Publications by authors named "Manuela Fuchs"

Stickland fermentation, the coupled oxidation and reduction of amino acid pairs, is a major pathway for obtaining energy in the nosocomial bacterium . D-proline is the preferred substrate for the reductive path, making it not only a key component of the general metabolism but also impacting on the expression of the clostridial toxins TcdA and TcdB. D-proline reduction is catalyzed by the proline reductase Prd, which belongs to the pyruvoyl-dependent enzymes.

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The obligate anaerobic, enteric pathogen Clostridioides difficile persists in the intestinal tract by forming antibiotic-resistant endospores that contribute to relapsing and recurrent infections. Despite the importance of sporulation for C. difficile pathogenesis, environmental cues and molecular mechanisms that regulate sporulation initiation remain ill-defined.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the transcriptome architecture of a gram-positive pathogen responsible for antibiotic-associated diarrhea, focusing on its untranslated regions, operon structures, and noncoding RNAs, including 42 sRNAs.
  • Researchers mapped the functionality of several riboswitches and identified regulatory RNAs related to drug resistance, revealing that Hfq plays a significant role in RNA-based gene regulation despite ongoing debates about its functions in gram-positive bacteria.
  • The findings demonstrate that Hfq affects transcript stability and expression during intestinal colonization, with sRNA CDIF630nc_085 regulating the use of ethanolamine, highlighting the importance of posttranscriptional regulation in bacterial infection processes.
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Much of our current knowledge about cellular RNA-protein complexes in bacteria is derived from analyses in gram-negative model organisms, with the discovery of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) generally lagging behind in Gram-positive species. Here, we have applied Grad-seq analysis of native RNA-protein complexes to a major Gram-positive human pathogen, , whose RNA biology remains largely unexplored. Our analysis resolves in-gradient distributions for ∼88% of all annotated transcripts and ∼50% of all proteins, thereby providing a comprehensive resource for the discovery of RNA-protein and protein-protein complexes in and related microbes.

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Background: The study of postnatal ontogeny can provide insights into evolution by offering an understanding of how growth trajectories have evolved resulting in adult morphological disparity. The Ursus lineage is a good subject for studying cranial and mandibular shape and size variation in relation to postnatal ontogeny and phylogeny because it is at the same time not diverse but the species exhibit different feeding ecologies. Cranial and mandibular shapes of Ursus arctos (brown bear), U.

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Ultrarapid freezing (RF) followed by freeze-substitution (FS) provide superior preservation of the Dictyostelium discoideum multicellular slug tissue over conventional methods of chemical fixation at room temperature. The peripheral cells of slugs prepared by RF and FS form a tight layer of flattened cells. This cell layer resembles epithelia of other multicellular organisms in that it has close junctional contact between cells associated with the extracellular matrix (ECM, slime sheath).

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