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2.
Front Plant Sci ; 14: 1136463, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37180384

ABSTRACT

Cell death-inducing proteins (CDIPs) play important roles in the infection of Botrytis cinerea, a broad host-range necrotrophic phytopathogen. Here, we show that the secreted protein BcCDI1 (Cell Death Inducing 1) can cause necrosis in tobacco leaves and at the same time elicit plant defense. The transcription of Bccdi1 was induced at the infection stage. Deletion or overexpression of Bccdi1 resulted in no notable change in disease lesion on bean, tobacco, and Arabidopsis leaves, indicating that Bccdi1 has no effect on the final outcome of B. cinerea infection. Furthermore, the plant receptor-like kinases BAK1 and SOBIR1 are required to transduce the cell death-promoting signal induced by BcCDI1. These findings suggest that BcCDI1 is possibly recognized by plant receptors and then induces plant cell death.

3.
Curr Microbiol ; 77(12): 3945-3952, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33011835

ABSTRACT

Many organisms secrete xylanase, an import group of proteins hydrolyzing xylan, and thus are able to use xylan as their carbon source. In this study, we sequenced the whole genome of a bacterial strain, YD01, which was isolated from the sludge near the sewage discharge outlet of a papermill and showed high alkalic xylanase activity. Its genome consists of a chromosome and two plasmids. Six rRNA genes, 46 tRNA genes, 3136 CDSs as well as 955 repetitive sequences were predicted. 3046 CDSs were functionally annotated. Phylogenetic analysis on 16S rRNA shows that YD01 is a new species in Microbacterium genus and is taxonomically close to M. jejuense THG-C31T and M. kyungheense THG-C26T. A comparative study on phylogenetic trees of 16S rRNA and xylanase genes suggests that xylanase genes in YD01 may originate from horizontal gene transfer instead of ancestral gene duplication.


Subject(s)
Fatty Acids , Sewage , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Phylogeny , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA
4.
Curr Microbiol ; 76(11): 1235-1237, 2019 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31432211

ABSTRACT

Chlorobenzenes are ubiquitously distributed, highly persistent, and toxic environmental contaminants. Pandoraea pnomenusa MCB032 was isolated as a new dominant chlorobenzene-utilizing strain from a functionally stable bioreactor during the treatment of chlorobenzenes when strain Burkholderia sp. JS150 disappeared. In study, we report the complete genome sequence of strain MCB032 which consists of a circular chromosome and three plasmids, which are ~ 6 Mb in length with 5450 open reading frames-12 encoding rRNAs and 77 encoding tRNAs. We further identified 17 putative genes encoding the enzymes involved in the methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins in sensing chemical gradients during chemotaxis. The annotated complete genome sequence of this strain will provide genetic insights into the degradation of chlorinated aromatic compounds. The information will empower the elucidation of chlorobenzene affinity hierarchy and species succession in the bioreactor.


Subject(s)
Burkholderiaceae/genetics , Burkholderiaceae/metabolism , Chlorobenzenes/metabolism , Genome, Bacterial , Biodegradation, Environmental , Burkholderiaceae/isolation & purification , Plasmids/genetics , Plasmids/metabolism , Whole Genome Sequencing
5.
Plant Sci ; 283: 1-10, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31128679

ABSTRACT

Colletotrichum higginsianum causes anthracnose disease in a wide range of cruciferous crops and has been used as a model system to study plant-pathogen interactions and pathogenicity of hemibiotrophic plant pathogens. Conidiation, hyphae growth, appressorial development and appressorial penetration are significant steps during the infection process of C. higginsianum. However, the mechanisms of these important steps during infection remain incompletely understood. To further investigate the mechanisms of the plant-C. higginsianum interactions during infection progress, we characterized Cyclase-Associated Protein (ChCAP) gene. Deletion of the ChCAP gene resulted in reduction in conidiation and hyphal growth rate. The pathogenicity of ΔChCAP mutants was significantly reduced with much smaller lesion on the infected leaves compared to that of wild type strain with typically water-soaked and dark necrotic lesions on Arabidopsis leaves. Further study demonstrated that the appressorial formation rate, turgor pressure, penetration ability and switch from biotrophic to necrotrophic phases decreased obviously in ΔChCAP mutants, indicating that the attenuated pathogenicity of ΔChCAP mutants was due to these defective phenotypes. In addition, the ΔChCAP mutants sectored on PDA with abnormal, dark color, vesicle-like colony morphology and hyphae tip. Moreover, the ΔChCAP mutants had a reduced intracellular cAMP levels and exogenous cAMP can partially rescue the defects of ΔChCAP mutants in appressorial formation and penetration rate, but not in colony morphology, conidial shape and virulence, indicating that ChCAP is a key component in cAMP signaling pathway and likely play other roles in biology of C. higginsianum. In summary, our findings support the role of ChCAP in regulating conidiation, intracellular cAMP level, hyphal growth, appressorial formation, penetration ability and pathogenicity of this hemibiotrophic fungus.


