marine vibrio
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Author(s):  
Hsin-Yang Chang ◽  
Li-Hua Lo ◽  
Yu-Hsuan Lan ◽  
Mao-Xuan Hong ◽  
Yuen Ting Chan ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 101071
Author(s):  
Yoshihito Kitaoku ◽  
Tamo Fukamizo ◽  
Sawitree Kumsaoad ◽  
Prakayfun Ubonbal ◽  
Robert C. Robinson ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathryn M Kauffman ◽  
William K Chang ◽  
Julia M Brown ◽  
Fatima Aysha Hussain ◽  
Joy Y Yang ◽  
...  

Microbial communities are shaped by viral predators. Yet, resolving which viruses (phages) and bacteria are interacting is a major challenge in the context of natural levels of microbial diversity. Thus, fundamental features of how phage-bacteria interactions are structured and evolve in "the wild" remain poorly resolved. Here we use large-scale isolation of environmental marine Vibrio bacteria and their phages to obtain quantitative estimates of strain-level phage predator loads, and use all-by-all host range assays to discover how phage and host genomic diversity shape interactions. We show that killing in environmental interaction networks is sparse - with phage predator loads low for most bacterial strains and phages host-strain-specific in their killing. Paradoxically, we also find that although overlap in killing is generally rare between phages, recombination is common. Together, these results indicate that the number of hosts that phages infect is often larger than the number that they kill and suggest that recombination during cryptic co-infections is an important mode of phage evolution in microbial communities. In the development of phages for bioengineering and therapeutics it will be important to consider that nucleic acids of introduced phages may spread into local phage populations through recombination, and that the likelihood of transfer is not predictable based on killing host range.


2020 ◽  
pp. 103913
Author(s):  
Julia M. Gauglitz ◽  
Rene M. Boiteau ◽  
Craig McLean ◽  
Lydia Babcock-Adams ◽  
Matt R. McIlvin ◽  
...  
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2020 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 100043
Author(s):  
Paritosh Parmar ◽  
Arpit Shukla ◽  
Dweipayan Goswami ◽  
Baldev Patel ◽  
Meenu Saraf

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Wang ◽  
Bai-Xue Liu ◽  
Jun-Hui Cheng ◽  
Hai-Nan Su ◽  
He-Min Sun ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 83 (5) ◽  
pp. 1495-1504 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanni Andrea Vitale ◽  
Martina Sciarretta ◽  
Fortunato Palma Esposito ◽  
Grant Garren January ◽  
Marianna Giaccio ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Marine Drugs ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 139
Author(s):  
Xinxin He ◽  
Min Yu ◽  
Yanhong Wu ◽  
Lingman Ran ◽  
Weizhi Liu ◽  
...  

Chitinase, as one of the most important extracellular enzymes in the marine environment, has great ecological and applied values. In this study, two chitinases (Chi1557 and Chi4668) with 97.33% amino acid sequences identity were individually found in Vibrio rotiferianus and Vibrio harveyi. They both were encoding by 561 amino acids, but differed in 15 amino acids and showed different enzymatic properties. The optimal temperature and pH ranges were 45–50 °C and pH 5.0–7.0 for Chi1557, while ~50 °C and pH 3.0–6.0 for Chi4668. K+, Mg2+, and EDTA increased the enzymatic activity of Chi4668 significantly, yet these factors were inhibitory to Chi1557. Moreover, Chi1557 degraded colloidal chitin to produce (GlcNAc)2 and minor GlcNAc, whereas Chi4668 produce (GlcNAc)2 with minor (GlcNAc)3 and (GlcNAc)4. The Kcat/Km of Chi4668 was ~4.7 times higher than that of Chi1557, indicating that Chi4668 had stronger catalytic activity than Chi1557. Furthermore, site-directed mutagenesis was performed on Chi1557 focusing on seven conserved amino acid residues of family GH18 chitinases. Chi1557 was almost completely inactive after Glu154, Gln219, Tyr221, or Trp312 was individually mutated, retained ~50% activity after Tyr37 was mutated, and increased two times activity after Asp152 was mutated, indicating that these six amino acids were key sites for Chi1557.


2019 ◽  
Vol 167 (4) ◽  
pp. 389-398
Author(s):  
Tatsuro Nishikino ◽  
Hiroto Iwatsuki ◽  
Taira Mino ◽  
Seiji Kojima ◽  
Michio Homma

Abstract The bacterial flagellar motor is a rotary nanomachine driven by ion flow. The flagellar stator complex, which is composed of two proteins, PomA and PomB, performs energy transduction in marine Vibrio. PomA is a four transmembrane (TM) protein and the cytoplasmic region between TM2 and TM3 (loop2–3) interacts with the rotor protein FliG to generate torque. The periplasmic regions between TM1 and TM2 (loop1–2) and TM3 and TM4 (loop3–4) are candidates to be at the entrance to the transmembrane ion channel of the stator. In this study, we purified the stator complex with cysteine replacements in the periplasmic loops and assessed the reactivity of the protein with biotin maleimide (BM). BM easily modified Cys residues in loop3–4 but hardly labelled Cys residues in loop1–2. We could not purify the plug deletion stator (ΔL stator) composed of PomBΔ41–120 and WT-PomA but could do the ΔL stator with PomA-D31C of loop1–2 or with PomB-D24N of TM. When the ion channel is closed, PomA and PomB interact strongly. When the ion channel opens, PomA interacts less tightly with PomB. The plug and loop1–2 region regulate this activation of the stator, which depends on the binding of sodium ion to the D24 residue of PomB.


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