Publications by authors named "Giudici-Orticoni M"

Article Synopsis
  • The aquatic γ-proteobacterium can form two types of biofilms: a floating pellicle at the air-liquid interface and a solid surface-associated biofilm (SSA-biofilm).
  • The Bpf system, which is similar to the Lap system, is essential for the formation of the pellicle biofilm but is not necessary for SSA-biofilm formation, highlighting its unique role.
  • BpfD, a protein involved in pellicle formation, binds c-di-GMP and interacts with other proteins like PdgA and CheY3, suggesting that biofilm development is regulated by a complex c-di-GMP signaling network.
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Introduction: Hildenborough is a gram-negative anaerobic bacterium belonging to the sulfate-reducing bacteria that exhibits highly versatile metabolism. By switching from one energy mode to another depending on nutrients availability in the environments" it plays a central role in shaping ecosystems. Despite intensive efforts to study energy metabolism at the genomic, biochemical and ecological level, bioenergetics in this microorganism remain far from being fully understood.

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Molecular mechanisms underlying the thermal response of cells remain elusive. On the basis of the recent result that the short-time diffusive dynamics of the proteome is an excellent indicator of temperature-dependent bacterial metabolism and death, we used neutron scattering (NS) spectroscopy and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to investigate the sub-nanosecond proteome mobility in psychro-, meso-, and hyperthermophilic bacteria over a wide temperature range. The magnitude of thermal fluctuations, measured by atomic mean square displacements, is similar among all studied bacteria at their respective thermal cell death.

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Cupredoxins are widely occurring copper-binding proteins with a typical Greek-key beta barrel fold. They are generally described as electron carriers that rely on a T1 copper centre coordinated by four ligands provided by the folded polypeptide. The discovery of novel cupredoxins demonstrates the high diversity of this family, with variations in terms of copper-binding ligands, copper centre geometry, redox potential, as well as biological function.

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Bacterial genomes are a huge reservoir of genes encoding J-domain protein co-chaperones that recruit the molecular chaperone DnaK to assist protein substrates involved in survival, adaptation, or fitness. The atc operon of the aquatic mesophilic bacterium Shewanella oneidensis encodes the proteins AtcJ, AtcA, AtcB, and AtcC, and all of them, except AtcA, are required for growth at low temperatures. AtcJ is a short J-domain protein that interacts with DnaK, but also with AtcC through its 21 amino acid C-terminal domain.

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is a microaerophilic hydrogen- and sulfur -oxidizing bacterium that assimilates CO via the reverse tricarboxylic acid cycle (rTCA). Key enzymes of this pathway are pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PFOR) and 2-oxoglutarate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (OGOR), which are responsible, respectively, for the reductive carboxylation of acetyl-CoA to pyruvate and of succinyl-CoA to 2-oxoglutarate, two energetically unfavorable reactions that require a strong reduction potential. We have confirmed, by biochemistry and proteomics, that possesses a pentameric version of these enzyme complexes ((αβγδε)) and that they are highly abundant in the cell.

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The hydrogen-based economy will require not only sustainable hydrogen production but also sensitive and cheap hydrogen sensors. Commercially available H sensors are limited by either use of noble metals or elevated temperatures. In nature, hydrogenase enzymes present high affinity and selectivity for hydrogen, while being able to operate in mild conditions.

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Temperature variations have a big impact on bacterial metabolism and death, yet an exhaustive molecular picture of these processes is still missing. For instance, whether thermal death is determined by the deterioration of the whole or a specific part of the proteome is hotly debated. Here, by monitoring the proteome dynamics of , we clearly show that only a minor fraction of the proteome unfolds at the cell death.

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has 2 functional chemosensory systems named Che1 and Che3, and 27 chemoreceptors. Che3 is dedicated to chemotaxis while Che1 could be involved in RpoS post-translational regulation. In this study, we have shown that two chemoreceptors Aer2so and McpAso, genetically related to the Che1 system, form distinct core-signaling units and signal to Che1 and Che3, respectively.

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Chaperone proteins are essential in all living cells to ensure protein homeostasis. Hsp90 is a major adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-dependent chaperone highly conserved from bacteria to eukaryotes. Recent studies have shown that bacterial Hsp90 is essential in some bacteria in stress conditions and that it participates in the virulence of pathogenic bacteria.

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Chemoreceptors are usually transmembrane proteins dedicated to the detection of compound gradients or signals in the surroundings of a bacterium. After detection, they modulate the activation of CheA-CheY, the core of the chemotactic pathway, to allow cells to move upwards or downwards depending on whether the signal is an attractant or a repellent, respectively. Environmental bacteria such as Shewanella oneidensis harbour dozens of chemoreceptors or MCPs (methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins).

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Chromate is a toxic metal that enters bacteria by using oxyanion importers. Here, we show that each mutant of the Tol-Pal system of Escherichia coli exhibited increased chromate resistance. This system, which spans the cell envelope, plays a major role in envelope integrity and septation.

