mycothiol has been researched along with bacillithiol* in 6 studies
2 review(s) available for mycothiol and bacillithiol
Article | Year |
---|---|
Redox regulation by reversible protein S-thiolation in Gram-positive bacteria.
Low molecular weight (LMW) thiols play an important role as thiol-cofactors for many enzymes and are crucial to maintain the reduced state of the cytoplasm. Most Gram-negative bacteria utilize glutathione (GSH) as major LMW thiol. However, in Gram-positive Actinomycetes and Firmicutes alternative LMW thiols, such as mycothiol (MSH) and bacillithiol (BSH) play related roles as GSH surrogates, respectively. Under conditions of hypochlorite stress, MSH and BSH are known to form mixed disulfides with protein thiols, termed as S-mycothiolation or S-bacillithiolation that function in thiol-protection and redox regulation. Protein S-thiolations are widespread redox-modifications discovered in different Gram-positive bacteria, such as Bacillus and Staphylococcus species, Mycobacterium smegmatis, Corynebacterium glutamicum and Corynebacterium diphtheriae. S-thiolated proteins are mainly involved in cellular metabolism, protein translation, redox regulation and antioxidant functions with some conserved targets across bacteria. The reduction of protein S-mycothiolations and S-bacillithiolations requires glutaredoxin-related mycoredoxin and bacilliredoxin pathways to regenerate protein functions. In this review, we present an overview of the functions of mycothiol and bacillithiol and their physiological roles in protein S-bacillithiolations and S-mycothiolations in Gram-positive bacteria. Significant progress has been made to characterize the role of protein S-thiolation in redox-regulation and thiol protection of main metabolic and antioxidant enzymes. However, the physiological roles of the pathways for regeneration are only beginning to emerge as well as their interactions with other cellular redox systems. Future studies should be also directed to explore the roles of protein S-thiolations and their redox pathways in pathogenic bacteria under infection conditions to discover new drug targets and treatment options against multiple antibiotic resistant bacteria. Topics: Animals; Cysteine; Glucosamine; Glycopeptides; Gram-Positive Bacteria; Humans; Inositol; Models, Biological; Oxidation-Reduction; Protein Processing, Post-Translational; Structure-Activity Relationship; Sulfhydryl Compounds | 2019 |
Application of genetically encoded redox biosensors to measure dynamic changes in the glutathione, bacillithiol and mycothiol redox potentials in pathogenic bacteria.
Gram-negative bacteria utilize glutathione (GSH) as their major LMW thiol. However, most Gram-positive bacteria do not encode enzymes for GSH biosynthesis and produce instead alternative LMW thiols, such as bacillithiol (BSH) and mycothiol (MSH). BSH is utilized by Firmicutes and MSH is the major LMW thiol of Actinomycetes. LMW thiols are required to maintain the reduced state of the cytoplasm, but are also involved in virulence mechanisms in human pathogens, such as Staphylococcus aureus, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Salmonella enterica subsp. Typhimurium and Listeria monocytogenes. Infection conditions often cause perturbations of the intrabacterial redox balance in pathogens, which is further affected under antibiotics treatments. During the last years, novel glutaredoxin-fused roGFP2 biosensors have been engineered in many eukaryotic organisms, including parasites, yeast, plants and human cells for dynamic live-imaging of the GSH redox potential in different compartments. Likewise bacterial roGFP2-based biosensors are now available to measure the dynamic changes in the GSH, BSH and MSH redox potentials in model and pathogenic Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. In this review, we present an overview of novel functions of the bacterial LMW thiols GSH, MSH and BSH in pathogenic bacteria in virulence regulation. Moreover, recent results about the application of genetically encoded redox biosensors are summarized to study the mechanisms of host-pathogen interactions, persistence and antibiotics resistance. In particularly, we highlight recent biosensor results on the redox changes in the intracellular food-borne pathogen Salmonella Typhimurium as well as in the Gram-positive pathogens S. aureus and M. tuberculosis during infection conditions and under antibiotics treatments. These studies established a link between ROS and antibiotics resistance with the intracellular LMW thiol-redox potential. Future applications should be directed to compare the redox potentials among different clinical isolates of these pathogens in relation to their antibiotics resistance and to screen for new ROS-producing drugs as promising strategy to combat antimicrobial resistance. Topics: Biosensing Techniques; Cysteine; Glucosamine; Glutathione; Glycopeptides; Green Fluorescent Proteins; Humans; Inositol; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Oxidation-Reduction; Recombinant Fusion Proteins; Staphylococcus aureus | 2018 |
4 other study(ies) available for mycothiol and bacillithiol
Article | Year |
---|---|
Alternative Thiol-Based Redox Systems.
The maintenance of thiol-redox homeostasis is vital to the survival of living organisms. Sulfur-based low-molecular weight compounds and proteins synthesized by cells provide efficient and specific ways to counteract oxidative stress and regulate cellular processes. For these tasks, most organisms share the glutathione and thioredoxin NADPH-dependent redox systems. However, in certain lineages, evolution has taken different paths that led to the emergence of novel cysteine-based low-molecular weight redox cofactors, around which new redox systems evolved. These include the sugar-based cysteinyl derivatives mycothiol and bacillithiol, and ergothioneine (EGT), which are present in different phyla from bacteria. Within Eukarya, some fungi contain EGT, whereas trypanothione is unique to species from the Euglenozoa family. This Forum compiles the state-of-the-art knowledge about these noncanonical redox systems of pathogenic organisms. The functions in physiology and pathogenicity, as well as structural and biochemical specializations that these system components evolved, are thoroughly discussed. Antioxid. Redox Signal. 28, 407-409. Topics: Bacteria; Cysteine; Ergothioneine; Glucosamine; Glutathione; Glycopeptides; Homeostasis; Inositol; Oxidation-Reduction; Oxidative Stress; Sulfhydryl Compounds; Thioredoxins | 2018 |
Characterization of BshA, bacillithiol glycosyltransferase from Staphylococcus aureus and Bacillus subtilis.
