins interact with the SufBCD protein complex to facilitate sulfur liberation from cysteine and donation for Fe-S cluster assembly. It was previously shown that the
cysteine desulfurase
SufS
donates sulfur to the sulfur transfer protein SufE. We have found here that SufE in turn interacts with the SufB protein for sulfur transfer to that protein. The interaction occurs only if SufC is present. Furthermore, SufB can act as a site for Fe-S cluster assembly in the Suf system. This provides the first evidence of a novel site for Fe-S cluster assembly in the SufBCD complex.
...
PMID:SufE transfers sulfur from SufS to SufB for iron-sulfur cluster assembly. 1735 Sep 58
Bacteria use three distinct systems for iron-sulfur (Fe/S) cluster biogenesis: the ISC, SUF, and NIF machineries. The ISC and SUF systems are widely distributed, and many bacteria possess both of them. In Escherichia coli, ISC is the major and constitutive system, whereas SUF is induced under iron
starvation
and/or oxidative stress. Genomic analysis of the Fe/S cluster biosynthesis genes in Bacillus subtilis suggests that this bacterium's genome encodes only a SUF system consisting of a sufCDSUB gene cluster and a distant sufA gene. Mutant analysis of the putative Fe/S scaffold genes sufU and sufA revealed that sufU is essential for growth under minimal standard conditions, but not sufA. The drastic growth retardation of a conditional mutant depleted of SufU was coupled with a severe reduction of aconitase and succinate dehydrogenase activities in total-cell lysates, suggesting a crucial function of SufU in Fe/S protein biogenesis. Recombinant SufU was devoid of Fe/S clusters after aerobic purification. Upon in vitro reconstitution, SufU bound an Fe/S cluster with up to approximately 1.5 Fe and S per monomer. The assembled Fe/S cluster could be transferred from SufU to the apo form of isopropylmalate isomerase Leu1, rapidly forming catalytically active [4Fe-4S]-containing holo-enzyme. In contrast to native SufU, its D43A variant carried a Fe/S cluster after aerobic purification, indicating that the cluster is stabilized by this mutation. Further, we show that apo-SufU is an activator of the
cysteine desulfurase
SufS
by enhancing its activity about 40-fold in vitro.
SufS
-dependent formation of holo-SufU suggests that SufU functions as an Fe/S cluster scaffold protein tightly cooperating with the
SufS
cysteine desulfurase
.
...
PMID:SufU is an essential iron-sulfur cluster scaffold protein in Bacillus subtilis. 2009 60
In vivo biogenesis of Fe-S cluster cofactors requires complex biosynthetic machinery to limit release of iron and sulfide, to protect the Fe-S cluster from oxidation, and to target the Fe-S cluster to the correct apoenzyme. The SufABCDSE pathway for Fe-S cluster assembly in Escherichia coli accomplishes these tasks under iron
starvation
and oxidative stress conditions that disrupt Fe-S cluster metabolism. Although SufB, SufC, and SufD are all required for in vivo Suf function, their exact roles are unclear. Here we show that SufB, SufC, and SufD, coexpressed with the
SufS
-SufE sulfur transfer pair, purify as two distinct complexes (SufBC(2)D and SufB(2)C(2)) that contain Fe-S clusters and FADH(2). These studies also show that SufC and SufD are required for in vivo Fe-S cluster formation on SufB. Furthermore, while SufD is dispensable for in vivo sulfur transfer, it is absolutely required for in vivo iron acquisition. Finally, we demonstrate for the first time that the ATPase activity of SufC is necessary for in vivo iron acquisition during Fe-S cluster assembly.
...
PMID:SufD and SufC ATPase activity are required for iron acquisition during in vivo Fe-S cluster formation on SufB. 2085 74
The first step in sulfur mobilization for the biosynthesis of Fe-S clusters under oxidative stress and iron
starvation
in Escherichia coli involves a
cysteine desulfurase
SufS
. Its catalytic reactivity is dependent on the presence of a sulfur acceptor protein, SufE, which acts as the preferred substrate for this enzyme. Kinetic analysis of the cysteine:SufE sulfurtransferase reaction of the E. coli
SufS
that is partially protected from reducing agents, such as dithiothreitol and glutathione, was conducted. Under these conditions, the reaction displays a biphasic profile in which the first phase involves a fast sulfur transfer reaction from
SufS
to SufE. The accumulation of persulfurated/polysulfurated forms of SufE accounts for a second phase of the slow catalytic turnover rate. The presence of the SufBCD complex enhances the activity associated with the second phase, while modestly inhibiting the activity associated with the initial sulfur transfer from
SufS
to SufE. Thus, the rate of sulfur transfer from
SufS
to the final proposed SufBCD Fe-S cluster scaffold appears to be dependent on the availability of the final sulfur acceptor. The use of a stronger reducing agent [tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine hydrochloride] elicited the maximal activity of the
SufS
-SufE reaction and surpassed the stimulatory effect of SufBCD. This concerted sulfur trafficking path involving sequential transfer from
SufS
to SufE to SufBCD guarantees the protection of intermediates at a controlled flux to meet cellular demands encountered under conditions detrimental to thiol chemistry and Fe-S cluster metabolism.
...
PMID:Protected sulfur transfer reactions by the Escherichia coli Suf system. 2367 90