Biofilms are structured communities characterized by distinctive gene expression patterns and profound physiological changes compared to those of planktonic cultures. Here, we show that many gram-negative bacterial biofilms secrete high levels of a small-molecular-weight compound, which inhibits the growth of only Escherichia coli K-12 and a rare few other natural isolates. We demonstrate both genetically and biochemically that this molecule is the amino acid valine, and we provide evidence that valine production within biofilms results from metabolic changes occurring within high-density biofilm communities when carbon sources are not limiting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLuria-Bertani broth supports Escherichia coli growth to an optical density at 600 nm (OD(600)) of 7. Surprisingly, however, steady-state growth ceases at an OD(600) of 0.3, when the growth rate slows down and cell mass decreases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Escherichia coli proteins DksA, GreA, and GreB are all structural homologs that bind the secondary channel of RNA polymerase (RNAP) but are thought to act at different levels of transcription. DksA, with its co-factor ppGpp, inhibits rrnB P1 transcription initiation, whereas GreA and GreB activate RNAP to cleave back-tracked RNA during elongational pausing. Here, in vivo and in vitro evidence reveals antagonistic regulation of rrnB P1 transcription initiation by Gre factors (particularly GreA) and DksA; GreA activates and DksA inhibits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn Escherichia coli the beta-lactam mecillinam specifically inhibits penicillin-binding protein 2 (PBP2), a peptidoglycan transpeptidase essential for maintaining rod shape. We have previously shown that PBP2 inactivation results in a cell division block and that an increased concentration of the nucleotide ppGpp, effector of the RelA-dependent stringent response, confers mecillinam resistance and allows cells to divide as spheres in the absence of PBP2 activity. In this study we have characterized an insertion mutation which confers mecillinam resistance in wild-type and DeltarelA strains but not in DeltarelADeltaspoT strains, devoid of ppGpp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA scheme is presented whereby a new genetic control circuit can be introduced into an organism, permitting the experimenter to turn the expression of a given gene (or set of genes) on or off at will. The proposed scheme involves a positive feedback loop--here, a positive regulator, the CII protein of phage lambda, with its structural gene engineered so as to require CII for its expression. This feedback loop creates the possibility of two stable steady states, with gene cII ON or OFF.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeeing connections between apparently unrelated areas is the hallmark of a deep thinker. Maurice Hofnung showed that his interest in the maltose regulon and my own interest in the regulation of cell division in Escherichia coli could lead to fruitful collaboration. From the maltose regulon to the LamB receptor to phage A to the SOS response to the Mutatest to induction of expression of the SOS-inducible division inhibitor SfiA to the SOS Chromotest based on sfiA::lacZ induction to the development of a commercial kit for measuring the genotoxicity of environmental substances.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhenever the state of a biological system is not determined solely by present conditions but depends on its past history, we can say that the system has memory. Bacteria and bacteriophage use a variety of memory mechanisms, some of which seem to convey adaptive value. A genetic type of heritable memory is the programmed inversion of specific DNA sequences, which causes switching between alternative patterns of gene expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe temperate bacteriophage Mu is a transposable element that can integrate randomly into bacterial DNA, thereby creating mutations. Mutants due to an integrated Mu prophage do not give rise to revertants, as if Mu, unlike other transposable elements, were unable to excise precisely. In the present work, starting with a lacZ::Muc62(Ts) strain unable to form Lac+ colonies, we cloned a lacZ+ gene in vivo on a mini-Mu plasmid, under conditions of prophage induction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe transcriptional profile of the entire Caulobacter crescentus genome over a synchronous cell cycle was recently described. The analysis reveals a stunning 553 cell-cycle-regulated genes or orfs, nearly 19% of the genome, including putative functions in virtually all biological activities. Over a quarter of these genes/orfs respond to the Caulobacter master regulator, CtrA, most of them apparently indirectly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe concept of multistationarity has become essential for understanding cell differentiation. For this reason theoretical biologists have more and more frequently to determine the steady values, often multiple, of systems of non-linear differential equations. It is well known that iteration processes of current use converge or not towards a fixed point depending on the absolute value of the slope of the iteration function in the vicinity of the considered fixed point.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mutant bacteriophage Mugem2(Ts), known to synchronize the division of infected cells, to relax DNA supercoiling and, as prophage, to give rise to precisely excised revertants, has been thought to overexpress the gemA-mor operon, and genetic evidence suggests that the B subunit of DNA gyrase (GyrB) is the target of action of GemA. In two different double hybrid tests presented here, we find no evidence of GemA-GyrB protein-protein interaction. We do observe a GemA-GemA interaction, however, indicating that GemA can dimerize.