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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A gene of
Haemophilus
somnus encoding the major 40,000-molecular-weight antigen (LppA) was cloned on a 2-kb Sau3AI fragment. The nucleotide sequence of the entire DNA insert was determined. One open reading frame, encoding a 247-residue polypeptide with a calculated molecular weight of 27,072, was identified. This reading frame was confirmed by sequencing the fusion joint of two independent IppA::TnphoA gene fusions. The 21 amino-terminal amino acids of the deduced polypeptide showed strong sequence homology to the signal peptide of secreted proteins, and the sequence
Leu
-
Leu
-Ala-Ala-Cys at the putative cleavage site is identical to the consensus cleavage sequence of lipoproteins from gram-negative bacteria. The presence of the lipid moiety on the protein was shown by incorporation of radioactive palmitic acid into the natural H. somnus protein. Palmitic acid could also be incorporated into the recombinant protein in Escherichia coli. Synthesis of the mature LppA lipoprotein was inhibited by globomycin, showing that cleavage of the signal peptide is mediated by signal peptidase II in both organisms. By using site-directed mutagenesis, the cysteine residue at the cleavage site was changed to glycine. Radiolabelled palmitate was not incorporated into the mutated protein, showing that lipid modification occurs at the Cys-22 residue.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning, nucleotide sequence, and characterization of a 40,000-molecular-weight lipoprotein of Haemophilus somnus. 154 56
The gene for protein D, a membrane-associated protein with specific affinity for human immunoglobulin D, was cloned from a nontypeable strain of
Haemophilus
influenzae. The gene was expressed in Escherichia coli from an endogenous promoter, and the gene product has an apparent molecular weight equal to that of H. influenzae protein D (42,000). The complete nucleotide sequence of the gene for protein D was determined, and the deduced amino acid sequence of 364 residues includes a putative signal sequence of 18 amino acids containing a consensus sequence,
Leu
-Ala-Gly-Cys, for bacterial lipoproteins. The sequence of protein D shows no similarity to those of other immunoglobulin-binding proteins. Protein D is the first example of immunoglobulin receptors from gram-negative bacteria that has been cloned and sequenced.
...
PMID:Protein D, an immunoglobulin D-binding protein of Haemophilus influenzae: cloning, nucleotide sequence, and expression in Escherichia coli. 198 23
The fadL gene of Escherichia coli encodes an outer membrane protein (FadL) that plays a central role in the uptake of exogenous long-chain fatty acids. The nucleotide sequence of the fadL gene revealed a single open reading frame of 1,344 bp encoding a protein with 448 amino acid residues and a molecular weight of 48,831. The transcriptional start, analyzed by primer extension, was shown to be 95 bp upstream from the translational start. Apparent -10 and -35 regions were found at -12 and -37 bp upstream from the transcriptional start. Three regions with hyphenated dyad symmetry (two between the transcriptional start and the translational start and one upstream from the -10 and -35 regions) were identified that may play a role in the expression of fadL. The protein product of the fadL gene contained a signal sequence and signal peptidase I cleavage site similar to that defined for other E. coli outer membrane proteins. The N-terminal sequence of mature FadL protein was determined by automated amino acid sequencing of protein purified from the outer membrane of a strain harboring fadL under the control of a T7 RNA polymerase-responsive promoter. This amino acid sequence, Ala-Gly-Phe-Gln-
Leu
-Asn-Glu-Phe-Ser-Ser, verified the signal peptidase I cleavage site on pre-FadL and confirmed the N-terminal amino acid sequence of FadL predicted from the DNA sequence. Mature FadL contained 421 amino acid residues, giving a molecular weight of 45,969. The amino acid composition of FadL deduced from the DNA sequence suggested that this protein contained an abundance of hydrophobic amino acid residues and lacked cysteinyl residues. The hydrophobic amino acids within FadL were predicted to contribute to at least five regions of the protein with an overall hydrophobic character. The amino acid sequence of FadL was used to search GenBank for other proteins with amino acid sequence homology. These data demonstrated that FadL and the heat-modifiable outer membrane protein P1 of
Haemophilus
influenzae type b were 60.5% conserved and 42.0% identical over 438 amino acid residues.
...
PMID:Primary sequence of the Escherichia coli fadL gene encoding an outer membrane protein required for long-chain fatty acid transport. 198 39
Four Capnocytophaga strains from blood cultures of immunocompromised patients with malignant disease and the type strains of three Capnocytophaga species were examined and compared to strains representing five other genera that are hard to differentiate from Capnocytophaga. With three rapid identification methods, negative catalase and oxidase reactions and positive ONPG assay, Capnocytophaga was easily separated from Eikenella corrodens, Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, Cardiobacterium hominis, and CDC group DF-2.
Haemophilus
aphrophilus was excluded by
leucine
, valine and cystine arylamidase and alpha-glucosidase reactions (API ZYM). Further confirmatory reactions constituted gelatin hydrolysis, haemin requirement, and carbohydrate and esculin breakdown. Although rapid identification of Capnocytophaga to the genus level was feasible, differentiation on a species level proved impossible.
...
