raffinose and maltotetraose

raffinose has been researched along with maltotetraose* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for raffinose and maltotetraose

ArticleYear
Identification of an ATPase, MsmK, which energizes multiple carbohydrate ABC transporters in Streptococcus pneumoniae.
    Infection and immunity, 2011, Volume: 79, Issue:10

    Streptococcus pneumoniae is the leading cause of community-acquired pneumonia and results in over 1 million deaths each year worldwide. Asymptomatic colonization of the airway precedes disease, and acquisition of carbohydrates from the host environment is necessary for bacterial survival. We previously demonstrated that S. pneumoniae cleaves sialic acid from human glycoconjugates to be used as a carbohydrate source. The satABC genes are required for growth and import of sialic acid. The satABC genes are predicted to encode components of an ABC transporter but not the ATPases essential to energize transport. As this subunit is essential, an ATPase must be encoded elsewhere in the genome. We identified msmK as a candidate based on similarity to other known carbohydrate ATPases. Recombinant MsmK hydrolyzed ATP, revealing that MsmK is an ATPase. An msmK mutant was reduced in growth on and transport of sialic acid, demonstrating that MsmK is the ATPase energizing the sialic acid transporter. In addition to satABC, S. pneumoniae contains five other loci that are predicted to encode CUT1 family carbohydrate ABC transporter components; each of these lacks a predicted ATPase. Data indicate that msmK is also required for growth on raffinose and maltotetraose, which are the substrates of two other characterized carbohydrate ABC transporters. Furthermore, an msmK mutant was reduced in airway colonization. Together, these data imply that in vivo, MsmK energizes multiple carbohydrate transporters in S. pneumoniae. This is the first demonstration of a shared ATPase in a pathogenic bacterium.

    Topics: Adenosine Triphosphatases; ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters; Bacterial Proteins; Biological Transport; Carbohydrate Metabolism; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial; Humans; Maltose; N-Acetylneuraminic Acid; Organic Anion Transporters; Raffinose; Streptococcus pneumoniae; Symporters

2011
Identification of a new porin, RafY, encoded by raffinose plasmid pRSD2 of Escherichia coli.
    Journal of bacteriology, 1997, Volume: 179, Issue:18

    The conjugative plasmid pRSD2 carries a raf operon that encodes a peripheral raffinose metabolic pathway in enterobacteria. In addition to the previously known raf genes, we identified another gene, rafY, which in Escherichia coli codes for an outer membrane protein (molecular mass, 53 kDa) similar in function to the known glycoporins LamB (maltoporin) and ScrY (sucrose porin). Sequence comparisons with LamB and ScrY revealed no significant similarities; however, both lamB and scrY mutants are functionally complemented by RafY. Expressed from the tac promoter, RafY significantly increases the uptake rates for maltose, sucrose, and raffinose at low substrate concentrations; in particular it shifts the apparent K(m) for raffinose transport from 2 mM to 130 microM. Moreover, RafY permits diffusion of the tetrasaccharide stachyose and of maltodextrins up to maltoheptaose through the outer membrane of E. coli. A comparison of all three glycoporins in regard to their substrate selectivity revealed that both ScrY and RafY have a broad substrate range which includes alpha-galactosides while LamB seems to be restricted to malto-oligosaccharides. It supports growth only on maltodextrins but not, like the others, on raffinose and stachyose.

    Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins; Base Sequence; Biological Transport; Cloning, Molecular; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Proteins; Genes, Bacterial; Maltose; Membrane Transport Proteins; Molecular Sequence Data; Monosaccharide Transport Proteins; Oligosaccharides; Plasmids; Porins; Raffinose; Receptors, Virus; Symporters

1997