Na(+)/H(+) antiporters are membrane proteins that play a major role in pH and Na(+) homeostasis of cells throughout the biological kingdom, from bacteria to humans and higher plants. The emerging genomic sequence projects already have started to reveal that the Na(+)/H(+) antiporters cluster in several families. Structure and function studies of a purified antiporter protein have as yet been conducted mainly with NhaA, the key Na(+)/H(+) antiporter of Escherichia coli. This antiporter has been overexpressed, purified and reconstituted in a functional form in proteoliposomes. It has recently been crystallized in both 3D as well as 2D crystals. The NhaA 2D crystals were analyzed by cryoelectron microscopy and a density map at 4 A resolution was obtained and a 3D map was reconstructed. NhaA is shown to exist in the 2D crystals as a dimer of monomers each composed of 12 transmembrane segments with an asymmetric helix packing. This is the first insight into the structure of a polytopic membrane protein. Many Na(+)/H(+) antiporters are characterized by very dramatic sensitivity to pH, a property that corroborates their role in pH homeostasis. The molecular mechanism underlying this pH sensitivity has been studied in NhaA. Amino acid residues involved in the pH response have been identified. Conformational changes transducing the pH change into a change in activity were found in loop VIII-IX and at the N-terminus by probing trypsin digestion or binding of a specific monoclonal antibody respectively. Regulation by pH of the eukaryotic Na(+)/H(+) antiporters involves an intricate signal transduction pathway (recently reviewed by Yun et al., Am. J. Physiol. 269 (1995) G1-G11). The transcription of NhaA has been shown to be regulated by a novel Na(+)-specific regulatory network. It is envisaged that interdisciplinary approaches combining structure, molecular and cell biology as well as genomics should be applied in the future to the study of this important group of transporters.
Floral nectar is regarded as the most important reward available to animal-pollinated plants to attract pollinators. Despite the vast amount of publications on nectar properties, the role of nectar as a natural bacterial habitat is yet unexplored. To gain a better understanding of bacterial communities inhabiting floral nectar, culture-dependent and -independent (454-pyrosequencing) methods were used. Our findings demonstrate that bacterial communities in nectar are abundant and diverse. Using culture-dependent method we showed that bacterial communities of nectar displayed significant variation among three plant species: Amygdalus communis, Citrus paradisi and Nicotiana glauca. The dominant class in the nectar bacterial communities was Gammaproteobacteria. About half of the isolates were novel species (< 97% similarities of the 16S rRNA gene with known species). Using 454-pyrosequencing we demonstrated that nectar microbial community are distinct for each of the plant species while there are no significant differences between nectar microbial communities within nectars taken from different plants of the same species. Primary selection of the nectar bacteria is unclear; it may be affected by variations in the chemical composition of the nectar in each plant. The role of the rich and diverse nectar microflora in the attraction-repulsion relationships between the plant and its nectar consumers has yet to be explored.
The nhaA gene of Escherichia coli, which encodes a pH-activated Na+/H+ antiporter, has been modified; six of its eight histidine codons were mutated to arginine codons by site-directed mutagenesis, yielding the mutations H254R-H257R (a double mutant), H226R, H39R, H244R, and H319R. In addition a deletion (delta nhaA1-14) lacking the remaining two histidines, His-3 and His-5, has been constructed. By comparing the phenotypes conferred by plasmids bearing the various mutations to the phenotype of the wild type upon transformation of strains NM81 (delta nhaA) or EP432 (delta nhaA, delta nhaB) we found that none of the NhaA histidines are essential for the Na+/H+ antiporter activity of the NhaA protein. However, the replacement of His-226 by Arg markedly changes the pH dependence of the antiporter. All mutants except H226R confer to NM81 and EP432 Na+ resistance up to pH 8.5 as well as Li+ resistance. Cells bearing H226R are resistant to Li+ and to Na+ at neutral pH, but they become sensitive to Na+ above pH 7.5. Analysis of the Na+/H+ antiporter activity of membrane vesicles derived from H226R cells shows that the mutated protein is activated by pH to the same extent as the wild type. However, whereas the activation of the wild-type NhaA occurs between pH 7 and pH 8, that of H226R antiporter occurs between pH 6.5 and pH 7.5. Furthermore, while the wild-type antiporter remains almost fully active at least up to pH 8.5, H226R is reversibly inactivated above pH 7.5, reaching 10-20% of the maximal activity at pH 8.5. We suggest that His-226 is part of a pH-sensitive site that regulates the activity of NhaA.