PMID:Rapid identification of Capnocytophaga isolated from septicemic patients. 646 67
We report a 1.432-kb DNA sequence at 59 min on the Escherichia coli chromosome that connects the published sequences of the pcm gene for the isoaspartyl protein methyltransferase and that of the katF or rpoS (katF/rpoS) gene for a sigma factor involved in stationary-phase gene expression. Analysis of the DNA sequence reveals an open reading frame potentially encoding a polypeptide of 379 amino acids. The polypeptide sequence includes a consensus bacterial lipidation sequence present at residues 23 to 26 (
Leu
-Ala-Gly-Cys), four octapeptide proline- and glutamine-rich repeats of consensus sequence QQPQIQPV, and four heptapeptide threonine- and serine-rich repeats of consensus sequence PTA(S,T)TTE. The deduced amino acid sequence, especially in the C-terminal region, is similar to that of the
Haemophilus
somnus LppB lipoprotein outer membrane antigen (40% overall sequence identity; 77% identity in last 95 residues). The LppB lipoprotein binds Congo red dye and has been proposed to be a virulence determinant in H. somnus. Utilizing a plasmid construct with the E. coli gene under the control of a phage T7 promoter, we demonstrate the lipidation of this gene product by the incorporation of [3H]palmitic acid into a 42-kDa polypeptide. We also show that treatment of E. coli cells with globomycin, an inhibitor of the lipoprotein signal peptidase, results in the accumulation of a 46-kDa precursor. We thus designate the protein NlpD (new lipoprotein D). E. coli cells overexpressing NlpD bind Congo red dye, suggesting a common function with the H. somnus LppB protein. Disruption of the chromosomal E. coli nlpD gene by insertional mutagenesis results in decreased stationary-phase survival after 7 days.
...
PMID:A gene at 59 minutes on the Escherichia coli chromosome encodes a lipoprotein with unusual amino acid repeat sequences. 813 57
Haemophilus
somnus is a facultative intracellular pathogen which causes a wide range of diseases in cattle. To identify putative virulence determinants, a genomic library of H. somnus in Escherichia coli was screened for Congo red binding, a property associated with virulence in pathogenic bacteria, and subsequently with bovine hyperimmune sera raised against H. somnus HS25. A Congo red-binding clone carrying a 1.8-kb DNA insert was found to encode a strongly seroreactive LppB protein with an apparent molecular weight of 40,000. The nucleotide sequence of the entire DNA insert was determined. Two open reading frames coding for polypeptides with calculated molecular weights of 21,893 and 30,721 were identified. The larger open reading frame encoded LppB, while the smaller reading frame encoded a nonseroreactive protein with a relative molecular mass of approximately 18 kDa. The 16 amino-terminal amino acids of the deduced LppB polypeptide showed strong sequence homology to the signal peptide of secreted bacterial proteins, and the sequence
Leu
-Ala-Ala-Cys at the putative cleavage site corresponds to the consensus cleavage sequence of bacterial lipoproteins. Synthesis of the mature LppB lipoprotein in H. somnus was inhibited by globomycin, a specific inhibitor of signal peptidase II. LppB was localized to the outer membrane of H. somnus.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning, nucleotide sequence, and characterization of lppB, encoding an antigenic 40-kilodalton lipoprotein of Haemophilus somnus. 847 68
The nucleotide sequences of the quinolone resistance-determining regions of the gyrA and parC genes from five ciprofloxacin-resistant strains of
Haemophilus
influenzae (MICs, 2 to 32 micrograms/ml) isolated from patients with cystic fibrosis and three ciprofloxacin-susceptible strains of H. influenzae (MICs, < or = 0.1 micrograms/ml) were determined. Four of the five resistant strains possessed at least one amino acid substitution in each of the GyrA and ParC fragments studied. The mutations identified in GyrA were a serine at residue 84 (Ser-84) to
Leu
or Tyr and Asp-88 to Asn or Tyr. ParC mutations were in positions exactly analogous to those identified in GyrA, namely, Ser-84 to Ile and Glu-88 to Lys. The Glu-88 to Lys ParC substitution was identified only in high-level ciprofloxacin-resistant strains. These mutations have been shown to be the origin of the observed resistance after transformation into ciprofloxacin-susceptible H. influenzae isolates. These results suggest that H. influenzae isolates require at least one amino acid substitution in both GyrA and ParC in order to attain significant levels of resistance to quinolones.
...