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Copper is well known for its antimicrobial and antiviral properties. Under aerobic conditions, copper toxicity relies in part on the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), especially in the periplasmic compartment. However, copper is significantly more toxic under anaerobic conditions, in which ROS cannot be produced.

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Article Synopsis
  • Multispecies bacterial communities thrive by exchanging molecular information, which is crucial for their survival in various environments.
  • A coculture model was developed to study interactions between two types of anaerobic bacteria, revealing how they rely on each other for nutrients during stressful conditions, leading to enhanced growth and energy production.
  • The study identifies the role of autoinducer-2 (AI-2) molecules in regulating these interactions and how bacterial communication influences metabolism, shedding light on complex bacterial societies beyond traditional single-culture studies.
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The bacterium '' is the model organism for the deeply rooted phylum . This 'water-maker' is an H-oxidizing microaerophile that flourishes in extremely hot marine habitats, and it also thrives on the sulphur compounds commonly found in volcanic environments. '' has hyper-stable proteins and a fully sequenced genome, with some of its essential metabolic pathways deciphered (including energy conservation).

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Bacteria possess several molecular pathways to adapt to changing environments and to stress conditions. One of these pathways involves a complex network of chaperone proteins that together control proteostasis. In the aquatic bacterium Shewanella oneidensis, we have recently identified a previously unknown co-chaperone of the DnaK/Hsp70 chaperone system, AtcJ, that is essential for adaptation to low temperatures.

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The microaerophilic bacterium Aquifex aeolicus is a chemolitoautotroph that uses sulfur compounds as electron sources. The model of oxidation of the energetic sulfur compounds in this bacterium predicts that sulfite would probably be a metabolic intermediate released in the cytoplasm. In this work, we purified and characterized a membrane-bound sulfite dehydrogenase, identified as an SoeABC enzyme, that was previously described as a sulfur reductase.

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In this report, we investigate small proteins involved in bacterial alternative respiratory systems that improve the enzymatic efficiency through better anchorage and multimerization of membrane components. Using the small protein TorE of the respiratory TMAO reductase system as a model, we discovered that TorE is part of a subfamily of small proteins that are present in proteobacteria in which they play a similar role for bacterial respiratory systems. We reveal by microscopy that, in Shewanella oneidensis MR1, alternative respiratory systems are evenly distributed in the membrane contrary to what has been described for Escherichia coli.

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Bilirubin oxidases (BODs) belong to the multi-copper oxidase (MCO) family and efficiently reduce O at neutral pH and in physiological conditions where chloride concentrations are over 100 mM. BODs were consequently considered to be Cl resistant contrary to laccases. However, there has not been a detailed study on the related effect of chloride and pH on the redox state of immobilized BODs.

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, a chemolithoautotrophic Gram-negative bacterium, has a remarkable ability to obtain energy from ferrous iron oxidation at pH 2. Several metalloproteins have been described as being involved in this respiratory chain coupling iron oxidation with oxygen reduction. However, their properties and physiological functions remain largely unknown, preventing a clear understanding of the global mechanism.

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The "Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines (BIP)" laboratory, CNRS (France), organized its first French workshop on molecular chaperone proteins and protein folding in November 2017. The goal of this workshop was to gather scientists working in France on chaperone proteins and protein folding. This initiative was a great success with excellent talks and fruitful discussions.

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Pure phospholipids and membrane fragments from bacterial cells living under various conditions were studied against the influence of the surrounding acidity on the internal dynamics. For that we compared mean square displacements extracted from elastic incoherent neutron scattering data, measured both at low and at neutral pH, of the phospholipids 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and of samples from neutralophilic and acidophilic micro-organisms (some being hyperthermophilic and others mesophilic). The lipids showed a slight shift in the phase transition temperature of about 4 degrees under pH variation and became slightly more mobile at lower pH.

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Mononuclear cupredoxins contain a type 1 copper center with a trigonal or tetragonal geometry usually maintained by four ligands, a cystein, two histidines and a methionine. The recent discovery of new members of this family with unusual properties demonstrates, however, the versatility of this class of proteins. Changes in their ligand set lead to drastic variation in their metal site geometry and in the resulting spectroscopic and redox features.

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We have studied the translational migration of a monotopic membrane protein, the bacterial sulfide quinone reductase (SQR) in supported n-bilayers ([Formula: see text]) under the influence of an electric field parallel to the membrane plane. The direction of the migration changes when the charge of the protein changes its sign. Measuring mobilities at different pH enables us to gain experimental physico-chemical data on SQR as its isoelectric point and its estimated oligomeric state (at least trimeric) when inserted in a lipid membrane.

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Dark fermentation systems often show low H yields and unstable H production, as the result of the variability of microbial dynamics and metabolic pathways. Recent batch investigations have demonstrated that an artificial consortium of two anaerobic bacteria, Clostridium acetobutylicum and Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough, may redirect metabolic fluxes and improve H yields. This study aimed at evaluating the scale-up from batch to continuous H production in an up-flow anaerobic packed-bed reactor (APBR) continuously fed with a glucose-medium.

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