VCC234718, a molecule with growth inhibitory activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), was identified by phenotypic screening of a 15344-compound library. Sequencing of a VCC234718-resistant mutant identified a Y487C substitution in the inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase, GuaB2, which was subsequently validated to be the primary molecular target of VCC234718 in Mtb. VCC234718 inhibits Mtb GuaB2 with a K of 100 nM and is uncompetitive with respect to IMP and NAD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe lack of proper treatment for serious infectious diseases due to the emergence of multidrug resistance reinforces the need for the discovery of novel antibiotics. This is particularly true for tuberculosis (TB) for which 3.7% of new cases and 20% of previously treated cases are estimated to be caused by multi-drug resistant strains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTelomycin (TEM) is a cyclic depsipeptide antibiotic active against Gram-positive bacteria. In this study, five new natural telomycin analogues produced by Streptomyces canus ATCC 12646 were identified. To understand the biosynthetic machinery of telomycin and to generate more analogues by pathway engineering, the TEM biosynthesis gene cluster has been characterized from S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSR31747A is a sigma ligand with potent antiproliferative activity against tumor cells and for which three binding proteins have been identified to date: (a) SRBP-1 (also called sigma 1); (b) HIS; and (c) sigma 2. In this study, we characterized an additional SR31747A binding site, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn budding yeast, anaphase initiation is controlled by ubiquitin-dependent degradation of Pds1p. Analysis of pds1 mutants implicated Pds1p in the DNA damage, spindle assembly, and S-phase checkpoints. Though some components of these pathways are known, others remain to be identified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn most eukaryotic cells, DNA replication is confined to S phase of the cell cycle [1]. During this interval, S-phase checkpoint controls restrain mitosis until replication is complete [2]. In budding yeast, the anaphase inhibitor Pds1p has been associated with the checkpoint arrest of mitosis when DNA is damaged or when mitotic spindles have formed aberrantly [3] [4], but not when DNA replication is blocked with hydroxyurea (HU).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins are cell surface-localized proteins that serve many important cellular functions. The pathway mediating synthesis and attachment of the GPI anchor to these proteins in eukaryotic cells is complex, highly conserved, and plays a critical role in the proper targeting, transport, and function of all GPI-anchored protein family members. In this article, we demonstrate that MCD4, an essential gene that was initially identified in a genetic screen to isolate Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants defective for bud emergence, encodes a previously unidentified component of the GPI anchor synthesis pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe regulation of secretion polarity and cell surface growth during the cell cycle is critical for proper morphogenesis and viability of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A shift from isotropic cell surface growth to polarized growth is necessary for bud emergence and a repolarization of secretion to the bud neck is necessary for cell separation. Although alterations in the actin cytoskeleton have been implicated in these changes in secretion polarity, clearly other cellular systems involved in secretion are likely to be targets of cell cycle regulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ellipsoidal shape of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is the result of successive isotropic/apical growth switches that are regulated in a cell cycle-dependent manner. It is thought that growth polarity is governed by the remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton that is itself under the control of the cell cycle machinery. The cell cycle and the morphogenesis cycle are tightly coupled and it has been recently suggested that a morphogenesis/polarity checkpoint control monitors bud emergence in order to maintain the coupling of these two events (Lew, D.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe adenovirus major late promotor (MLP) is induced to very high levels after the onset of the viral DNA replication. Previous studies have identified sequence elements located downstream of the MLP startsite (DE1, between +85 and +98; DE2, between +100 and +120) implicated, together with the upstream promoter element, in this late-phase-specific transcriptional activation. One protein (DEF, now renamed DEF-A), induced during the late phase of viral infection, has been identified and shown to bind to the DE1 element (Jansen-Durr et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTranscription from the adenovirus major late promoter (MLP) is greatly stimulated during lytic infection, after replication of the viral DNA has started. This replication-dependent activation has previously been shown to be mediated by a positive regulatory cellular protein(s). Binding of this factor(s) to sequence elements (DE1 and DE2), located between positions +76 and +124, with respect to the MLP transcriptional startsite, is detected only after the onset of DNA replication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring lytic infection, the adenovirus major late promoter (MLP) is primarily activated after the onset of viral DNA replication. Using a combination of DNA binding and in vitro transcription assays, we delineated a discrete MLP element spanning positions +80 to +106 which is essential for the replication-dependent activation of this promoter. We also identified a 40-kilodalton protein (the downstream element factor [DEF]) which binds to the +86-TTGTCAGTTT-+95 motif within this element.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF