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Dive into the research topics where Adrian J. Jervis is active.

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Featured researches published by Adrian J. Jervis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

The O2 sensitivity of the transcription factor FNR is controlled by Ser24 modulating the kinetics of [4Fe-4S] to [2Fe-2S] conversion

Adrian J. Jervis; Jason C. Crack; Gaye F. White; Peter J. Artymiuk; Myles R. Cheesman; Andrew J. Thomson; Nick E. Le Brun; Jeffrey Green

Fumarate and nitrate reduction regulatory (FNR) proteins are bacterial transcription factors that coordinate the switch between aerobic and anaerobic metabolism. In the absence of O2, FNR binds a [4Fe-4S]2+ cluster (ligated by Cys-20, 23, 29, 122) promoting the formation of a transcriptionally active dimer. In the presence of O2, FNR is converted into a monomeric, non-DNA-binding form containing a [2Fe-2S]2+ cluster. The reaction of the [4Fe-4S]2+ cluster with O2 has been shown to proceed via a 2-step process, an O2-dependent 1-electron oxidation to yield a [3Fe-4S]+ intermediate with release of 1 Fe2+ ion, followed by spontaneous rearrangement to the [2Fe-2S]2+ form with release of 1 Fe3+ and 2 S2− ions. Here, we show that replacement of Ser-24 by Arg, His, Phe, Trp, or Tyr enhances aerobic activity of FNR in vivo. The FNR-S24F protein incorporates a [4Fe-4S]2+ cluster with spectroscopic properties similar to those of FNR. However, the substitution enhances the stability of the [4Fe-4S]2+ cluster in the presence of O2. Kinetic analysis shows that both steps 1 and 2 are slower for FNR-S24F than for FNR. A molecular model suggests that step 1 of the FNR-S24F iron–sulfur cluster reaction with O2 is inhibited by shielding of the iron ligand Cys-23, suggesting that Cys-23 or the cluster iron bound to it is a primary site of O2 interaction. These data lead to a simple model of the FNR switch with physiological implications for the ability of FNR proteins to operate over different ranges of in vivo O2 concentrations.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2010

Characterization of N-Linked Protein Glycosylation in Helicobacter pullorum

Adrian J. Jervis; Rebecca Langdon; Paul G. Hitchen; Andrew J. Lawson; Alison Wood; Joanne L. Fothergill; Howard R. Morris; Anne Dell; Brendan W. Wren; Dennis Linton

The first bacterial N-linked glycosylation system was discovered in Campylobacter jejuni, and the key enzyme involved in the coupling of glycan to asparagine residues within the acceptor sequon of the glycoprotein is the oligosaccharyltransferase PglB. Emerging genome sequence data have revealed that pglB orthologues are present in a subset of species from the Deltaproteobacteria and Epsilonproteobacteria, including three Helicobacter species: H. pullorum, H. canadensis, and H. winghamensis. In contrast to C. jejuni, in which a single pglB gene is located within a larger gene cluster encoding the enzymes required for the biosynthesis of the N-linked glycan, these Helicobacter species contain two unrelated pglB genes (pglB1 and pglB2), neither of which is located within a larger locus involved in protein glycosylation. In complementation experiments, the H. pullorum PglB1 protein, but not PglB2, was able to transfer C. jejuni N-linked glycan onto an acceptor protein in Escherichia coli. Analysis of the characterized C. jejuni N-glycosylation system with an in vitro oligosaccharyltransferase assay followed by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry demonstrated the utility of this approach, and when applied to H. pullorum, PglB1-dependent N glycosylation with a linear pentasaccharide was observed. This reaction required an acidic residue at the -2 position of the N-glycosylation sequon, as for C. jejuni. Attempted insertional knockout mutagenesis of the H. pullorum pglB2 gene was unsuccessful, suggesting that it is essential. These first data on N-linked glycosylation in a second bacterial species demonstrate the similarities to, and fundamental differences from, the well-studied C. jejuni system.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2007

SigM-Responsive Genes of Bacillus subtilis and Their Promoters

Adrian J. Jervis; Penny D. Thackray; Christopher W. Houston; Malcolm J. Horsburgh; Anne Moir

Promoters of nine Bacillus subtilis genes (bcrC, yacK, ydaH, yfnI, yjbD, ypbG, ypuA, yraA, and ysxA), all responsive to artificially induced increases in the stress-responsive extracytoplasmic function sigma factor, SigM, were mapped by rapid amplification of cDNA ends-PCR. The resulting promoter consensus suggests that overlapping control by SigX or SigW is common.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2012

Characterization of the Structurally Diverse N-Linked Glycans of Campylobacter Species

