Wade H. Bingle’s research while affiliated with University of British Columbia and other places

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Publications (34)


V. Functions of S‐layers1
  • Article

January 2006

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214 Reads

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63 Citations

FEMS Microbiology Reviews

Terrance J Beveridge

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Peter H Pouwels

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Margit Sára

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[...]

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Susan F Koval

Although S-layers are being increasingly identified on Bacteria and Archaea, it is enigmatic that in most cases S-layer function continues to elude us. In a few instances, S-layers have been shown to be virulence factors on pathogens (e.g. Campylobacter fetus ssp. fetus and Aeromonas salmonicida), protective against Bdellovibrio, a depository for surface-exposed enzymes (e.g. Bacillus stearothermophilus), shape-determining agents (e.g. Thermoproteus tenax) and nucleation factors for fine-grain mineral development (e.g. Synechococcus GL 24). Yet, for the vast majority of S-layered bacteria, the natural function of these crystalline arrays continues to be evasive. The following review up-dates the functional basis of S-layers and describes such diverse topics as the effect of S-layers on the Gram stain, bacteriophage adsorption in lactobacilli, phagocytosis by human polymorphonuclear leukocytes, the adhesion of a high-molecular-mass amylase, outer membrane porosity, and the secretion of extracellular enzymes of Thermoanaerobacterium. In addition, the functional aspect of calcium on the Caulobacter S-layer is explained.


Fig. 1. pNPCase activity of hybrid Cex/RsaA fusion proteins. pNPCase activity was measured for each of the hybrid Cex/RsaA fusion proteins by determining spectroscopically the release of pNP from 1 mM pNPC at 400 nm. Cex/RsaA fusion proteins were recovered from culture medium, washed with distilled water, pelleted by centrifugation , and sonicated prior to the assay to disrupt the aggregates. RsaA336C without an N-terminal Cex fusion was included as a negative control. The results were normalized against a standard curve made with free pNP.  
Fig. 2. Comparative purity, yield, and pNPCase activity of C P /RsaA336C vs C S / RsaA336C. (A) Cex/RsaA fusion protein aggregates were recovered from culture medium, solubilized with urea, and analyzed by SDS-PAGE on a 12% polyacrylamide gel. The molecular weight standards are as indicated. The predicted molecular weights of the fusion proteins are given in Materials and Methods. (B) Representative yields (milligrams/liter of dry weight) are given for each construct. (C) pNPCase activity was measured as described in the legend to Fig. 1. RsaA336C without an N-terminal Cex fusion was included as a negative control.  
Fig. 3. Stability of pNPCase activity of Cex/RsaA particulate enzyme. The pNPCase activity of C P /RsaA336C was measured as described in the legend to Fig. 1 after 0–9 d of storage at 4°C. The results are expressed as a percentage of the original activity.  
Fig. 4. Michaelis-Menten enzyme kinetics of Cex/RsaA336C particulate enzyme. (A) Determination of linear range of initial rate of enzymatic hydrolysis of pNPC by C P /RsaA336C at low substrate concentration (0.2 mM pNPC). The release of pNP was calculated by measuring the absorbance at 400 nm and using an extinction coefficient of 7.28 mM –1 cm –1 . (B) Effect of increasing substrate (pNPC) concentration on initial velocity of C P /RsaA336C-catalyzed release of pNP at pH 7.0, 37°C, using stopped assay time of 3 min. The kinetic parameters k cat and K M were calculated by fitting the initial rate data to the Michaelis-Menten equation using Grafit version 4.0 (39).  
Evaluation of a New System for Developing Particulate Enzymes Based on the Surface (S)-Layer Protein (RsaA) of Caulobacter crescentus : Fusion With the b -1,4-Glycanase (Cex) From the Cellulolytic Bacterium Cellulomonas fimi Yields a Robust, Catalytically Active Product
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2005