Subject(s)
Colletotrichum/growth & development , Cyclic AMP/metabolism , Fungal Proteins/physiology , Hyphae/growth & development , Spores, Fungal/growth & development , Arabidopsis/microbiology , Colletotrichum/metabolism , Colletotrichum/pathogenicity , Colletotrichum/physiology , Fungal Proteins/metabolism , Hyphae/physiology , Phylogeny , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction , Signal Transduction , Spores, Fungal/physiology , Stress, Physiological
6.
Curr Microbiol ; 76(9): 1092, 2019 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29574478

ABSTRACT

The original version of this article unfortunately contained a mistake in the Fig. S1 of supplementary material. It is corrected with this erratum.

7.
Front Microbiol ; 9: 2848, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30524413

ABSTRACT

Cyclohexylamine (CHAM) is widely used in various industries, but it is harmful to human beings and the environment. Acinetobacter sp. YT-02 can degrade CHAM via cyclohexanone as an intermediate. In this study, the cyclohexylamine oxidase (CHAO) gene from Acinetobacter sp. YT-02 was cloned. Amino acid sequence alignment indicated that the cyclohexylamine oxidase (CHAOYT-02) was 48% identical to its homolog from Brevibacterium oxydans IH-35A (CHAOIH-35). The enzyme was expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3), and purified to apparent homogeneity by Ni-affinity chromatography. The purified enzyme was proposed to be a dimer of molecular mass of approximately 91 kDa. The enzyme exhibited its maximum activity at 50°C and at pH 7.0. The enzyme was thermolabile as demonstrated by loss of important percentage of its maximal activity after 30 min incubation at 50°C. Metal ions Mg2+, Co2+, and K+ had certain inhibitory effect on the enzyme activity. The kinetic parameters K m and V max were 0.25 ± 0.02 mM and 4.3 ± 0.083 µM min-1, respectively. The biochemical properties, substrate specificities, and three-dimensional structures of CHAOYT-02 and CHAOIH-35 were compared. Our results are helpful to elucidate the mechanism of microbial degradation of CHAM in the strain YT-02. In addition, CHAOYT-02, as a potential biocatalyst, is promising in controlling CHAM pollution and deracemization of chiral amines.

8.
Curr Microbiol ; 75(3): 284-287, 2018 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29063968

ABSTRACT

Acinetobacter sp. YT-02, a Gram-negative bacterium isolated from the activated sludge from a sodium N-cyclohexylsulfamate production plant, has the ability to degrade cyclohexylamine. It was classified as a member of Acinetobacter sp., a Gram-negative bacterium, sharing a 16S rRNA gene sequence identity of 99% with Acinetobacter guangdongensis strain 1NM-4. It could degrade 10 mmol/L cyclohexylamine within 22 h. Based on the identified metabolite, the metabolic pathway of cyclohexylamine could be postulated as it was degraded via cyclohexanone. Draft genome sequence of this strain (2,993, 647 bp of chromosome length) is presented here. We further identified the genes encoding the enzymes involved in cyclohexylamine oxidation to cyclohexanone and the subsequent downstream metabolic pathway of cyclohexanone oxidation. Strain YT-02 has the potentiality to be applied in the treatment of the pollutant cyclohexylamine, and it could also be treated as a research material to study the degradation mechanism of cyclohexylamine.


