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Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
While belonging to the same family of antioxidant enzymes, members of the peroxiredoxins do not necessarily employ one and the same method for their reduction. Most representatives become reduced with the aid of thioredoxin, whereas some members use AhpF, tryparedoxin, or cyclophilin A. Recent research on a new peroxiredoxin isoform (type C) from Populus trichocarpa has shown that these particular types may also use glutaredoxin instead of thioredoxin. This finding is supported by the occurrence of chimeric proteins composed of a peroxiredoxin and glutaredoxin region. A gene encoding such a fusion protein is enclosed in the
Haemophilus
influenzae Rd genome. We expressed the H. influenzae protein, denoted here as PGdx, in Escherichia coli and purified the recombinant enzyme. In vitro assays demonstrate that PGdx, in the presence of dithiothreitol or glutathione, is able to protect supercoiled DNA against the metal ion-catalyzed oxidation-system. Enzymatic assays did, indeed, characterize PGdx as a peroxidase, requiring the glutathione redox cycle for the reduction of
hydrogen
peroxide (k(cat)/K(m) 5.01 x 10(6) s(-1) m(-1)) as well as the small organic hydroperoxide tert-butylhydroperoxide (k(cat)/K(m) 5.67 x 10(4) s(-1) m(-1)). Enzymatic activity as function of the glutathione concentration deviated from normal Michaelis-Menten kinetics, giving a sigmoidal pattern with an apparent Hill coefficient of 2.9. Besides the formation of a disulfide-linked PGdx dimer, it was also shown by mass spectrometric analysis that cysteine 49, which is equivalent to the active site cysteine of the peroxiredoxins, undergoes glutathionylation during purification under nonreducing conditions. Based on these results, we propose a model for the catalytic mechanism.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a chimeric enzyme from Haemophilus influenzae Rd that exhibits glutathione-dependent peroxidase activity. 1260 54
Glutathione is an abundant and ubiquitous low-molecular-weight thiol that may play a role in many cellular processes, including protection against the deleterious effects of reactive oxygen species. We address here the role of glutathione in protection against
hydrogen
peroxide (H2O2) in
Haemophilus
influenzae and show that glutathione and catalase provide overlapping defense systems. H. influenzae is naturally glutathione deficient and imports glutathione from the growth medium. Mutant H. influenzae lacking catalase and cultured in glutathione-deficient minimal medium is completely devoid of H2O2 scavenging activity and, accordingly, substantial amounts of H2O2 accumulate in the growth medium. H. influenzae generates H2O2 at rates similar to those reported for Escherichia coli, but the toxicity of this harmful metabolite is averted by glutathione-based H2O2 removal, which appears to be the primary system for protection against H2O2 endogenously generated during aerobic respiration. When H2O2 concentrations exceed low micromolar levels, the hktE gene-encoded catalase becomes the predominant scavenger. The requirement for glutathione in protection against oxidative stress is analogous to that in higher and lower eukaryotes but is unlike the situation in other bacteria in which glutathione is dispensable for aerobic growth during both normal and oxidative stress conditions.
...
PMID:Glutathione and catalase provide overlapping defenses for protection against respiration-generated hydrogen peroxide in Haemophilus influenzae. 1294 8
Barnhart, Benjamin J. (Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health, Baltimore, Md.). Residual activity of thermally denatured transforming deoxyribonucleic acid from
Haemophilus
influenzae. J. Bacteriol. 89:1271-1279. 1965.-The level of residual transforming activity of heated deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) (i.e., 1 to a few per cent of native DNA-transforming activity) was found to be independent of the heating and quenching temperatures and less susceptible than native or renatured DNA to heat inactivation upon prolonged heating above or below the critical melting temperature. Similar dose-response curves were obtained for inactivation by formamide of native and renatured DNA, but the residual-active material was much more resistant. Heating DNA above the T(m) in the presence of 1% formaldehyde resulted in a level of residual activity 4 logs lower than that obtained without formaldehyde. Residual-active material was not inactivated by Escherichia coli phosphodiesterase, but it was susceptible to snake venom phosphodiesterase. A new genetic marker was induced in heated-quenched DNA but not in purified residual-active material following nitrous acid treatment. Residual activity was found to be less susceptible to ultraviolet inactivation and to band at a higher density region in CsCl than native DNA. In conclusion, it is suggested that the residual-active material is a structure formed by intrastrand
hydrogen
bonding of the separated units of heated-quenched DNA. Such a configuration would result in at least a partially double-stranded structure, which is probably the essential characteristic of the residual-active material endowing it with biological activity.