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603 Reads

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19 Citations

Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology

Immobilized biocatalysts, including particulate enzymes, represent an attractive tool for research and industrial applications because they combine the specificity of native enzymes with the advantage that they can be readily separated from end product and reused. We demonstrated the use of the Caulobacter crescentus surface (S)-layer protein (RsaA) secretion apparatus for the generation of particulate enzymes. Specifically, a candidate protein made previously by fusion of the beta-1,4-glycanase (Cex) from the cellulolytic bacterium Cellulomonas fimi with the C-terminus of RsaA was evaluated. Cex/RsaA cleaved the glycosidic linkage in the artificial substrate p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-cellobioside with a KM similar to that of native Cex (1.1 mM for Cex/RsaA vs 0.60 mM for Cex), indicating that the particulate Cex enzyme was able to bind substrate with wild-type affinity. By contrast, the kcat value was significantly reduced (0.08 s-1 for Cex/RsaA vs 15.8 s-1 for Cex), likely owing to the fact that the RsaA C-terminus induces spontaneous unstructured aggregation of the recombinant protein. Here, we demonstrated that not only can an RsaA fusion protein be cheaply produced and purified to a high yield (76 mg/L of dry wt for Cex/RsaA), but it can also be efficiently recycled. The Caulobacter S-layer secretion system therefore offers an attractive new model system for the production of particulate biocatalysts.

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Caulobacter crescentus Synthesizes an S-Layer-Editing Metalloprotease Possessing a Domain Sharing Sequence Similarity with Its Paracrystalline S-Layer Protein

May 2002

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80 Reads

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17 Citations

Strains of Caulobacter crescentus elaborate an S-layer, a two-dimensional protein latticework which covers the cell surface. The S-layer protein (RsaA) is secreted by a type I mechanism (relying on a C-terminal signal) and is unusual among type I secreted proteins because high levels of protein are produced continuously. In efforts to adapt the S-layer for display of foreign peptides and proteins, we noted a proteolytic activity that affected S-layer monomers with foreign inserts. The cleavage was precise, resulting in fragments with an unambiguous N-terminal sequence. We developed an assay to screen for loss of this activity (i.e., presentation of foreign peptides without degradation), using transposon and traditional mutagenesis. A metalloprotease gene designated sap (S-layer-associated protease) was identified which could complement the protease-negative mutants. The N-terminal half of Sap possessed significant similarity to other type I secreted proteases (e.g., alkaline protease of Pseudomonas aeruginosa), including the characteristic RTX repeat sequences, but the C-terminal half which normally includes the type I secretion signal exhibited no such similarity. Instead, there was a region of significant similarity to the N-terminal region of RsaA. We hypothesize that Sap evolved by combining the catalytic portion of a type I secreted protease with an S-layer-like protein, perhaps to associate with nascent S-layer monomers to “scan” for modifications.


Fig. 1. Creation of RsaA fusion proteins. (a) To provide DNA encoding a heterologous protein with BamHI termini for fusion to rsaA, the DNA of interest is first passed through pUC9CXS, a pUC9 derivative carrying a modified multiple cloning site and a promoterless chloramphenicol resistance (Cm r ∆P) gene (Bingle et al. 1997a). The polylinker encodes 5 restriction sites: BamHI, XhoI, SalI, StuI, and BglII. The Cm r ∆P gene was inserted into the BglII site so that its expression is directed by the lacZa promoter (Pm). The DNA of interest is provided with XhoI/StuI termini and inserted into the XhoI/StuI sites of pUC9CXS in the same orientation as the Cm r ∆P gene. It is then excised as a BamHI fragment and ligated into the BamHI linker site of the appropriate rsaA fusion plasmid (b, c or d). The Cm r ∆P gene is used to select for insertion events with the correct orientation. Afterwards, the Cm r ∆P gene is removed using BglII, and the plasmid sealed. (b) pWB9KSAC:rsaA∆P(MspI69BamHI), a pKT215 derived vector with the rsaA∆P carrying a BamHI linker insertion at a site corresponding to amino acid 69 of RsaA. (c) pUC8:rsaA242C, pUC8 carrying a 1.3 kb BamHI/HindIII fragment encoding the final 242 C-terminal amino acids of RsaA. (d) pUC8:rsaA336C, pUC8 carrying a 1.6 kb BamHI/HindIII fragment encoding the final 336 C-terminal amino acids of RsaA. For introduction into Caulobacter crescentus, the pUC based plasmids (c or d) carrying the DNA of interest is fused to broad-host-range vector pKT215 at their common HindIII sites. Bold numbers indicate the amino acid position relative to full-length RsaA  
Recombinant vaccines against infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus: production by the Caulobacter crescentus S-layer protein secretion system and evaluation in laboratory trials