Subject(s)
Acinetobacter/genetics , Acinetobacter/isolation & purification , Cyclohexylamines/metabolism , Genome, Bacterial , Acinetobacter/classification , Acinetobacter/metabolism , Base Sequence , Biodegradation, Environmental , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Sewage/microbiology
9.
J Biotechnol ; 251: 166-173, 2017 Jun 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28472672

ABSTRACT

The Gram-negative strain of Pseudomonas plecoglossicida NyZ12 isolated from soil has the ability to degrade cyclohexylamine (CHAM). The genes encoding CHAM degradation by gram-negative bacteria, however, have not been reported previously. In this study, ORFs predicted to encode CHAM degradation by NyZ12 were identified by bioinformatics analysis. Differential expression of the proposed ORFs was analyzed via RNA-seq and quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR), using RNA extracted from NyZ12 cultured with or without CHAM addition. One CHAM-inducible ORF, RK21_02867 predicted to encode a cyclohexanone monooxygenase (ChnB) was disrupted, as were five ORFs, RK21_00425, RK21_02631, RK21_04207, RK21_04637 and RK21_05539, that had weak homology to the only known cyclohexylamine oxidase (CHAO encoded by chaA) found in Brevibacterium oxydans IH-35A. We also found that a tandem array of five ORFs (RK21_02866-02870) shared homology with those in an operon responsible for oxidation of cyclohexanone to adipic acid, although the ORFs in strain NyZ12 were arranged in a different order with previously found in cyclohexane, cyclohexanol or cyclohexanone degradation strains. The ORFs in this cluster were all up-regulated when CHAM was supplied as the sole carbon source. When one of these five genes, RK21_02867 encoding cyclohexanone (CHnone) monooxygenase, was knocked out, NyZ12 could not grow on CHAM, but it accumulated equimolar amounts of CHnone. Our results show that strain NyZ12 metabolized CHAM directly to CHnone which was then further metabolized to adipate. Despite clearly identifying genes encoding the steps for metabolism of CHAM metabolites, not every one of the putative chaAs was differentially expressed in the presence of CHAM and deletion of each one individually did not completely eliminate the capacity of NyZ12 to degrade CHAM, though it did reduce its growth in several instances. Our results suggest that there is genetic redundancy encoding the initial step in the oxidation of CHAM to CHnone in NyZ12 and that its CHAOs differ considerably from the ChaA, originally described in Brevibacterium oxydans IH-35A.


Subject(s)
Genome, Bacterial , Pseudomonas/genetics , Biodegradation, Environmental , Cyclohexylamines/metabolism , Genes, Bacterial , Oxidoreductases/genetics , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Pseudomonas/metabolism
10.
J Biotechnol ; 199: 29-30, 2015 Apr 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25701176

ABSTRACT

Pseudomonas plecoglossicida NyZ12 (CCTCC AB 2015057), a Gram-negative bacterium isolated from soil, has the ability to degrade cyclohexylamine. The complete genome sequence of this strain (6,233,254bp of chromosome length) is presented, with information about the genes of characteristic enzymes responsible for cyclohexylamine oxidation to cyclohexanone and the integrated gene cluster for the metabolic pathway of cyclohexanone oxidation to adipate.


Subject(s)
Cyclohexylamines/metabolism , Genome, Bacterial/genetics , Pseudomonas/genetics , Pseudomonas/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Multigene Family/genetics
11.
J Sci Food Agric ; 95(13): 2646-51, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25382639

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Genetically modified (GM) foods have caused much controversy. Construction of a food-grade delivery system is a desirable technique with presumptive impact on industrial applications from the perspective of bio-safety. The aim of this study was to construct a food-grade delivery system for Saccharomyces cerevisiae and to study the expression of monellin from the berries of the West African forest plant Dioscoreophyllum cumminsii in this system. RESULTS: A food-grade system for S. cerevisiae was constructed based on ribosomal DNA (rDNA)-mediated homologous recombination to enable high-copy-number integration of the expression cassette inserted into the rDNA locus. A copper resistance gene (CUP1) was used as the selection marker for yeast transformation. Because variants of transformants containing different copy numbers at the CUP1 locus can be readily selected after growth in the presence of elevated copper levels, we suggest that this system would prove useful in the generation of tandemly iterated gene clusters. Using this food-grade system, a single-chain monellin gene was heterologously expressed. The yield of monellin reached a maximum of 675 mg L(-1) . CONCLUSION: This system harbors exclusively S. cerevisiae DNA with no antibiotic resistance genes, and it should therefore be appropriate for safe use in the food industry. Monellin was shown to be expressed in this food-grade delivery system. To our knowledge, this is the first report so far on expression of monellin in a food-grade expression system in S. cerevisiae.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression , Genes, Plant , Menispermaceae/chemistry , Plant Proteins/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Sweetening Agents , Transformation, Genetic , Africa, Western , DNA, Fungal , DNA, Ribosomal , Food Technology , Fruit/chemistry , Humans , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism
12.
World J Microbiol Biotechnol ; 31(2): 371-7, 2015 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25532745

