Publications by authors named "Patrick H Viollier"

Peripheral modification is often the main approach to optimize natural products for improved biological activity or desired physicochemical properties. This procedure inevitably increases molecular weight, often accompanied by undesired increased lipophilicity. Removing structural elements from natural products is not always tolerated.

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Many bacteria glycosylate flagellin on serine or threonine residues using pseudaminic acid (Pse) or other sialic acid-like donor sugars. Successful reconstitution of Pse-dependent sialylation by the conserved Maf-type flagellin glycosyltransferase (fGT) may require (a) missing component(s). Here, we characterize both Maf paralogs in the Gram-negative bacterium Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 and reconstitute Pse-dependent glycosylation in heterologous hosts.

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In response to nutrient deprivation, bacteria activate a conserved stress response pathway called the stringent response (SR). During SR activation in , SpoT synthesizes the secondary messengers guanosine 5'-diphosphate 3'-diphosphate and guanosine 5'-triphosphate 3'-diphosphate (collectively known as (p)ppGpp), which affect transcription by binding RNA polymerase (RNAP) to down-regulate anabolic genes. (p)ppGpp also impacts the expression of anabolic genes by controlling the levels and activities of their transcriptional regulators.

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The alphaproteobacterium thrives in oligotrophic environments and is able to optimally exploit minimal resources by entertaining an intricate network of gene expression control mechanisms. Numerous transcriptional activators and repressors have been reported to contribute to these processes, but only few studies have focused on regulation at the post-transcriptional level in . Small RNAs (sRNAs) are a prominent class of regulators of bacterial gene expression, and most sRNAs characterized today engage in direct base-pairing interactions to modulate the translation and/or stability of target mRNAs.

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In response to nutrient deprivation, bacteria activate a conserved stress response pathway called the stringent response (SR). During SR activation in , SpoT synthesizes the secondary messengers (p)ppGpp, which affect transcription by binding RNA polymerase to downregulate anabolic genes. (p)ppGpp also impacts expression of anabolic genes by controlling the levels and activities of their transcriptional regulators.

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The acquisition of multidrug resistance (MDR) determinants jeopardizes treatment of bacterial infections with antibiotics. The tripartite efflux pump AcrAB-NodT confers adaptive MDR in the polarized α-proteobacterium Caulobacter crescentus via transcriptional induction by first-generation quinolone antibiotics. We discovered that overexpression of AcrAB-NodT by mutation or exogenous inducers confers resistance to cephalosporin and penicillin (β-lactam) antibiotics.

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Fidaxomicin (Fdx) is a natural product antibiotic with potent activity against Clostridioides difficile and other Gram-positive bacteria such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Only a few Fdx derivatives have been synthesized and examined for their biological activity in the 50 years since its discovery. Fdx has a well-studied mechanism of action, namely inhibition of the bacterial RNA polymerase.

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Unidirectional growth of filamentous protein assemblies including the bacterial flagellum relies on dedicated polymerization factors (PFs). The molecular determinants and structural transitions imposed by PFs on multi-subunit assembly are poorly understood. Here, we unveil FlaY from the polarized α-proteobacterium Caulobacter crescentus as a defining member of an alternative class of specialized flagellin PFs.

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Glycosylation of surface structures diversifies cells chemically and physically. Nucleotide-activated sialic acids commonly serve as glycosyl donors, particularly pseudaminic acid (Pse) and its stereoisomer legionaminic acid (Leg), which decorate eubacterial and archaeal surface layers or protein appendages. FlmG, a recently identified protein sialyltransferase, O-glycosylates flagellins, the subunits of the flagellar filament.

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Article Synopsis
  • Endosporulation is a process where bacteria form a tough structure called endospores to survive harsh conditions, but some bacteria, like those in the Kurthia genus, were previously thought not to produce spores.
  • Researchers discovered that strain 11kri321 from a geothermal area produces spore-like structures, or cryptospores, even though it is classified as asporogenic, indicating a possible lost ability to form true endospores.
  • These cryptospores lack the protective properties of regular endospores and may suggest that cryptosporulation is an ancestral trait in some Firmicutes that could be lost when cultured in the lab under non-stressful conditions.*
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Most bacteria use the ParABS system to segregate their newly replicated chromosomes. The two protein components of this system from various bacterial species share their biochemical properties: ParB is a CTPase that binds specific centromere-like sequences to assemble a nucleoprotein complex, while the ParA ATPase forms a dimer that binds DNA non-specifically and interacts with ParB complexes. The ParA-ParB interaction incites the movement of ParB complexes toward the opposite cell poles.

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Many bacterial flagella are specifically O-glycosylated with nonulosonic acids, including the sialic acid derivatives, pseudaminic acid or legionaminic acid. Unlike protein glycosyltransferases that are extracytoplasmic, flagellin glycosyltransferases (fGTs) act cytoplasmically with unknown donor or acceptor specificities. The recent reconstitution of fGT-based glycosylation in heterologous hosts enables analyses underpinning such specificity.