February 2001

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147 Reads

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36 Citations

Diseases of Aquatic Organisms

We report the development of an IHNV vaccine produced by a new protein production system based on the bacterium Caulobacter crescentus. The subunit vaccines that were tested contain a 184 amino acid segment of the IHNV glycoprotein in different fusion arrangements with the C. crescentus S-layer protein. Relative percent survival of 26 to 34% was demonstrated in rainbow trout fry for a vaccine that contained the 184 amino acid segment of the IHNV glycoprotein fused to the C-terminal one-quarter of the S-layer protein. Inclusion of the universal mammalian T-cell epitopes developed from the measles fusion protein or the tetanus toxin protein did not increase the effectiveness of the IHNV-G/S-layer recombinant protein.


Strains and previously constructed plasmids used in this study References and/or strain designations Species Strain
Endpoint reciprocal ELISA titers of mice immunized with RsaA and RsaA:pilin fusion proteins
ELISA titers reported for other adhesintope-based anti-adhesion vaccine candidates against P. aeruginosa
Expression and testing of Pseudomonas aeruginosa vaccine candidate proteins prepared with the Caulobacter crescentus S-layer protein expression system

February 2001

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100 Reads

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39 Citations

Vaccine

A novel bacterial protein secretion system was used to produce vaccine candidates against Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The surface protein (RsaA) of Caulobacter crescentus was adapted to produce recombinant vaccine proteins based on the pilus tip epitope ('adhesintope') of P. aeruginosa. Two versions of the adhesintope, with (PCK) or without (PE) the cysteine residues that flank the epitope were investigated, fused to the C-terminus or inserted into full-length RsaA. When expressed in caulobacter the fusion proteins were secreted as aggregates. Full length RsaA-containing adhesintopes assembled on the cell surface as an S-layer; these were recovered by low pH extraction. Vaccine candidates were evaluated in a mouse challenge model. PCK-containing proteins produced at least 1000-fold higher antibody titers against the adhesintope, compared to the PE version, exceeding titers achievable with any other vaccine preparation method. Immunoglobulin isotyping indicated a balanced IgG1/IgG2 response, though when challenged with P. aeruginosa, the PE- and PCK-containing proteins did not afford mice a significant level of protection. Overall, we describe a new system for vaccine production that shows promise as a fast, economical way to construct, evaluate and produce vaccine proteins.


