Publications by authors named "Roberto Paggi"

Phytoene synthase (PSY) converts two molecules of geranyl-geranyl diphosphate to phytoene, the key regulatory step in carotenogenesis. However, post-translational mechanisms that control PSY expression are scarcely understood. Carotenoid biosynthesis (mainly bacterioruberin) is a distinctive feature of haloarchaea thriving in hypersaline environments.

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Extreme halophilic archaea (haloarchaea) have adapted their physiology and biomolecules to thrive in saline environments (>2 M NaCl). Many haloarchaea produce extracellular hydrolases (including proteases) with potential biotechnological applications, which require unusual high salt concentrations to attain their function and maintain their stability. These conditions restrict many of the standard methods used to study these enzymes such as activity determination and/or protein purification.

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Article Synopsis
  • Coimmunoprecipitation is a key technique for studying protein-protein interactions in living organisms, and this study focuses on optimizing it for the haloarchaeon Haloferax volcanii to explore relationships involving the LonB protease.* -
  • The adapted protocol involves in vivo cross-linking of proteins using either dithiobis(succinimidyl propionate) or formaldehyde, and then isolating the proteins with anti-LonB antibodies attached to Protein A-Sepharose beads.* -
  • After isolating the protein interactions, tryptic digestion and Mass Spectrometry are used to analyze the peptides, helping to identify and quantify the proteins that interact with LonB.*
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The cellular protein repertoire is highly dynamic and responsive to internal or external stimuli. Its changes are largely the consequence of the combination of protein synthesis and degradation, referred collectively as protein turnover. Different proteomics techniques have been developed to determine the whole proteome turnover of a cell, but very few have been applied to archaea.

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Article Synopsis
  • Proteolysis is crucial for various cellular processes like protein quality control, signaling, and cell envelope formation.
  • Archaea, a diverse group of prokaryotes, thrive in extreme environments, offering insights into proteases' roles in cell physiology and adaptation.
  • This review highlights recent progress on archaeal membrane proteases, particularly their biological functions and potential targets, focusing on a specific model organism known as haloarchaeon.
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Article Synopsis
  • Many aspects of archaeal cell biology are still under-explored, but mass spectrometry-based proteomics offers a way to accelerate research despite challenges in data analysis and interpretation.
  • The Archaeal Proteome Project (ArcPP) aims to systematically analyze archaeal proteomes, starting with the model organism Haloferax volcanii, by reexamining existing mass spectrometry datasets.
  • Through improved data matching techniques, the project successfully identifies over 72% of the reference proteome, revealing significant insights into key biological processes like protein maturation and metabolism, establishing a framework for understanding prokaryotic proteomics.
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The dynamic changes that take place along the phases of microbial growth (lag, exponential, stationary, and death) have been widely studied in bacteria at the molecular and cellular levels, but little is known for archaea. In this study, a high-throughput approach was used to analyze and compare the proteomes of two haloarchaea during exponential and stationary growth: the neutrophilic Haloferax volcanii and the alkaliphilic Natrialba magadii. Almost 2000 proteins were identified in each species (≈50% of the predicted proteome).

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Nep (Natrialba magadii extracellular protease) is a halolysin-like peptidase secreted by the haloalkaliphilic archaeon Natrialba magadii. Many extracellular proteases have been characterized from archaea to bacteria as adapted to hypersaline environments retaining function and stability until 4.0M NaCl.

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The membrane protease LonB is an essential protein in the archaeon Haloferax volcanii and globally impacts its physiology. However, natural substrates of the archaeal Lon protease have not been identified. The whole proteome turnover was examined in a H.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Rhomboids are intramembrane serine proteases crucial for cell signaling, but their role in prokaryotes, especially Archaea, is not well understood.
  • - A study on a rhomboid homologue deletion mutant (ΔrhoII) in Haloferax volcanii revealed issues like reduced motility and N-glycosylation defects, prompting an analysis of protein changes in the mutant compared to the wild-type strain.
  • - Out of 1847 proteins identified, 103 showed differences in quantity and 99 had altered processing, highlighting key proteins linked to motility and glycosylation issues in the mutant, and marking the first investigation of a rhomboid protease's impact
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We studied the existence, biochemical characteristics and response to different environmental salinities of amylase, maltase and sucrase activity in the intertidal euryhaline crab Cyrtograpsus angulatus (Dana, 1852) along with the response to distinct salinities of glycogen and free glucose content in storage organs. Amylase, maltase and sucrase activities were kept over a broad range of pH and temperature and exhibited Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Zymography showed the existence of two amylase forms in crabs exposed to 35 (osmoconformation) and low (6-10psu; hyper-regulation) or high (40psu) (hypo-regulation) salinities.