...
PMID:RESIDUAL ACTIVITY OF THERMALLY DENATURED TRANSFORMING DEOXYRIBONUCLEIC ACID FROM HAEMOPHILUS INFLUENZAE. 1429 97
SecB is a bacterial chaperone involved in directing pre-protein to the translocation pathway by its specific interaction with the peripheral membrane ATPase SecA. The SecB-binding site on SecA is located at its C terminus and consists of a stretch of highly conserved residues. The crystal structure of SecB in complex with the C-terminal 27 amino acids of SecA from
Haemophilus
influenzae shows that the SecA peptide is structured as a CCCH zinc-binding motif. One SecB tetramer is bound by two SecA peptides, and the interface involves primarily salt bridges and
hydrogen
bonding interactions. The structure explains the importance of the zinc-binding motif and conserved residues at the C terminus of SecA in its high-affinity binding with SecB. It also suggests a model of SecB-SecA interaction and its implication for the mechanism of pre-protein transfer in bacterial protein translocation.
...
PMID:Structural determinants of SecB recognition by SecA in bacterial protein translocation. 1451 49
The structural analysis of an enzymatic reaction intermediate affords a unique opportunity to study a catalytic mechanism in extraordinary detail. Here we present the structure of a tetrahedral intermediate in the catalytic cycle of aspartate-beta-semialdehyde dehydrogenase (ASADH) from
Haemophilus
influenzae at 2.0-A resolution. ASADH is not found in humans, yet its catalytic activity is required for the biosynthesis of essential amino acids in plants and microorganisms. Diaminopimelic acid, also formed by this enzymatic pathway, is an integral component of bacterial cell walls, thus making ASADH an attractive target for the development of new antibiotics. This enzyme is able to capture the substrates aspartate-beta-semialdehyde and phosphate as an active complex that does not complete the catalytic cycle in the absence of NADP. A distinctive binding pocket in which the hemithioacetal oxygen of the bound substrate is stabilized by interaction with a backbone amide group dictates the R stereochemistry of the tetrahedral intermediate. This pocket, reminiscent of the oxyanion hole found in serine proteases, is completed through
hydrogen
bonding to the bound phosphate substrate.
...
PMID:Capture of an intermediate in the catalytic cycle of L-aspartate-beta-semialdehyde dehydrogenase. 1455 65
The chimeric peroxidase PGdx of
Haemophilus
influenzae Rd belongs to a recently identified family of thiol peroxidases capable of reducing
hydrogen
peroxide as well as alkylhydroperoxides by means of glutathione redox cycling. In the present study, we constructed a H. influenzae Rd strain, deficient in its PGdx encoding gene (open reading frame HI0572). The mutant was shown by disk inhibition and liquid culture growth assays to exhibit increased susceptibility to organic hydroperoxides. The hampered growth was restored by complementing the interrupted gene on the genome with a replicating plasmid bearing an intact copy of the gene, hereby rejecting the possible influences of polar effects. Elevated levels of
hydrogen
peroxide scavenging activity, due to the catalase HktE, were measured in the absence of a functional pgdx gene rendering the mutant more resilient against
hydrogen
peroxide. On the other hand, after initiation of the stationary phase, aerobic cultures of the pgdx mutant were practically devoid of living cells, whereas wild-type counterparts retained viability. This observed feature was alleviated by complementation with the functional gene or with the addition of catalase.
...
PMID:Physiological characterization of Haemophilus influenzae Rd deficient in its glutathione-dependent peroxidase PGdx. 1470 67
The gene encoding Dam methyltransferase of
Haemophilus
influenzae was mutagenized by the insertion of a chloramphenicol-resistance cassette into the middle of the Dam coding sequence. This mutant construct was introduced into the H. influenzae chromosome by transformation and selection for Cam(R) transformants. The authors have shown that several phenotypic properties, resistance to antibiotics, dyes and detergent as well as efficiency of transformation, depend on the Dam methylation state of the DNA. Although the major role of the methyl-directed mismatch repair (MMR) system is to repair postreplicative errors, it seems that in H. influenzae its effect is more apparent in repairing DNA damage caused by oxidative compounds. In the dam mutant treated with
hydrogen
peroxide, MMR is not targeted to newly replicated DNA strands and therefore mismatches are converted into single- and double-strand DNA breaks. This is shown by the increased peroxide sensitivity of the dam mutant and the finding that the sensitivity can be suppressed by a mutH mutation inactivating MMR. In the dam mutant treated with nitrofurazone the resulting damage is not converted into DNA breaks but the high sensitivity is also suppressed by a mutH mutation.