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ParB-like CTPases mediate the segregation of bacterial chromosomes and low-copy number plasmids. They act as DNA-sliding clamps that are loaded at parS motifs in the centromere of target DNA molecules and spread laterally to form large nucleoprotein complexes serving as docking points for the DNA segregation machinery. Here, we solve crystal structures of ParB in the pre- and post-hydrolysis state and illuminate the catalytic mechanism of nucleotide hydrolysis.

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The ability of gut bacterial pathogens to escape immunity by antigenic variation-particularly via changes to surface-exposed antigens-is a major barrier to immune clearance. However, not all variants are equally fit in all environments. It should therefore be possible to exploit such immune escape mechanisms to direct an evolutionary trade-off.

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How DNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RNAP) acts on bacterial cell cycle progression during transcription elongation is poorly investigated. A forward genetic selection for cell cycle mutants unearthed the uncharacterized DUF1013 protein (TrcR, transcriptional cell cycle regulator). TrcR promotes the accumulation of the essential cell cycle transcriptional activator CtrA in late S-phase but also affects transcription at a global level to protect cells from the quinolone antibiotic nalidixic acid that induces a multidrug efflux pump and from the RNAP inhibitor rifampicin that blocks transcription elongation.

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In some free-living and pathogenic bacteria, problems in the synthesis and assembly of early flagellar components can cause cell-division defects. However, the mechanism that couples cell division with the flagellar biogenesis has remained elusive. Herein, we discover the regulator MadA that controls transcription of flagellar and cell-division genes in Caulobacter crescentus.

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Under eubiotic conditions commensal microbes are known to provide a competitive barrier against invading bacterial pathogens in the intestinal tract, on the skin or on the vaginal mucosa. Here, we evaluate the role of lung microbiota in Pneumococcus colonization of the lungs. In eubiosis, the lungs of mice were dominantly colonized by .

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How cellular checkpoints couple the orderly assembly of macromolecular machines with cell-cycle progression is poorly understood. The alpha-proteobacterium Caulobacter crescentus assembles a single polar flagellum during each cell cycle. We discovered that the expression of multiple flagellin transcripts is licensed by a translational checkpoint responsive to a dual input signal: a secretion-competent hook-basal-body (HBB) structure and a surge in the FlaF secretion chaperone during cytokinesis, instructed by the cell-cycle program.

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How specificity is programmed into post-translational modification of proteins by glycosylation is poorly understood, especially for O-linked glycosylation systems. Here we reconstitute and dissect the substrate specificity underpinning the cytoplasmic O-glycosylation pathway that modifies all six flagellins, five structural and one regulatory paralog, in , a monopolarly flagellated alpha-proteobacterium. We characterize the biosynthetic pathway for the sialic acid-like sugar pseudaminic acid and show its requirement for flagellation, flagellin modification and efficient export.

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A crucial bacterial strategy to avoid killing by antibiotics is to enter a growth arrested state, yet the molecular mechanisms behind this process remain elusive. The conditional overexpression of mazF, the endoribonuclease toxin of the MazEF toxin-antitoxin system in Staphylococcus aureus, is one approach to induce bacterial growth arrest, but its targets remain largely unknown. We used overexpression of mazF and high-throughput sequence analysis following the exact mapping of non-phosphorylated transcriptome ends (nEMOTE) technique to reveal in vivo toxin cleavage sites on a global scale.

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Rod-shaped bacteria frequently localize proteins to one or both cell poles in order to regulate processes such as chromosome replication or polar organelle development. However, the roles of polar factors in responses to extracellular stimuli have been generally unexplored. We employed chemical-genetic screening to probe the interaction between one such factor from , TipN, and extracellular stress and found that TipN is required for normal resistance of cell envelope-directed antibiotics, including vancomycin which does not normally inhibit growth of Gram-negative bacteria.

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The Alphaproteobacteria show a remarkable diversity of cell cycle-dependent developmental patterns, which are governed by the conserved CtrA pathway. Its central component CtrA is a DNA-binding response regulator that is controlled by a complex two-component signaling network, mediating distinct transcriptional programs in the two offspring. The CtrA pathway has been studied intensively and was shown to consist of an upstream part that reads out the developmental state of the cell and a downstream part that integrates the upstream signals and mediates CtrA phosphorylation.

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The spatiotemporal regulation of chromosome segregation and cell division in Caulobacter crescentus is mediated by two different P-loop ATPases, ParA and MipZ. Both of these proteins form dynamic concentration gradients that control the positioning of regulatory targets within the cell. Their proper localization depends on their nucleotide-dependent cycling between a monomeric and a dimeric state and on the ability of the dimeric species to associate with the nucleoid.

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Proliferating cells must coordinate central metabolism with the cell cycle. How central energy metabolism regulates bacterial cell cycle functions is not well understood. Our forward genetic selection unearthed the Krebs cycle enzyme citrate synthase (CitA) as a checkpoint regulator controlling the G→S transition in the polarized alpha-proteobacterium , a model for cell cycle regulation and asymmetric cell division.

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Bacterial growth and division require regulated synthesis of the macromolecules used to expand and replicate components of the cell. Transcription of housekeeping genes required for metabolic homeostasis and cell proliferation is guided by the sigma factor σ70. The conserved CarD-like transcriptional regulator, CdnL, associates with promoter regions where σ70 localizes and stabilizes the open promoter complex.

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