Cysteine residues were found nonessential in the mechanism of the NhaA antiporter activity of Escherichia coli. The functional C-less NhaA has provided the groundwork to study further histidine 225 of NhaA which has previously been suggested to play an important role in the activation of NhaA at alkaline pH (Rimon, A., Gerchman, Y., Olami, Y., Schuldiner, S. and Padan, E. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 26813-26817). C-less H225C was constructed and shown to possess an antiporter activity 60% of that of C-less antiporter and a pH profile similar to that of both the C-less or wild-type antiporters. Remarkably, whereas neither the wild-type nor the C-less antiporters were affected by N-ethylmaleimide, C-less H225C was inhibited by this reagent. To determine the degree of alkylation of the antiporter protein by N-ethylmaleimide, antiporter derivatives tagged at their C termini with six histidines residues were constructed. Alkylation of C-less H225C was measured by labeling of everted membrane vesicles with [14 C]N-ethylmaleimide, affinity purification of the His-tagged antiporter, and determination of the radioactivity of the purified protein. This assay showed that H225C is alkylated to a much higher level than any of the native cysteinyl residues of NhaA reaching saturation at alkyl/ NhaA stoichiometry of 1. The wild-type derivative showed at least 10-fold less alkylation even at higher concentrations, suggesting that H225C resides in a domain that is much more exposed to N-ethylmaleimide than the native cysteinyl residues of NhaA.Since H225C residues both in right-side out and inside-out membrane vesicles were quantitatively alkylated by N-ethylmaleimide, this assay was used to determine the accessibility of H225C to other SH reagents by titrating the H225C left free to react with N-ethylmaleimide, following exposure of the membranes to the reagents. Furthermore, since membrane-impermeant probes can react with residues in membrane-embedded protein only if accessible to the medium containing the reagent, the assay was used to determine the membrane topology of H225C.As expected for a membrane-permeant probe, p-chloromercuribenzoate reacted with H225C as efficiently as N-ethylmaleimide in both membrane orientations. Similar results were obtained with methanethiosulfonate ethylammonium supporting the recent observations that this probe is membrane-permeant. On the other hand, both membrane-impermeant reagents p-chloromercuribenzosulfonate and methanethiosulfonate ethyl-trimethyl ammonium bromide reacted with H225C 10-fold more in right-side out than in inside-out vesicles, and p-chloromercuribenzosulfonate also blocked completely the H225C in intact cells. These results strongly suggest that H225C is exposed at the periplasmic face of the membrane.
UV light-emitting diodes (UV LEDs) are an emerging technology and a UV source for pathogen inactivation, however low UV-LED wavelengths are still expensive and of low fluence. Our results suggest that the sensitivity of human Coronavirus (HCoV-OC43 used as SARS-CoV-2 surrogate) was wavelength dependent with 267 nm ~ 279 nm > 286 nm > 297 nm. Other viruses showed similar results, suggesting UV LED with peak emission at ~286 nm could serve as an effective tool in the fight against human Coronaviruses.
All colonial diazotrophic cyanobacteria are capable of simultaneously evolving O 2 through oxygenic photosynthesis and fixing nitrogen via nitrogenase. Since nitrogenase is irreversibly inactivated by O 2 , accommodation of the two metabolic pathways has led to biochemical and ⁄ or structural adaptations that protect the enzyme from O 2 . In some species, differentiated cells (heterocysts) are produced within the filaments. PSII is absent in the heterocysts, while PSI activity is maintained. In other, nonheterocystous species, however, a ''division of labor'' occurs whereby individual cells within a colony appear to ephemerally fix nitrogen while others evolve oxygen. Using membrane inlet mass spectrometry (MIMS) in conjunction with tracer 18 O 2 and inhibitors of photosynthetic and respiratory electron transport, we examined the light dependence of O 2 consumption in Trichodesmium sp. IMS 101, a nonheterocystous, colonial cyanobacterium, and Anabaena flos-aquae (Lyngb.) Bréb. ex Bornet et Flahault, a heterocystous species. Our results indicate that in both species, intracellular O 2 concentrations are maintained at low levels by the light-dependent reduction of oxygen via the Mehler reaction. In N 2 -fixing Trichodesmium colonies, Mehler activity can consume 75% of gross O 2 production, while in Trichodesmium utilizing nitrate, Mehler activity declines and consumes 10% of gross O 2 production. Moreover, evidence for the coupling between N 2 fixation and Mehler activity was observed in purified heterocysts of Anabaena, where light accelerated O 2 consumption by 3-fold. Our results suggest that a major role for PSI in N 2 -fixing cyanobacteria is to effectively act as a photoncatalyzed oxidase, consuming O 2 through pseudocyclic electron transport while simultaneously supplying ATP in both heterocystous and nonheterocystous taxa.
The presence and role of melatonin in plants are still under debate owing to difficulties of identification and quantification. Accordingly, although it has been frequently proposed that melatonin acts as an antioxidant in phototrophic organisms, experimental data on its physiological role are scarce. This study describes the use of a rapid and simple new method for quantification of melatonin in the marine macroalga Ulva sp., organisms routinely exposed to tide-related environmental stresses and known for their high tolerance to abiotic conditions. The method was used here to show that exposure to oxidative stress-inducing environmental conditions (elevated temperature and heavy metals) induced a rise in melatonin level in the algae. Addition of exogenous melatonin alleviated the algae from cadmium-induced stress. Interestingly, although the algae were taken from a culture growing free floating and kept under constant photoperiod and water level, they exhibited a semi-lunar rhythm of melatonin levels that correlated with predicted spring tides. The correlation can probably be interpreted as reflecting preparation for predicted low tides, when the algae are exposed to increasing temperature, desiccation, and salinity, all known to induce oxidative stress. Given the simplicity of the described method it can easily be adapted for the study of melatonin in many other phototrophic organisms. These results provide, for the first time, experimental data that support both an antioxidant role for melatonin and its semi-lunar rhythm in macroalgae.
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