The first step during bacillithiol (BSH) biosynthesis involves the formation of N-acetylglucosaminylmalate from UDP-N-acetylglucosamine and l-malate and is catalyzed by a GT4 class glycosyltransferase enzyme (BshA). Recombinant Staphylococcus aureus and Bacillus subtilis BshA were highly specific and active with l-malate but the former showed low activity with d-glyceric acid and the latter with d-malate. We show that BshA is inhibited by BSH and similarly that MshA (first enzyme of mycothiol biosynthesis) is inhibited by the final product MSH. Topics: Antioxidants; Bacillaceae Infections; Bacillus subtilis; Bacterial Proteins; Cysteine; Enzyme Inhibitors; Glucosamine; Glycopeptides; Inositol; Kinetics; Malates; Models, Molecular; Molecular Targeted Therapy; Molecular Weight; N-Acetylglucosaminyltransferases; Protein Conformation; Recombinant Proteins; Staphylococcal Infections; Staphylococcus aureus; Substrate Specificity; Uridine Diphosphate N-Acetylglucosamine | 2012 |
The DinB superfamily includes novel mycothiol, bacillithiol, and glutathione S-transferases.
The superfamily of glutathione S-transferases has been the subject of extensive study; however, Actinobacteria produce mycothiol (MSH) in place of glutathione, and no mycothiol S-transferase (MST) has been identified. Using mycothiol and monochlorobimane as substrates, an MST activity was detected in extracts of Mycobacterium smegmatis and purified sufficiently to allow identification of MSMEG_0887, a member the DUF664 family of the DinB superfamily, as the MST. The identity of the M. smegmatis and homologous Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Rv0443) enzymes was confirmed by cloning, and the expressed proteins were found to be active with MSH but not bacillithiol (BSH) or glutathione (GSH). Bacillus subtilis YfiT is another member of the DinB superfamily, but this bacterium produces BSH. The YfiT protein was shown to have S-transferase activity with monochlorobimane when assayed with BSH but not with MSH or GSH. Enterococcus faecalis EF_3021 shares some homology with MSMEG_0887, but En. faecalis produces GSH but not MSH or BSH. Cloned and expressed EF_0321 was active with monochlorobimane and GSH but not with MSH or BSH. MDMPI_2 is another member of the DinB superfamily and has been previously shown to have mycothiol-dependent maleylpyruvate isomerase activity. Three of the eight families of the DinB superfamily include proteins shown to catalyze thiol-dependent metabolic or detoxification activities. Because more than two-thirds of the sequences assigned to the DinB superfamily are members of these families, it seems likely that such activity is dominant in the DinB superfamily. Topics: Amidohydrolases; Bacterial Proteins; Cloning, Molecular; Cysteine; Enterococcus faecalis; Glucosamine; Glutathione Transferase; Glycopeptides; Inositol; Multigene Family; Mycobacterium smegmatis; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Phylogeny; Pyrazoles; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid | 2011 |
Characterization of the N-acetyl-α-D-glucosaminyl l-malate synthase and deacetylase functions for bacillithiol biosynthesis in Bacillus anthracis .
Bacillithiol (Cys-GlcN-malate, BSH) has recently been identified as a novel low-molecular weight thiol in Bacillus anthracis, Staphylococcus aureus, and several other Gram-positive bacteria lacking glutathione and mycothiol. We have now characterized the first two enzymes for the BSH biosynthetic pathway in B. anthracis, which combine to produce α-d-glucosaminyl l-malate (GlcN-malate) from UDP-GlcNAc and l-malate. The structure of the GlcNAc-malate intermediate has been determined, as have the kinetic parameters for the BaBshA glycosyltransferase (→GlcNAc-malate) and the BaBshB deacetylase (→GlcN-malate). BSH is one of only two natural products reported to contain a malyl glycoside, and the crystal structure of the BaBshA-UDP-malate ternary complex, determined in this work at 3.3 Å resolution, identifies several active-site interactions important for the specific recognition of l-malate, but not other α-hydroxy acids, as the acceptor substrate. In sharp contrast to the structures reported for the GlcNAc-1-d-myo-inositol-3-phosphate synthase (MshA) apo and ternary complex forms, there is no major conformational change observed in the structures of the corresponding BaBshA forms. A mutant strain of B. anthracis deficient in the BshA glycosyltransferase fails to produce BSH, as predicted. This B. anthracis bshA locus (BA1558) has been identified in a transposon-site hybridization study as required for growth, sporulation, or germination [Day, W. A., Jr., Rasmussen, S. L., Carpenter, B. M., Peterson, S. N., and Friedlander, A. M. (2007) J. Bacteriol. 189, 3296-3301], suggesting that the biosynthesis of BSH could represent a target for the development of novel antimicrobials with broad-spectrum activity against Gram-positive pathogens like B. anthracis. The metabolites that function in thiol redox buffering and homeostasis in Bacillus are not well understood, and we present a composite picture based on this and other recent work. Topics: Bacillus anthracis; Binding Sites; Borohydrides; Cysteine; Glucosamine; Glycopeptides; Glycosyltransferases; Inositol; Intramolecular Lyases; Molecular Weight; Oxidation-Reduction; Sulfhydryl Compounds; Uridine Diphosphate | 2010 |