colicin ia
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

54
(FIVE YEARS 2)

H-INDEX

20
(FIVE YEARS 0)

Author(s):  
Joka Pipercevic ◽  
Roman P. Jakob ◽  
Ricardo D. Righetto ◽  
Kenneth N. Goldie ◽  
Henning Stahlberg ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (18) ◽  
pp. 1697-1712
Author(s):  
Xiao-Qing Qiu ◽  
Ke-Fu Cao ◽  
Xiao-Feng Zhang ◽  
Chong-Yi Tong ◽  
Hong-Lung Ma ◽  
...  

Aim: The resident bacterial microbiome may shape and protect the health of vertebrate host. An array of molecules secreted by microbiome may contribute to the ecological stability of the microbiome itself. Material & methods: ELISA, radioactivity, immunofluorescence and cytokines measurements were used to observe the bioactivity and stability of colicin Ia level in oviparous and viviparous animal circulation. Results: Colicin Ia, a protein antimicrobial produced by Escherichia coli, is not present in animals at birth, but increases in concentration with the establishment of a stable gut microbiome and drops when the microbiome is experimentally disrupted. Colicin introduced in vivo is transported to tissues at concentrations able to prevent or eliminate bacterial infection. Conclusion: Our findings suggest an unexpected benefit provided by the presence of a resident microbiome in the form of active, circulating, bacterially-synthesized antimicrobial molecules.


2012 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 1443-1448 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen S. Jakes

Of the steps involved in the killing of Escherichia coli by colicins, binding to a specific outer-membrane receptor was the best understood and earliest characterized. Receptor binding was believed to be an indispensable step in colicin intoxication, coming before the less well-understood step of translocation across the outer membrane to present the killing domain to its target. In the process of identifying the translocator for colicin Ia, I created chimaeric colicins, as well as a deletion missing the entire receptor-binding domain of colicin Ia. The normal pathway for colicin Ia killing was shown to require two copies of Cir: one that serves as the primary receptor and a second copy that serves as translocator. The novel Ia colicins retain the ability to kill E. coli, even in the absence of receptor binding, as long as they can translocate via their Cir translocator. Experiments to determine whether colicin M uses a second copy of its receptor, FhuA, as its translocator were hampered by precipitation of colicin M chimaeras in inclusion bodies. Nevertheless, I show that receptor binding can be bypassed for killing, as long as a translocation pathway is maintained for colicin M. These experiments suggest that colicin M, unlike colicin Ia, may normally use a single copy of FhuA as both its receptor and its translocator. Colicin E1 can kill in the absence of receptor binding, using translocation through TolC.


2011 ◽  
Vol 100 (3) ◽  
pp. 133a
Author(s):  
Karen S. Jakes ◽  
Alan Finkelstein
Keyword(s):  
E Coli ◽  

2009 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 567-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen S. Jakes ◽  
Alan Finkelstein
Keyword(s):  

2009 ◽  
Vol 284 (24) ◽  
pp. 16126-16134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah L. Greig ◽  
Mazdak Radjainia ◽  
Alok K. Mitra

Colicin Ia is a soluble, harpoon-shaped bacteriocin which translocates across the periplasmic space of sensitive Escherichia coli cell by parasitizing an outer membrane receptor and forms voltage-gated ion channels in the inner membrane. This process leads to cell death, which has been thought to be caused by a single colicin Ia molecule. To directly visualize the three-dimensional structure of the channel, we generated two-dimensional crystals of colicin Ia inserted in lipid-bilayer membranes and determined a ∼17 three-dimensional model by electron crystallography. Supported by velocity sedimentation, chemical cross-linking and single-particle image analysis, the three-dimensional structure is a crown-shaped oligomer enclosing a ∼35 Å-wide extrabilayer vestibule. Our study suggests that lipid insertion instigates a global conformational change in colicin Ia and that more than one molecule participates in the channel architecture with the vestibule, possibly facilitating the known large scale peptide translocation upon channel opening.


2009 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 592a
Author(s):  
Karen S. Jakes ◽  
Susan K. Buchanan ◽  
Rodolfo Ghirlando ◽  
Alan Finkelstein
Keyword(s):  

2008 ◽  
Vol 132 (6) ◽  
pp. 693-707 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul K. Kienker ◽  
Karen S. Jakes ◽  
Alan Finkelstein

Colicin Ia is a bactericidal protein of 626 amino acid residues that kills its target cell by forming a channel in the inner membrane; it can also form voltage-dependent channels in planar lipid bilayer membranes. The channel-forming activity resides in the carboxy-terminal domain of ∼177 residues. In the crystal structure of the water-soluble conformation, this domain consists of a bundle of 10 α-helices, with eight mostly amphipathic helices surrounding a hydrophobic helical hairpin (helices H8-H9). We wish to know how this structure changes to form a channel in a lipid bilayer. Although there is evidence that the open channel has four transmembrane segments (H8, H9, and parts of H1 and H6-H7), their arrangement relative to the pore is largely unknown. Given the lack of a detailed structural model, it is imperative to better characterize the channel-lining protein segments. Here, we focus on a segment of 44 residues (573–616), which in the crystal structure comprises the H8-H9 hairpin and flanking regions. We mutated each of these residues to a unique cysteine, added the mutant colicins to the cis side of planar bilayers to form channels, and determined whether sulfhydryl-specific methanethiosulfonate reagents could alter the conduction of ions through the open channel. We found a pattern of reactivity consistent with parts of H8 and H9 lining the channel as α-helices, albeit rather short ones for spanning a lipid bilayer (12 residues). The effects of the reactions on channel conductance and selectivity tend to be greater for residues near the amino terminus of H8 and the carboxy terminus of H9, with particularly large effects for G577C, T581C, and G609C, suggesting that these residues may occupy a relatively constricted region near the cis end of the channel.


2007 ◽  
Vol 189 (19) ◽  
pp. 7045-7052 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Jeziorowski ◽  
David M. Gordon

ABSTRACT Survey results and genotypic characterization of Escherichia coli strains demonstrate that the bacteriocins colicin Ia and microcin V coassociate in a strain more often than would be expected by chance. When these two bacteriocins co-occur, they are encoded on the same conjugative plasmid. Plasmids encoding colicin Ia and microcin V are nonrandomly distributed with respect to the genomic background of the host strain. Characterization of microcin V and colicin Ia nucleotide variation, together with the backbone of plasmids encoding these bacteriocins, indicates that the association has evolved on multiple occasions and involves the movement of the microcin V operon, together with the genes iroNEDCB and iss, onto a nonrandom subset of colicin Ia plasmids. The fitness advantage conferred on cells encoding both colicin Ia and microcin V has yet to be determined.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document