ABSTRACT

A consortium comprised of an engineered Escherichia coli DH5α and a natural pentachlorophenol (PCP) degrader, Sphingobium chlorophenolicum ATCC 39723, was assembled for degradation of hexachlorobenzene (HCB), a persistent organic pollutant. The engineered E. coli strain, harbouring a gene cassette (camA (+) camB (+) camC) that encodes the F87W/Y96F/L244A/V247L mutant of cytochrome P-450cam (CYP101), oxidised HCB to PCP. The resulting PCP was then further completely degraded by ATCC 39723. The results showed that almost 40 % of 4 µM HCB was degraded by the consortium at a rate of 0.033 nmol/mg (dry weight)/h over 24 h, accompanied by transient accumulation and immediate consumption of the intermediate PCP, detected by gas chromatography. In contrast, in the consortium comprised of Pseudomonas putida PaW340 harbouring camA (+) camB (+) camC and ATCC 39723, PCP accumulated in PaW340 cells but could not be further degraded, which may be due to a permeability barrier of Pseudomonas PaW340 for PCP transportation. The strategy of bacterial co-culture may provide an alternative approach for the bioremediation of HCB contamination.


Subject(s)
Camphor 5-Monooxygenase/genetics , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Hexachlorobenzene/metabolism , Pentachlorophenol/metabolism , Sphingomonadaceae/metabolism , Biodegradation, Environmental , Camphor 5-Monooxygenase/metabolism , Chromatography, Gas , Coculture Techniques , Escherichia coli/genetics , Genetic Engineering , Microbial Consortia , Mutation
13.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 346(2): 555-61, 2006 Jul 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16765316

ABSTRACT

Ralstonia sp. strain U2 metabolizes naphthalene via gentisate (2,5-dihydroxybenzoate) to central metabolites, but it was found unable to utilize gentisate as growth substrate. A putative gentisate transporter encoded by ncg12922 from Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13032 was functionally expressed in Ralstonia sp. strain U2, converting strain U2 to a gentisate utilizer. After ncg12922 was inserted into plasmid pGFPe with green fluorescence protein gene gfp, the expressed fusion protein Ncg12922-GFP could be visualized in the periphery of Escherichia coli cells under confocal microscope, consistent with a cytoplasmic membrane location. In contrast, GFP was ubiquitous in the cytoplasm of E. coli cells carrying pGFPe only. Gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase activity was present in the cell extract from strain U2 induced with gentisate but at a much lower level (one-fifth) than that obtained with salicylate. However, it exhibited a similar level in strain U2 containing Ncg12922 induced either by salicylate or gentisate.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Corynebacterium glutamicum/metabolism , Gentisates/metabolism , Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Ralstonia/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Corynebacterium glutamicum/genetics , Cytoplasm/metabolism , Dioxygenases/metabolism , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Membrane Transport Proteins/genetics , Ralstonia/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Salicylates/metabolism , Substrate Specificity
14.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 72(3): 2283-6, 2006 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16517689

ABSTRACT

The gene cassette (camA+ camB+ camC) encoding a cytochrome P-450cam variant was integrated into the nonessential gene pcpM of the pentachlorophenol degrader Sphingobium chlorophenolicum ATCC 39723 by homologous recombination. The recombinant strain could degrade hexachlorobenzene at a rate of 0.67 nmol.mg (dry weight)-1.h-1, and intermediate pentachlorophenol was also identified.


Subject(s)
Camphor 5-Monooxygenase/genetics , Genetic Engineering/methods , Hexachlorobenzene/metabolism , Recombination, Genetic , Sphingomonadaceae/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Biodegradation, Environmental , Pentachlorophenol/metabolism , Sphingomonadaceae/enzymology , Sphingomonadaceae/metabolism
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