...
PMID:Characterization of a dam mutant of Haemophilus influenzae Rd. 1552 63
Peptidoglycan-associated lipoprotein (Pal) is a potential vaccine candidate from
Haemophilus
influenzae that is highly conserved in Gram-negative bacteria and anchored to the outer membrane through an N-terminal lipid attachment. Pal stabilizes the outer membrane by providing a noncovalent link to the peptidoglycan (PG) layer through a periplasmic domain. Using NMR spectroscopy, we determined the three-dimensional structure of a complex between the periplasmic domain of Pal and a biosynthetic peptidoglycan precursor (PG-P), UDP-N-acetylmuramyl-L-Ala-alpha-d-Glu-m-Dap-D-Ala-d-Ala (m-Dap is meso-diaminopimelate). Pal has a binding pocket lined with conserved surface residues that interacts exclusively with the peptide portion of the ligand. The m-Dap residue, which is mainly found in the cell walls of Gram-negative bacteria, is sequestered in this pocket and plays an important role by forming
hydrogen
bond and hydrophobic contacts to Pal. The structure provides insight into the mode of cell wall recognition for a broad class of Gram-negative membrane proteins, including OmpA and MotB, which have peptidoglycan-binding domains homologous to that of Pal.
...
PMID:Peptidoglycan recognition by Pal, an outer membrane lipoprotein. 1647 1
D-amino acids are much less common than their L-isomers but are widely distributed in most organisms. Many D-amino acids, including those necessary for bacterial cell wall formation, are synthesized from the corresponding L-isomers by alpha-amino acid racemases. The important class of pyridoxal phosphate-independent racemases function by an unusual mechanism whose details have been poorly understood. It has been proposed that the stereoinversion involves two active-site cysteine residues acting in concert as a base (thiolate) and an acid (thiol). Although crystallographic structures of several such enzymes are available, with the exception of the recent structures of glutamate racemase from Bacillus subtilis and of proline racemase from Trypanosoma cruzi, the structures either are of inactive forms (e.g., disulfide) or do not allow unambiguous modeling of the substrates in the active sites. Here, we present the crystal structures of diaminopimelate (DAP) epimerase from
Haemophilus
influenzae with two different isomers of the irreversible inhibitor and substrate mimic aziridino-DAP at 1.35- and 1.70-A resolution. These structures permit a detailed description of this pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-independent amino acid racemase active site and delineate the electrostatic interactions that control the exquisite substrate selectivity of DAP epimerase. Moreover, the active site shows how deprotonation of the substrates' nonacidic
hydrogen
at the alpha-carbon (pKa approximately 29) by a seemingly weakly basic cysteine residue (pKa approximately 8-10) is facilitated by interactions with two buried alpha-helices. Bacterial racemases, including glutamate racemase and DAP epimerase, are potential targets for the development of new agents effective against organisms resistant to conventional antibiotics.
...
PMID:Structural insights into stereochemical inversion by diaminopimelate epimerase: an antibacterial drug target. 1672 97
Nontypeable
Haemophilus
influenzae (NTHi) is a gram-negative bacterium and a common commensal organism of the upper respiratory tract in humans. NTHi causes a number of diseases, including otitis media, sinusitis, conjunctivitis, exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and bronchitis. During the course of colonization and infection, NTHi must withstand oxidative stress generated by insult due to multiple reactive oxygen species produced endogenously by other copathogens and by host cells. Using an NTHi-specific microarray containing oligonucleotides representing the 1821 open reading frames of the recently sequenced NTHi isolate 86-028NP, we have identified 40 genes in strain 86-028NP that are upregulated after induction of oxidative stress due to
hydrogen
peroxide. Further comparisons between the parent and an isogenic oxyR mutant identified a subset of 11 genes that were transcriptionally regulated by OxyR, a global regulator of oxidative stress. Interestingly,
hydrogen
peroxide induced the OxyR-independent upregulation of expression of the genes encoding components of multiple iron utilization systems. This finding suggested that careful balancing of levels of intracellular iron was important for minimizing the effects of oxidative stress during NTHi colonization and infection and that there are additional regulatory pathways involved in iron utilization.
...
PMID:The OxyR regulon in nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae. 1714
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