Recombinant DNA manipulations. Recombinant DNA manipulations were carried out by standard methods (22) using E. coli DH5α as a host. Growth of bacterial strains, preparation and electroporation of plasmid DNA into E. coliand C. crescentus, and selection of electrotransformants have been previously described (5, 6, 14). (A)rsaAΔP gene showing positions of BamHI linker insertions. The region extending between aa 863 and 907 contains a cluster of RTX sequences. (B) Construction of plasmids bearing genes encoding C-terminal peptides. BamHI-HindIII fragments encoding various portions of the RsaA C terminus were inserted into pUC8. lacZ-directed expression of 3′rsaA DNA was predicted to yield C-terminal peptides of RsaA carrying an 11-aa N-terminal extension derived from LacZ, the pUC8 multiple cloning site, and BamHI linker DNA. For expression in C. crescentus, each of the six pUC8-based plasmids were ligated to the broad-host-range plasmid pKT215 via their commonHindIII sites. (C) Construction of Cex-RsaA hybrid proteins. A DNA fragment encoding the first 368 aa of mature Cex was provided with a 5′ EcoRI site by inserting theNheI/HindIII fragment of pTZEO6 into theXbaI/HindIII sites of pPR510XE;XbaI and NheI possess compatible cohesive termini. A 3′ BamHI site was provided by inserting aBamHI linker from pUC1021 into the unique SalI site of cex. The EcoRI/BamHI fragment was inserted into pUC8-based plasmids carrying DNAs encoding various portions of the RsaA C terminus to create in-frame translational fusions between lacZ, cex, and rsaAsequences. Finally, the pUC8-based plasmids bearing genes encoding the RsaA-Cex hybrid proteins were fused to pKT215 via their commonHindIII sites. As a control, the secretion of Cex (369) in the absence of RsaA sequences was investigated. Cex (369) was provided with a translational stop site by inserting theEcoRI/BamHI fragment encoding Cex (369) into pUC8 not carrying any rsaA DNA. Abbreviations: Pm, promoter; SD, Shine-Dalgarno sequence; MCS, multiple cloning site; B,BamHI.
SDS-PAGE analysis of aggregated protein recovered from culture fluids by filtration through nylon mesh. (A) C-terminal peptides. C. crescentus was grown in small peptone-yeast extract cultures as previously described (5). Aggregated protein present in the culture fluids of stationary-phase cultures was recovered by gravity filtration through a disk of nylon mesh (2-cm diameter) fitted into a microfiltration apparatus and solubilized in 1 to 4 volumes of 8 M urea–100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.5) prior to SDS-PAGE (5, 28). Lane 1, molecular mass markers; lanes 2 and 3, RsaA242C; lanes 4 and 5, RsaA166C; lanes 7 and 8, RsaA134C; lanes 8 and 9, RsaA119C. Lanes 2, 4, 6, and 8 contain aggregated protein which collected on mesh with a 350-μm pore size. Lanes 3, 5, 7, and 9 contain aggregated protein which collected on mesh with a 90-μm pore size. Molecular mass markers were of 97.4, 66.2, 42.7, 31.0, 21.5, and 14.4 kDa. (B) Cex-RsaA hybrid proteins. C. crescentus was grown overnight on a rotary shaker in 5 ml of peptone-yeast extract (chloramphenicol, 2 μg/ml) medium. The entire 5-ml culture was then transferred to a 2,800-ml Fernbach flask containing 1,275 ml of M11HIGG medium, a modification of M6Higg medium (25) containing 5 mM imidazolium chloride (1 M stock stock, pH 7.0), 2 mM potassium phosphate (2 M stock stock, pH 6.8), 0.15% glucose, 0.15% l-glutamate (monosodium salt), 1% modified Hunter's mineral base, 0.58 mM CaCl2, and 2 μg of chloramphenicol per ml and grown for a further 72 to 96 h on a model G53 gyratory shaker (New Brunswick Scientific, Edison, N.J.) at approximately 55 rpm. After 72 to 96 h, cultures were sieved through nylon mesh (90-μm diagonal pore size) cut to fit into a 4.5-cm-diameter filtration housing possessing an O-ring seal. The protein aggregates were dislodged from the mesh using a water spray from a wash bottle and washed three times with water by centrifugation (about 1 min, 12,000 × g). A small portion of the protein was solubilized in 1 to 4 volumes of 8 M urea–100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.5) for SDS-PAGE analysis, and the remainder was lyophilized and weighed. Lane 1, molecular mass markers (see legend to panel A); lane 2, Cex-RsaA336; lane 3, Cex-RsaA242C; lane 4, Cex-RsaA166C; lane 5, Cex-RsaA134C; lane 6, Cex-RsaA119C; lane 7, Cex-RsaA82C. The yield of the Cex passenger portion of the hybrid protein (in milligrams per liter of culture) appears below each lane and was estimated from the numbers of amino acids in the Cex and RsaA portions of the hybrid proteins.
Secretion of the Caulobacter crescentus SLayer Protein: Further Localization of the C-Terminal Secretion Signal and Its Use for Secretion of Recombinant Proteins

June 2000

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291 Reads

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52 Citations

The secretion signal of the Caulobacter crescentusS-layer protein (RsaA) was localized to the C-terminal 82 amino acids of the molecule. Protein yield studies showed that 336 or 242 C-terminal residues of RsaA mediated secretion of >50 mg of a cellulase passenger protein per liter to the culture fluids.