Adrian J. Jervis; Jonathan A. Butler; Andrew J. Lawson; Rebecca Langdon; Brendan W. Wren; Dennis Linton

The Gram-negative bacterium Campylobacter jejuni encodes an extensively characterized N-linked protein glycosylation system that modifies many surface proteins with a heptasaccharide glycan. In C. jejuni, the genes that encode the enzymes required for glycan biosynthesis and transfer to protein are located at a single pgl gene locus. Similar loci are also present in the genome sequences of all other Campylobacter species, although variations in gene content and organization are evident. In this study, we have demonstrated that only Campylobacter species closely related to C. jejuni produce glycoproteins that interact with both a C. jejuni N-linked-glycan-specific antiserum and a lectin known to bind to the C. jejuni N-linked glycan. In order to further investigate the structure of Campylobacter N-linked glycans, we employed an in vitro peptide glycosylation assay combined with mass spectrometry to demonstrate that Campylobacter species produce a range of structurally distinct N-linked glycans with variations in the number of sugar residues (penta-, hexa-, and heptasaccharides), the presence of branching sugars, and monosaccharide content. These data considerably expand our knowledge of bacterial N-linked glycan structure and provide a framework for investigating the role of glycosyltransferases and sugar biosynthesis enzymes in glycoprotein biosynthesis with practical implications for synthetic biology and glycoengineering.


Methods in Enzymology | 2008

Reactions of nitric oxide and oxygen with the regulator of fumarate and nitrate reduction, a global transcriptional regulator, during anaerobic growth of Escherichia coli.

Jason C. Crack; Nick E. Le Brun; Andrew J. Thomson; Jeffrey Green; Adrian J. Jervis

The Escherichia coli fumarate and nitrate reductase (FNR) regulator protein is an important transcriptional regulator that controls the expression of a large regulon of more than 100 genes in response to changes in oxygen availability. FNR is active when it acquires a [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster under anaerobic conditions. The presence of the [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster promotes protein dimerization and site-specific DNA binding, facilitating activation or repression of target promoters. Oxygen is sensed by the controlled disassembly of the [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster, ultimately resulting in inactive, monomeric, apo-FNR. The FNR [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster is also sensitive to nitric oxide, such that under anaerobic conditions the protein is inactivated by nitrosylation of the iron-sulfur cluster, yielding a mixture of monomeric and dimeric dinitrosyl-iron cysteine species. This chapter describes some of the methods used to produce active [4Fe-4S] FNR protein and investigates the reaction of the [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster with nitric oxide and oxygen in vitro.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2008

Signal perception by FNR: the role of the iron-sulfur cluster.

Jason C. Crack; Adrian J. Jervis; Alisa A. Gaskell; Gaye F. White; Jeffrey Green; Andrew J. Thomson; Nick E. Le Brun

The metabolic flexibility of bacteria is key to their ability to survive and thrive in a wide range of environments. Optimal switching from one metabolic pathway to another is a key requirement for this flexibility. Respiration is a good example: many bacteria utilize O(2) as the terminal electron acceptor, but can switch to a range of other acceptors, such as nitrate, when O(2) becomes limiting. Sensing environmental levels of O(2) is the key step in switching from aerobic to anaerobic respiration. In Escherichia coli, the fumarate and nitrate reduction transcriptional regulator (FNR) controls this switch. Under O(2)-limiting conditions, FNR binds a [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster, generating a transcriptionally active dimeric form. Exposure to O(2) results in conversion of the cluster into a [2Fe-2S](2+) form, leading to dissociation of the protein into inactive monomers. The mechanism of cluster conversion, together with the nature of the reaction products, is of considerable current interest, and a near-complete description of the process has now emerged. The [4Fe-4S](2+) into [2Fe-2S](2+) cluster conversion proceeds via a two-step mechanism. In step 1, a one-electron oxidation of the cluster takes place, resulting in the release of a Fe(2+) ion, the formation of an intermediate [3Fe-4S](1+) cluster, together with the generation of a superoxide anion. In step 2, the intermediate [3Fe-4S](1+) cluster rearranges spontaneously to form the [2Fe-2S](2+) cluster, releasing two sulfide ions and an Fe(3+) ion in the process. The one-electron activation of the cluster, coupled to catalytic recycling of the superoxide anion back to oxygen via superoxide dismutase and catalase, provides a novel means of amplifying the sensitivity of [4Fe-4S](2+) FNR to its signal molecule.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2007

In vivo demonstration of FNR dimers in response to lower O(2) availability.

Adrian J. Jervis; Jeffrey Green

Escherichia coli FNR is an O(2)-sensing transcription factor. In vitro studies indicate that anaerobic iron-sulfur cluster acquisition promotes FNR dimerization. Here, two-hybrid assays show that iron-sulfur cluster-dependent FNR dimers are formed in vivo in response to lower O(2) availability, consistent with the current model of FNR activation.


