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1.
J Proteome Res ; 19(4): 1409-1422, 2020 04 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32056440

RÉSUMÉ

Francisella tularensis is a Gram-negative bacterium that causes the zoonotic disease tularemia. The historical development of tularemia as a biological weapon has led to it being characterized by the CDC as a category A biothreat agent. Neither posttranslational modification (PTM) of proteins, in particular lysine acetylation, in Francisella nor its subsequent regulation of the protein activity has been well studied. In this work, we analyze N-ε-lysine acetylation of the F. tularensis ssp. novicida proteome by mass spectrometry for the first time. To create a comprehensive acetylation profile, we enriched protein acetylation using two approaches: (1) the addition of glucose or acetate into the culture medium and (2) direct chemical acetylation of N-ε-lysines with acetyl phosphate. We discovered 280 acetylated proteins with 1178 acetylation sites in the F. tularensis ssp. novicida strain U112. Lysine acetylation is an important PTM that regulates multiple cellular processes in bacteria, including metabolism, transcription, translation, stress response, and protein folding. We discovered that Francisella chitinases A and B are acetylated naturally and when chemically induced by acetyl phosphate. Moreover, chemical overacetylation of chitinases results in silencing of the enzymatic activity. Our findings suggest a novel mechanism of posttranslational regulation of the chitinase activity and that acetylation may play a role in Francisella's regulation of the protein activity.


Sujet(s)
Chitinase , Lysine , Acétylation , Francisella , Maturation post-traductionnelle des protéines , Protéome/génétique , Protéome/métabolisme
2.
Parasit Vectors ; 10(1): 144, 2017 Mar 14.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28288696

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: Males of the cattle tick Rhipicephalus microplus produce salivary immunoglobulin-binding proteins and allotypic variations in IgG are associated with tick loads in bovines. These findings indicate that antibody responses may be essential to control tick infestations. Infestation loads with cattle ticks are heritable: some breeds carry high loads of reproductively successful ticks, in others, few ticks feed and they reproduce inefficiently. Different patterns of humoral immunity against tick salivary proteins may explain these phenotypes. METHODS: We describe the profiles of humoral responses against tick salivary proteins elicited during repeated artificial infestations of bovines of a tick-resistant (Nelore) and a tick-susceptible (Holstein) breed. We measured serum levels of total IgG1, IgG2 and IgE immunoglobulins and of IgG1 and IgG2 antibodies specific for tick salivary proteins. With liquid chromatography followed by mass spectrometry we identified tick salivary proteins that were differentially recognized by serum antibodies from tick-resistant and tick-susceptible bovines in immunoblots of tick salivary proteins separated by two-dimensional electrophoresis. RESULTS: Baseline levels of total IgG1 and IgG2 were significantly higher in tick-susceptible Holsteins compared with resistant Nelores. Significant increases in levels of total IgG1, but not of IgG2 accompanied successive infestations in both breeds. Resistant Nelores presented with significantly higher levels of salivary-specific antibodies before and at the first challenge with tick larvae; however, by the third challenge, tick-susceptible Holsteins presented with significantly higher levels of IgG1 and IgG2 tick salivary protein-specific antibodies. Importantly, sera from tick-resistant Nelores reacted with 39 tick salivary proteins in immunoblots of salivary proteins separated in two dimensions by electrophoresis versus only 21 spots reacting with sera from tick-susceptible Holsteins. CONCLUSIONS: Levels of tick saliva-specific antibodies were not directly correlated with infestation phenotypes. However, in spite of receiving apparently lower amounts of tick saliva, tick-resistant bovines recognized more tick salivary proteins. These reactive salivary proteins are putatively involved in several functions of parasitism and blood-feeding. Our results indicate that neutralization by host antibodies of tick salivary proteins involved in parasitism is essential to control tick infestations.


Sujet(s)
Protéines d'arthropode/immunologie , Maladies des bovins/génétique , Maladies des bovins/immunologie , Rhipicephalus/immunologie , Protéines et peptides salivaires/immunologie , Infestations par les tiques/médecine vétérinaire , Animaux , Bovins , Maladies des bovins/sang , Femelle , Génotype , Mâle , Rhipicephalus/génétique , Infestations par les tiques/génétique , Infestations par les tiques/immunologie , Infestations par les tiques/parasitologie
3.
J Biol Chem ; 288(25): 18612-23, 2013 Jun 21.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23649622