Electroporation of Plasmids into Freshwater and Marine Caulobacters

January 2000

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123 Reads

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1 Citation

Caulobacter sp.are gram-negative bacteria common in freshwater and marine environments. These organisms exhibit a life cycle alternating between a monoflagellated swarmer cell and nonmotile stalked cell. The stalked cell is typically found attached to inert surfaces by an attachment structure at the base of the stalk, the holdfast. It was observed more than forty years ago that the spatial positioning and temporal regulation of the structures associated with this developmental progression (e.g., the stalk, the flagellum) during the cell cycle is remarkably reproducible. As a result, one freshwater caulobacter species, C. crescentus, emerged as a bacterial model system for cell differentiation and temporal control of gene expression (Brun et al, 1994; Gober and Marques, 1995).



Cell-surface display of a Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain K pilin peptide within the paracrystalline S-layer of Caulobacter crescentus

November 1997

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48 Reads

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69 Citations

Molecular Microbiology

The paracrystalline surface (S)-layer of Caulobacter crescentus is composed of a single secreted protein (RsaA) that interlocks in a hexagonal pattern to completely envelop the bacterium. Using a genetic approach, we inserted a 12 amino acid peptide from Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain K pilin at numerous semirandom positions in RsaA. We then used an immunological screen to identify those sites that presented the inserted pilin peptide on the C. crescentus cell surface as a part of the S-layer. Eleven such sites (widely separated in the primary sequence) were identified, demonstrating for the first time that S-layers can be readily exploited as carrier proteins to display 'epitope-size' heterologous peptides on bacterial cell surfaces. Whereas intact RsaA molecules carrying a pilin peptide could always be found on the surface of C. crescentus regardless of the particular insertion site, introduction of the pilin peptide at 9 of the 11 sites resulted in some proteolytic cleavage of RsaA. Two types of proteolytic phenomena were observed. The first was characterized by a single cleavage within the pilin peptide insert with both fragments of the S-layer protein remaining anchored to the outer membrane. The other proteolytic phenomenon was characterized by cleavage of the S-layer protein at a point distant from the site of the pilin peptide insertion. This cleavage always occurred at the same location in RsaA regardless of the particular insertion site, yielding a surface-anchored 26 kDa proteolytic fragment bearing the RsaA N-terminus; the C-terminal cleavage product carrying the pilin peptide was released into the growth medium. When the results of this work were combined with the results of a previous study, the RsaA primary sequence could be divided into three regions with respect to the location of a peptide insertion and its effect on S-layer biogenesis: (i) insertions in the extreme N-terminus of RsaA either produce no apparent effect on S-layer biogenesis or disrupt surface-anchoring of the protein; (ii) insertions in the extreme C-terminus either produce no apparent effect on S-layer biogenesis or disrupt protein secretion; and (iii) insertions more centrally located in the protein either have no apparent effect on S-layer biogenesis or result in proteolytic cleavage of RsaA. These data are discussed in relation to our previous assignment of the RsaA N- and C-terminus as regions that are important for surface anchoring and secretion respectively.