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRapidly growing Escherichia coli is unable to divide in the presence of the antibiotic mecillinam, whose direct target is penicillin-binding protein 2 (PBP2), responsible for the elongation of the cylindrical portion of the cell wall. Division can be restored in the absence of PBP2 activity by increasing the concentration of the cell division proteins FtsQ, FtsA, and FtsZ. We tried to identify regulators of the ftsQ-ftsA-ftsZ operon among mecillinam-resistant mutants, which include strains overexpressing these genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytoplasmic proteases, although necessary for proper cell functioning, must be strictly regulated. In fact, they resemble chaperones, ancient protein folding devices. These molecules recognise exposed hydrophobic regions of unfolded or denatured proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bacteriol
December 1998
Two Escherichia coli genes, expressed from multicopy plasmids, are shown to cause partial induction of prophage lambda in recA mutant lysogens. One is rcsA, which specifies a positive transcriptional regulator of the cps genes, which are involved in capsular polysaccharide synthesis. The other is dsrA, which specifies an 85-nucleotide RNA that relieves repression of the rcsA gene by histone-like protein H-NS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEscherichia coli loses its rod shape by inactivation of PBP2 (penicillin-binding protein 2), target of the beta-lactam mecillinam. Under these conditions, cell division is blocked in rich medium. Division in the absence of PBP2 activity is restored (and resistance to mecillinam is conferred) when the three cell division proteins FtsQ, FtsA and FtsZ are overproduced, but not when only one or two of them are overproduced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe enzyme S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) synthetase, the Escherichia coli metK gene product, produces SAM, the cell's major methyl donor. We show here that SAM synthetase activity is induced by leucine and repressed by Lrp, the leucine-responsive regulatory protein. When SAM synthetase activity falls below a certain critical threshold, the cells produce long filaments with regularly distributed nucleoids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAll enzymes are able to use alternative substrates. When these are naturally occurring metabolites, an 'underground reaction' takes place. Examples are presented in which underground metabolism of this sort produces an observable phenotype.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProteins with short nonpolar carboxyl termini are unstable in Escherichia coli. This proteolytic pathway is used to dispose of polypeptides synthesized from truncated mRNA molecules. Such proteins are tagged with an 11-amino-acid nonpolar destabilizing tail via a mechanism involving the 10Sa (SsrA) stable RNA and then degraded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEscherichia coli hupA hupB double mutants, lacking both subunits (HU1 and HU2) of the histone-like protein HU, accumulate secondary mutations. In some genetic backgrounds, these include mutations in the minCDE operon, inactivating this system of septation control and resulting in the formation of minicells. In the course of the characterization of hupA hupB mutants, we observed that the simultaneous absence of the HU2 subunit and the MukB protein, implicated in chromosome partitioning, is lethal for the bacteria; the integrity of either HU or MukB thus seems to be essential for bacterial growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFolia Microbiol (Praha)
October 1997
The literature demonstrating tight regulation of the Escherichia coli cell cycle is reviewed. Recent evidence is presented indicating that the normal rod cell shape can be abandoned, allowing growth as a coccus, either by increasing the amount of the division proteins FtsZ, FtsA and FtsQ, or by increasing the pool of the nucleotide ppGpp. It is argued that ppGpp may be a cell cycle signal in E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cIII protein of bacteriophage lambda is known to protect two regulatory proteins from degradation by the essential Escherichia coli protease HflB (also known as FtsH), viz., the lambda cII protein and the host heat shock sigma factor sigma32. lambda cIII, itself an unstable protein, is partially stabilized when the HflB concentration is decreased, and its half-life is decreased when HflB is overproduced, strongly suggesting that it is degraded by HflB in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMecillinam, a beta-lactam antibiotic specific to penicillin-binding protein 2 (PBP 2) in Escherichia coli, blocks cell wall elongation and, indirectly, cell division, but its lethality can be overcome by increased levels of ppGpp, the nucleotide effector of the stringent response. We have subjected an E. coli K-12 strain to random insertional mutagenesis with a mini-Tn10 element.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrogravity affects certain physical properties of fluids, such as convection movement and surface tension. As a consequence, cells and living organisms may exhibit different behaviour in space, which may result from differences in the immediate environment of the cell or changes in the structure of the membrane in microgravity. Two experiments to examine the effects of microgravity on cell microenvironment and signal transduction through membranes were performed using a well-characterized system with different strains of the non-pathogenic Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli.
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