schizokinen has been researched along with aerobactin* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for schizokinen and aerobactin
Article | Year |
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Identification and characterization of an iron-regulated gene, chtA, required for the utilization of the xenosiderophores aerobactin, rhizobactin 1021 and schizokinen by Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa utilizes several xenosiderophores under conditions of iron limitation, including the citrate hydroxamate siderophore aerobactin. Analysis of the P. aeruginosa genome sequence revealed the presence of two genes, chtA (PA4675) and PA1365, encoding proteins displaying significant similarity to the aerobactin outer-membrane receptor, IutA, of Escherichia coli. The chtA and PA1365 genes were mutated by insertional inactivation and it was demonstrated that ChtA is the outer-membrane receptor for aerobactin. ChtA also mediated the utilization of rhizobactin 1021 and schizokinen, which are structurally similar to aerobactin. In contrast to the utilization of other xenosiderophores by P. aeruginosa, there was no apparent redundancy in the utilization of aerobactin, rhizobactin 1021 and schizokinen. The utilization of citrate hydroxamate siderophores by P. aeruginosa was demonstrated to be TonB1 dependent. A Fur box was identified in the region directly upstream of chtA and it was demonstrated by the in vivo Fur titration assay that this region is capable of binding Fur and accordingly that expression of chtA is iron regulated. The PA1365 mutant was unaffected in the utilization of citrate hydroxamate siderophores. Topics: Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins; Bacterial Proteins; DNA, Bacterial; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Proteins; Gene Deletion; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial; Genes, Bacterial; Hydroxamic Acids; Iron; Molecular Structure; Mutagenesis, Insertional; Promoter Regions, Genetic; Protein Binding; Pseudomonas aeruginosa; Receptors, Cell Surface; Repressor Proteins; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; Siderophores | 2006 |
Siderophore-mediated iron uptake in different strains of Anabaena sp.
Anabaena sp. strain 6411, which produces the dihydroxamate siderophore schizokinen to facilitate iron uptake, is also capable of using the related siderophore aerobactin. The two siderophores compete for the same iron transport system, but there is a markedly higher affinity for ferric schizokinen than for ferric aerobactin. The trihydroxamate siderophore ferrioxamine B is far less effective as an iron donor in this organism. Anabaena sp. strain 7120 appears to be closely related to strain 6411. It synthesizes schizokinen as its major siderophore and shows rates of iron uptake from ferric schizokinen, ferric aerobactin, and ferrioxamine B which are similar to those observed with strain 6411. Anabaena cylindrica Lemm. 7122 and 1611, on the other hand, differ from strain 6411. In contrast to schizokinen, the hydroxamate which they produce in response to iron starvation cannot be extracted with water from the organic layer and does not support the growth of the siderophore auxotroph Arthrobacter flavescens JG-9. Strain 7122 can use its endogenous siderophore or schizokinen to promote iron uptake, but at 50-fold-lower rates than are observed with Anabaena sp. strain 6411 or 7120. Topics: Biological Transport; Cyanobacteria; Deferoxamine; Ferric Compounds; Hydroxamic Acids; Iron; Iron Chelating Agents; Kinetics; Siderophores; Species Specificity | 1983 |