V. Functions of S-layers

July 1997

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44 Reads

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137 Citations

FEMS Microbiology Reviews

Although S-layers are being increasingly identified on Bacteria and Archaea, it is enigmatic that in most cases S-layer function continues to elude us. In a few instances, S-layers have been shown to be virulence factors on pathogens (e.g. Campylobacter fetus ssp. fetus and Aeromonas salmonicida), protective against Bdellovibrio, a depository for surface-exposed enzymes (e.g. Bacillus stearothermophilus), shape-determining agents (e.g. Thermoproteus tenax) and nucleation factors for fine-grain mineral development (e.g. Synechococcus GL 24). Yet, for the vast majority of S-layered bacteria, the natural function of these crystalline arrays continues to be evasive. The following review up-dates the functional basis of S-layers and describes such diverse topics as the effect of S-layers on the Gram stain, bacteriophage adsorption in lactobacilli, phagocytosis by human polymorphonuclear leukocytes, the adhesion of a high-molecular-mass amylase, outer membrane porosity, and the secretion of extracellular enzymes of Thermoanaerobacterium. In addition, the functional aspect of calcium on the Caulobacter S-layer is explained.


Citations (30)


... Fractionation of the cell wall layers was a challenge (Work and Griffiths 1968), but the Murray laboratory finally reported two methods that separated the layers of the complex envelope of M. radiodurans Sark (Lancy and Murray 1978) and in the process obtained an elegant rotary-shadowed image of the benzene-extracted hexagonally packed outer layer (Fig. 7). Baumeister and colleagues took up the challenge of detailed structural analyses of Deinococcus radiodurans (Baumeister et al. 1986) and other bacteria in the 1980s and 1990s, as techniques were developed to analyze the 3-dimensional structure of S-layers (Bingle et al. 1987). Species of Bacillus were good sources of S-layers, including Bacillus (now Geobacillus) stearothermophilus (studied extensively by the Sleytr and Messner groups). ...

Reference:

Inroads through the bacterial cell envelope: seeing is believing
Three-dimensional structure of the regular tetragonal surface layer of Azotobacter vinelandii
  • Citing Article
  • November 1987

... The success of this endeavor depends on the manipulation of the bacterium's paracrystalline protein surface (S)-layer which is anchored to the outer membrane completely enveloping the bacterium. The S-layer protein is secreted by a type I secretion system relying on an uncleaved C-terminal secretion signal (Bingle et al., 1997b). Foreign proteins linked to this secretion signal are secreted into the growth medium by the S-layer protein secretion apparatus where they can be easily recovered in appreciable quantities. ...

Linker Mutagenesis of the Caulobacter crescentus S-Layer Protein
  • Citing Chapter
  • January 1993

... C. crescentus, a dimorphic bacterium that begins its life cycle as a flagellated swarmer cell before differentiating into a nonmotile stalked cell, displays an S-layer with hexagonal unit cells spaced at a center-to-center distance of $22 nm (11,12). The Caulobacter S-layer consists of a single 98-kDa protein, RsaA (8). ...

Definition of form and Function for the S-Layer of Caulobacter crescentus

... Interestingly, deduced secondary structure investigations indicated higher amounts of helical structures for the mesophilic M. voltae and M. vannielii S-layer proteins, while the thermophilic and extreme thermophilic M. thermolithotrophicus and M. jannaschii S-layer proteins exhibited more loops (Akca et al., 2002). Concerning S-layer protein secondary structure, a higher amount of β-sheet structures was observed in Methanothermus fervidus and Methanothermus sociabilis S-layer proteins (Brockl et al., 1991) when compared to mesophilic organisms (Baumeister et al., 1982;Bingle et al., 1985;Engelhardt et al., 1986). As β-structures interact both at intermolecular and intramolecular levels (Jaenicke, 1987), it has been suggested that the higher amounts of β-sheets observed might play a role in stabilizing the proteins and favor the crystalline lattice formation (Brockl et al., 1991). ...