Current Opinion in Chemical Biology | 2016

Towards synthesis of monoterpenes and derivatives using synthetic biology

Ziga Zebec; Jonathan Wilkes; Adrian J. Jervis; Nigel S. Scrutton; Eriko Takano; Rainer Breitling

Synthetic biology is opening up new opportunities for the sustainable and efficient production of valuable chemicals in engineered microbial factories. Here we review the application of synthetic biology approaches to the engineering of monoterpene/monoterpenoid production, highlighting the discovery of novel catalytic building blocks, their accelerated assembly into functional pathways, general strategies for product diversification, and new methods for the optimization of productivity to economically viable levels. Together, these emerging tools allow the rapid creation of microbial production systems for a wide range of monoterpenes and their derivatives for a diversity of industrial applications.


Glycobiology | 2016

Functional analysis of N-linking oligosaccharyl transferase enzymes encoded by deep-sea vent proteobacteria

Dominic C. Mills; Adrian J. Jervis; Sherif Abouelhadid; Laura E. Yates; Jon Cuccui; Dennis Linton; Brendan W. Wren

Bacterial N-linking oligosaccharyl transferases (OTase enzymes) transfer lipid-linked glycans to selected proteins in the periplasm and were first described in the intestinal pathogen Campylobacter jejuni, a member of the ε-proteobacteria-subdivision of bacteria. More recently, orthologues from other ε-proteobacterial Campylobacter and Helicobacter species and a δ-proteobacterium, Desulfovibrio desulfuricans, have been described, suggesting that these two subdivisions of bacteria may be a source of further N-linked protein glycosylation systems. Whole-genome sequencing of both ε- and δ-proteobacteria from deep-sea vent habitats, a rich source of species from these subdivisions, revealed putative ORFs encoding OTase enzymes and associated adjacent glycosyltransferases similar to the C. jejuni N-linked glycosylation locus. We expressed putative OTase ORFs from the deep-sea vent species Nitratiruptor tergarcus, Sulfurovum lithotrophicum and Deferribacter desulfuricans in Escherichia coli and showed that they were able to functionally complement the C. jejuni OTase, CjPglB. The enzymes were shown to possess relaxed glycan specificity, transferring diverse glycan structures and demonstrated different glycosylation sequon specificities. Additionally, a permissive D. desulfuricans acceptor protein was identified, and we provide evidence that the N-linked glycan synthesized by N. tergarcus and S. lithotrophicum contains an acetylated sugar at the reducing end. This work demonstrates that deep-sea vent bacteria encode functional N-glycosylation machineries and are a potential source of biotechnologically important OTase enzymes.


PLOS ONE | 2017

biochem4j: integrated and extensible biochemical knowledge through graph databases

Neil Swainston; Riza Theresa Batista-Navarro; Pablo Carbonell; Paul D. Dobson; Mark S. Dunstan; Adrian J. Jervis; Maria Vinaixa; Alan R. Williams; Sophia Ananiadou; Jean-Loup Faulon; Pedro Mendes; Douglas B. Kell; Nigel S. Scrutton; Rainer Breitling

Biologists and biochemists have at their disposal a number of excellent, publicly available data resources such as UniProt, KEGG, and NCBI Taxonomy, which catalogue biological entities. Despite the usefulness of these resources, they remain fundamentally unconnected. While links may appear between entries across these databases, users are typically only able to follow such links by manual browsing or through specialised workflows. Although many of the resources provide web-service interfaces for computational access, performing federated queries across databases remains a non-trivial but essential activity in interdisciplinary systems and synthetic biology programmes. What is needed are integrated repositories to catalogue both biological entities and–crucially–the relationships between them. Such a resource should be extensible, such that newly discovered relationships–for example, those between novel, synthetic enzymes and non-natural products–can be added over time. With the introduction of graph databases, the barrier to the rapid generation, extension and querying of such a resource has been lowered considerably. With a particular focus on metabolic engineering as an illustrative application domain, biochem4j, freely available at http://biochem4j.org, is introduced to provide an integrated, queryable database that warehouses chemical, reaction, enzyme and taxonomic data from a range of reliable resources. The biochem4j framework establishes a starting point for the flexible integration and exploitation of an ever-wider range of biological data sources, from public databases to laboratory-specific experimental datasets, for the benefit of systems biologists, biosystems engineers and the wider community of molecular biologists and biological chemists.

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Eriko Takano

University of Manchester

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Neil Swainston

University of Manchester

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Andrew Currin

University of Manchester

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