PMID:Ciprofloxacin-resistant Haemophilus influenzae strains possess mutations in analogous positions of GyrA and ParC. 880 76
The complete
Haemophilus
influenzae genome (1.83 Mb, Rd strain) provides opportunities for characterizing global genomic inhomogeneities and for detecting important sequence signals. Along these lines, new methods for identifying frequent words (oligonucleotides and/or peptides) and their distributions are applied to the H.influenzae genome with some comparisons and contrasts made with frequent words of other bacterial genomes. Three major classes of frequent oligonucleotides stand out: (i) oligos related to the familiar uptake signal sequences (USSs), AAGTGCGGT (USS+) and its inverted complement (USS-), (ii) multiple tetranucleotide iterations and (iii) intergenic dyad sequences (ISDs) found as AAGCCCACCCTAC and its dyad form. The USS+ and USS- occur in almost equal counts, are remarkably evenly spaced around the genome, and appear predominantly in the same reading frame of protein coding domains (USS+ translated to Ser-Ala-Val, USS- translated to Thr-Ala-
Leu
). These observations suggest that USSs contribute to global genomic functions, for example, in replication and/or repair processes, or as membrane attachment sites, or as sequences helping to pack DNA. The long tetranucleotide iterations, virtually unique to H.influenzae (i.e., unknown in other prokaryotes), through polymerase slippage during replication and/or homologous recombination may produce subpopulations expressing alternative proteins. The 13 bp frequent IDS words, invariably intergenic, occur mostly in clusters and provide potential for complex secondary structures suggesting that these sequences may be important signals for regulating the activity of their flanking genes. The frequent oligopeptides of H.influenzae are principally of two kinds--those induced by oligonucleotide frequent words (USSs, tetranucleotide iterations), and those associated with ATP or GTP binding sites that are generally composed of three motifs: the A-box which contributes to delineating the binding pocket; the B-box which functions in hydrolysis; and the C-box whose function is unknown. The A-box occurs fairly universally in prokaryotes and eukaryotes. The B- and C-motifs appear to be specialized to various functional groups (e.g., transport, recombination, chaperone activity). Other putative motifs correspond to homologs of Escherichia coli motifs, for example, are associated with proteins of transcriptional processing, aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases and proteins functioning in electron transfer.
...
PMID:Frequent oligonucleotides and peptides of the Haemophilus influenzae genome. 893 82
An 8.5-kb plasmid encoding genes (leuABCD) involved in
leucine
biosynthesis and a small plasmid of 1.74 kb of yet unknown function were found in the intracellular symbiont, Buchnera aphidicola, of two divergent aphid species, Thelaxes suberi and Tetraneura caerulescens, respectively. The leuABCD-carrying plasmid (pBTs1) was amplified from total aphid DNA by inverse long PCR, using outwardly oriented oligonucleotide primers specific to leuA. The resulting 8.2-kb PCR fragment as well as the 1.74-kb plasmid (pBTc1) were cloned and sequenced. pBTs1 differed from a previously described B. aphidicola plasmid (pRPE) of the aphid Rhopalosiphum padi by the presence of a small heat shock gene (ibp) and in the order of the leuABCD and repA genes. Comparison of both
leucine
plasmids to the small plasmid pBTc1 revealed extensive similarity with respect to putative replication functions as well as in the presence of a highly conserved open reading frame that was found to be homologous to Escherichia coli YqhA and
Haemophilus
influenzae HI0507 and which may encode an integral membrane protein. The three B. aphidicola plasmids most likely evolved from a common ancestral replicon, which in turn may be distantly related to IncFII plasmids. Phylogenetic affiliations of the B. aphidicola strains of the two aphid species were assessed by sequencing of their 16S rRNA genes. Evaluation of the distribution of the leuABCD-encoding plasmids within a phylogenetic framework suggests independent origins for pBTs1 and pRPE from an ancestral replicon resembling pBTc1. The implications for symbiotic essential amino acid biosynthesis and provisioning are discussed.
...
PMID:Putative evolutionary origin of plasmids carrying the genes involved in leucine biosynthesis in Buchnera aphidicola (endosymbiont of aphids). 924 64
The properties of an aminopeptidase (AP) from Fusobacterium nucleatum were studied in view of the fact that this organism, along with other Gram-negative anaerobes involved in periodontal diseases, survives in the subgingival environment by obtaining energy via the fermentation of a small number of peptide-derived amino acids. The AP was found to be cell-associated and was isolated from disrupted chemostat-grown cells. It was purified by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, two column chromatographic steps and IEF. The enzyme was found to have a molecular mass of 54 kDa, a pI of 5.1, a pH optimum between 7.5 and 8.0 and, using
Leu
-Ala as substrate, it gave K(m) and Vmax values of 0.66 mM and 0.12 mumol min-1 mg-1, respectively. No complete homology was found between the N-terminal sequence of the first 20 amino acids (MDXKXYVDLKERFLRYVKFN...) and any other published sequence, but residues 8-20 gave a 62% match with residues 9-21 of an AP from
Haemophilus
influenzae. The enzyme was inactivated by chelating agents, bestatin, p-hydroxymercuribenzoate and some heavy metals. Cobalt ions restored EDTA-inactivated activity but did not reverse inhibition by 1,10-phenanthroline. In addition, bestatin and 1,10-phenanthroline had an inhibitory effect on the batch growth of F. nucleatum in a complex medium in which peptidase activities would be nutritionally essential. No such inhibition was observed in a chemically defined medium in which growth was not dependent upon peptidase activities. The peptidase described in this paper therefore appears to be a cobalt-activated metallo-AP which, together with other peptidases, is considered to be important in the survival of F. nucleatum in the subgingival environment of the mouth.
...
PMID:An aminopeptidase nutritionally important to Fusobacterium nucleatum. 969 13
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