Characterization of the surface layer protein from Azotobacter vinelandii
  • Citing Article
  • February 1986

... Fractionation of the cell wall layers was a challenge (Work and Griffiths 1968), but the Murray laboratory finally reported two methods that separated the layers of the complex envelope of M. radiodurans Sark ( Lancy and Murray 1978) and in the process obtained an elegant rotary-shadowed image of the benzene-extracted hexagonally packed outer layer (Fig. 7). Baumeister and colleagues took up the challenge of detailed structural analyses of Deinococcus radiodurans ( Baumeister et al. 1986) and other bacteria in the 1980s and 1990s, as techniques were developed to analyze the 3-dimensional structure of S-layers ( Bingle et al. 1987). Species of Bacillus were good sources of S-layers, including Bacillus (now Geobacillus) stearothermophilus (studied extensively by the Sleytr and Messner groups). ...

Three-Dimensional Structure oftheRegular Tetragonal Surface LayerofAzotobacter vinelandii
  • Citing Article

... Recently, the structure of the monomeric Sap AD was determined using nanobodies as crystallization aids 14 . Sap AD comprises a string of six Ig-like domains that fold independently of calcium, a divalent metal that is commonly found to stabilize SLPs and the S-layer lattice [21][22][23][24] . Here, we report the X-ray structure of the EA1 assembly domain at 1.8 Å in complex with two EA1biding nanobodies that inhibit EA1 self-assembly and depolymerize existing EA1 S-layer lattices. ...

Role of Calcium in Assembly of the Azotobacter vinelandii Surface Array
  • Citing Article
  • February 1987

Microbiology

... To ensure efficient transcription of this mutated gene, we included 5Јflanking sequences which may contain enhancers for polymerase III-directed transcription. Also included were 3Ј-flanking sequences consisting of the stop signal for polymerase III, and nucleotides required for processing, derived from the most efficiently expressed of the three cellular tRNAlys-UUU loci (21,40). The mutant tRNA was also designed to maintain essential features, in regions away from the 3Ј end, required for interaction with HIV-1 RT and NCp7 (5,36). ...

Two human genes encoding tRNAGlyGCC
  • Citing Article
  • May 1988

Gene

... Noteworthy, further cohesion to the SU is provided by the SDBC through the subunit DR_2577 (or SlpA), which exhibits a peculiar arrangement of its S-layer Homology (SLH) domain, a not-exclusively characteristic of S-layer proteins (Beveridge et al. 1997;Mesnage et al. 2000;Sleytr et al. 2014), tethered towards the inner membrane. ...

V. Functions of S‐layers1
  • Citing Article
  • January 2006

FEMS Microbiology Reviews

... El uso de problemas sociocientíficos como contexto en el aula, debido a sus características propias, favorece el desarrollo de la responsabilidad social (Ransey, 1993), la toma de decisiones (Bingle y Gaskell, 1994;Ratcliffe, 1997) o la educación para la democracia (González García y Prieto Ruz, 1998), entre otras. La adquisición de todos estos aspectos por parte de los profesores en formación inicial (en adelante, PFI) les ayudará no solo a ser ciudadanos competentes y responsables que toman decisiones fundamentadas y son críticos en la sociedad, sino también a trasladarlas a su futuro alumnado (Pro Bueno et al., 2022). ...

Scientific literacy for decision making and the social construction of scientific knowledge
  • Citing Article
  • April 1994

... A version of the rsaA gene (rsaA⌬P) lacking its native promoter and carried on an 3.7-kb EcoRI/ SstI fragment in plasmid pTZ18UB was used for linker mutagenesis experiments (Fig. 1). To create target sites for linker insertions, pTZ18UB:rsaA⌬P propagated in E. coli RB404 was partially digested with TaqI (Fig. 2), and those molecules potentially corresponding to full-length linearized plasmid were recovered from agarose gels and ligated to a BamHI linker (BamHI-1021K) previously tagged with the 1.2-kb Km r gene of Tn903 (11). The tagged BamHI linker was excised from its carrier plasmid with AccI to provide it with 5Ј-CG extensions compatible with those left by digestion of rsaA⌬P with TaqI. ...

A method of tagging specific-purpose linkers with an antibiotic- resistance gene for linker mutagenesis using a selectable marker