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The biodiversity and biotechnological potential of microbes from central Argentinean halophilic environments have been poorly explored. Salitral Negro and Colorada Grande salterns are neutral hypersaline basins exploded for NaCl extraction. As part of an ecological analysis of these environments, two bacterial and seven archaeal representatives were isolated, identified and examined for their biotechnological potential.

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This data article provides information in support of the research article "Global role of the membrane protease LonB in Archaea: Potential protease targets revealed by quantitative proteome analysis of a lonB mutant in Haloferax volcanii" [1]. The proteome composition of a wt and a LonB protease mutant strain (suboptimal expression) in the archaeon Haloferax volcanii was assessed by a quantitative shotgun proteomic approach. Membrane and cytosol fractions of H.

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Unlabelled: The membrane-associated LonB protease is essential for viability in Haloferax volcanii, however, the cellular processes affected by this protease in archaea are unknown. In this study, the impact of a lon conditional mutation (down-regulation) on H. volcanii physiology was examined by comparing proteomes of parental and mutant cells using shotgun proteomics.

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Proteins present in the archaeal cell envelope play key roles in a variety of processes necessary for survival in extreme environments. The haloarchaeon Haloferax volcanii is a good model for membrane proteomic studies because its genome sequence is known, it can be genetically manipulated, and a number of studies at the "omics" level have been performed in this organism. This work reports an easy strategy to improve the resolution of acidic membrane proteins from H.

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Rhomboid proteases occur in all domains of life; however, their physiological role is not completely understood, and nothing is known of the biology of these enzymes in Archaea. One of the two rhomboid homologs of Haloferax volcanii (RhoII) is fused to a zinc finger domain. Chromosomal deletion of rhoII was successful, indicating that this gene is not essential for this organism; however, the mutant strain (MIG1) showed reduced motility and increased sensitivity to novobiocin.

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Although homologs of the ATP-dependent Lon protease exist in all domains of life, the relevance of this protease in archaeal physiology remains a mystery. In this study, we have constructed and phenotypically characterized deletion and conditional lon mutants in the model haloarchaeon Haloferax volcanii to elucidate the role of the unusual membrane-bound LonB protease in archaea. Hvlon could be deleted from the chromosome only when a copy of the wild type gene was provided in trans suggesting that Lon is essential for survival in this archaeon.

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Halolysins are subtilisin-like extracellular proteases produced by haloarchaea that possess unique protein domains and are salt dependent for structural integrity and functionality. In contrast to bacterial subtilases, the maturation mechanism of halolysins has not been addressed. The halolysin Nep is secreted by the alkaliphilic haloarchaeon Natrialba magadii, and the recombinant active enzyme has been synthesized in Haloferax volcanii.

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Article Synopsis
  • Natrialba magadii is a unique extremophile that thrives in both high-salt and alkaline environments, and its genome has been sequenced to understand its survival mechanisms.
  • The genome consists of 4,443,643 base pairs and encodes 4,212 proteins, including those related to saline adaptation, respiration, and essential co-factor biosynthesis, though many proteins remain functionally uncharacterized.
  • Despite extensive analysis, specific genes for survival in alkaline conditions were not found, suggesting Natrialba magadii has a complex but incompletely understood metabolic adaptability.
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The ATP-dependent Lon protease is universally distributed in bacteria, eukaryotic organelles and archaea. In comparison with bacterial and eukaryal Lon proteases, the biology of the archaeal Lon has been studied to a limited extent. In this study, the gene encoding the Lon protease of the alkaliphilic haloarchaeon Natrialba magadii (Nmlon) was cloned and sequenced, and the genetic organization of Nmlon was examined at the transcriptional level.

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Plant-specific insert domain (PSI) is a region of approximately 100 amino acid residues present in most plant aspartic protease (AP) precursors. PSI is not a true saposin domain; it is the exchange of the N- and C-terminal portions of the saposin like domain. Hence, PSI is called a swaposin domain.

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The gene encoding the protease Nep secreted by the haloalkaliphilic archaeon Natrialba magadii was cloned and sequenced. Upstream of the nep gene, a region related to haloarchaeal TATA-box and BRE-like consensus sequences was identified. The nep-encoded polypeptide had a molecular mass of 56.

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Bacteria communicate at high cell density through quorum sensing, however, there are no reports about this mechanism in archaea. The archaeon Natronococcus occultus produces an extracellular protease at the end of growth. Early production of protease activity was observed when a low density culture was incubated with late exponential conditioned medium suggesting the presence of factor(s) inducing this activity.

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