RÉSUMÉ

TANK-binding kinase 1 (TBK1) serves as a key convergence point in multiple innate immune signaling pathways. In response to receptor-mediated pathogen detection, TBK1 phosphorylation promotes production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and type I interferons. Increasingly, TBK1 dysregulation has been linked to autoimmune disorders and cancers, heightening the need to understand the regulatory controls of TBK1 activity. Here, we describe the mechanism by which suppressor of IKKε (SIKE) inhibits TBK1-mediated phosphorylation of interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF3), which is essential to type I interferon production. Kinetic analyses showed that SIKE not only inhibits IRF3 phosphorylation but is also a high affinity TBK1 substrate. With respect to IRF3 phosphorylation, SIKE functioned as a mixed-type inhibitor (K(i, app) = 350 nM) rather than, given its status as a TBK1 substrate, as a competitive inhibitor. TBK1 phosphorylation of IRF3 and SIKE displayed negative cooperativity. Both substrates shared a similar Km value at low substrate concentrations (∼50 nM) but deviated >8-fold at higher substrate concentrations (IRF3 = 3.5 µM; SIKE = 0.4 µM). TBK1-SIKE interactions were modulated by SIKE phosphorylation, clustered in the C-terminal portion of SIKE (Ser-133, -185, -187, -188, -190, and -198). These sites exhibited striking homology to the phosphorylation motif of IRF3. Mutagenic probing revealed that phosphorylation of Ser-185 controlled TBK1-SIKE interactions. Taken together, our studies demonstrate for the first time that SIKE functions as a TBK1 substrate and inhibits TBK1-mediated IRF3 phosphorylation by forming a high affinity TBK1-SIKE complex. These findings provide key insights into the endogenous control of a critical catalytic hub that is achieved not by direct repression of activity but by redirection of catalysis through substrate affinity.


Sujet(s)
Facteur-3 de régulation d'interféron/métabolisme , Interféron de type I/métabolisme , Protéines et peptides de signalisation intracellulaire/métabolisme , Protein-Serine-Threonine Kinases/métabolisme , Algorithmes , Séquence d'acides aminés , Sites de fixation/génétique , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Cellules HEK293 , Humains , Immunotransfert , Facteur-3 de régulation d'interféron/génétique , Interféron alpha/métabolisme , Interféron bêta/métabolisme , Protéines et peptides de signalisation intracellulaire/génétique , Cinétique , Données de séquences moléculaires , Mutation , Phosphorylation , Protein-Serine-Threonine Kinases/génétique , Sérine/génétique , Sérine/métabolisme , Transduction du signal , Spectrométrie de masse MALDI , Spécificité du substrat , Transfection
4.
Infect Immun ; 79(11): 4696-707, 2011 Nov.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21844238

RÉSUMÉ

Anaplasma phagocytophilum is an obligate intracellular bacterium that invades neutrophils to cause the emerging infectious disease human granulocytic anaplasmosis. A. phagocytophilum undergoes a biphasic developmental cycle, transitioning between an infectious dense-cored cell (DC) and a noninfectious reticulate cell (RC). To gain insights into the organism's biology and pathogenesis during human myeloid cell infection, we conducted proteomic analyses on A. phagocytophilum organisms purified from HL-60 cells. A total of 324 proteins were unambiguously identified, thereby verifying 23.7% of the predicted A. phagocytophilum proteome. Fifty-three identified proteins had been previously annotated as hypothetical or conserved hypothetical. The second most abundant gene product, after the well-studied major surface protein 2 (P44), was the hitherto hypothetical protein APH_1235. APH_1235 homologs are found in other Anaplasma and Ehrlichia species but not in other bacteria. The aph_1235 RNA level is increased 70-fold in the DC form relative to that in the RC form. Transcriptional upregulation of and our ability to detect APH_1235 correlate with RC to DC transition, DC exit from host cells, and subsequent DC binding and entry during the next round of infection. Immunoelectron microscopy pronouncedly detects APH_1235 on DC organisms, while detection on RC bacteria minimally, at best, exceeds background. This work represents an extensive study of the A. phagocytophilum proteome, discerns the complement of proteins that is generated during survival within human myeloid cells, and identifies APH_1235 as the first known protein that is pronouncedly upregulated on the infectious DC form.


Sujet(s)
Anaplasma phagocytophilum/métabolisme , Protéines bactériennes/métabolisme , Analyse de profil d'expression de gènes , Régulation de l'expression des gènes bactériens/physiologie , Cellules myéloïdes/microbiologie , Séquence d'acides aminés , Anaplasma phagocytophilum/génétique , Protéines bactériennes/composition chimique , Protéines bactériennes/génétique , Centrifugation en gradient de densité , Chromatographie en phase liquide , Ehrlichia/génétique , Ehrlichia/métabolisme , Cellules HL-60 , Humains , Annotation de séquence moléculaire , Cellules myéloïdes/ultrastructure , Protéomique , Spécificité d'espèce , Spectrométrie de masse en tandem , Régulation positive
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