Andrzej Piekarowicz
University of Warsaw
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BMC Microbiology | 2007
Andrzej Piekarowicz; Aneta Kłyż; Michał Majchrzak; Monika Adamczyk-Popławska; Timothy K. Maugel; Daniel C. Stein
BackgroundBioinformatic analysis of the genome sequence of Neisseria gonorrhoeae revealed the presence of nine probable prophage islands. The distribution, conservation and function of many of these sequences, and their ability to produce bacteriophage particles are unknown.ResultsOur analysis of the genomic sequence of FA1090 identified five genomic regions (NgoΦ1 – 5) that are related to dsDNA lysogenic phage. The genetic content of the dsDNA prophage sequences were examined in detail and found to contain blocks of genes encoding for proteins homologous to proteins responsible for phage DNA replication, structural proteins and proteins responsible for phage assembly. The DNA sequences from NgoΦ1, NgoΦ2 and NgoΦ3 contain some significant regions of identity. A unique region of NgoΦ2 showed very high similarity with the Pseudomonas aeruginosa generalized transducing phage F116. Comparative analysis at the nucleotide and protein levels suggests that the sequences of NgoΦ1 and NgoΦ2 encode functionally active phages, while NgoΦ3, NgoΦ4 and NgoΦ5 encode incomplete genomes. Expression of the NgoΦ1 and NgoΦ2 repressors in Escherichia coli inhibit the growth of E. coli and the propagation of phage λ. The NgoΦ2 repressor was able to inhibit transcription of N. gonorrhoeae genes and Haemophilus influenzae HP1 phage promoters. The holin gene of NgoΦ1 (identical to that encoded by NgoΦ2), when expressed in E. coli, could serve as substitute for the phage λ s gene. We were able to detect the presence of the DNA derived from NgoΦ1 in the cultures of N. gonorrhoeae. Electron microscopy analysis of culture supernatants revealed the presence of multiple forms of bacteriophage particles.ConclusionThese data suggest that the genes similar to dsDNA lysogenic phage present in the gonococcus are generally conserved in this pathogen and that they are able to regulate the expression of other neisserial genes. Since phage particles were only present in culture supernatants after induction with mitomycin C, it indicates that the gonococcus also regulates the expression of bacteriophage genes.Bioinformatic analysis of the genome sequence of Neisseria gonorrhoeae revealed the presence of nine probable prophage islands. The distribution, conservation and function of many of these sequences, and their ability to produce bacteriophage particles are unknown. Our analysis of the genomic sequence of FA1090 identified five genomic regions (NgoΦ1 – 5) that are related to dsDNA lysogenic phage. The genetic content of the dsDNA prophage sequences were examined in detail and found to contain blocks of genes encoding for proteins homologous to proteins responsible for phage DNA replication, structural proteins and proteins responsible for phage assembly. The DNA sequences from NgoΦ1, NgoΦ2 and NgoΦ3 contain some significant regions of identity. A unique region of NgoΦ2 showed very high similarity with the Pseudomonas aeruginosa generalized transducing phage F116. Comparative analysis at the nucleotide and protein levels suggests that the sequences of NgoΦ1 and NgoΦ2 encode functionally active phages, while NgoΦ3, NgoΦ4 and NgoΦ5 encode incomplete genomes. Expression of the NgoΦ1 and NgoΦ2 repressors in Escherichia coli inhibit the growth of E. coli and the propagation of phage λ. The NgoΦ2 repressor was able to inhibit transcription of N. gonorrhoeae genes and Haemophilus influenzae HP1 phage promoters. The holin gene of NgoΦ1 (identical to that encoded by NgoΦ2), when expressed in E. coli, could serve as substitute for the phage λ s gene. We were able to detect the presence of the DNA derived from NgoΦ1 in the cultures of N. gonorrhoeae. Electron microscopy analysis of culture supernatants revealed the presence of multiple forms of bacteriophage particles. These data suggest that the genes similar to dsDNA lysogenic phage present in the gonococcus are generally conserved in this pathogen and that they are able to regulate the expression of other neisserial genes. Since phage particles were only present in culture supernatants after induction with mitomycin C, it indicates that the gonococcus also regulates the expression of bacteriophage genes.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1980
Andrzej Piekarowicz; Ryszard Brzeziński
Abstract Hin fIII is a restriction enzyme isolated from Haemophilus influenzae strain Rf. It requires ATP for cleavage and S -adenosyl-methionine for methylation of DNA. This enzyme can be present in two forms: one with AdoMet † bound to it, and a second form free of this cofactor. In the presence of AdoMet and ATP the enzyme cleaves ColE1 DNA molecules once, to produce unit-length linear molecules. The Hin fIII endonuclease cleaves at unique sites, though not every site on every molecule is cut. The five Hin fIII cleavage sites were mapped relative to the Eco RI restriction endonuclease cleavage site. If AdoMet is omitted from the enzyme reaction mixture, the second form of Hin fIII enzyme cleaves ColE1 DNA into several fragments. An average of 6.2 ± 1 methyl groups are transferred to ColE1 DNA from AdoMet. The methyl groups were mapped relative to the Hae III restriction endonuclease fragments. The position of methylation sites correlates well with the cleavage sites. The restriction activity of the Hin fIII enzyme shows some dependence upon the structure of the substrate DNA. The linear molecule of ColE1 DNA is a poorer substrate than the supercoiled molecules. Lambda DNA fragments with molecular weights smaller than approximately 2 × 10 6 are not cleaved by Hin fIII enzyme, but since they can be methylated the enzyme is able to recognize the specific sequences on these fragments.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2012
Marek Drozdz; Andrzej Piekarowicz; Janusz M. Bujnicki; Monika Radlinska
The mom gene of bacteriophage Mu encodes an enzyme that converts adenine to N6-(1-acetamido)-adenine in the phage DNA and thereby protects the viral genome from cleavage by a wide variety of restriction endonucleases. Mu-like prophage sequences present in Haemophilus influenzae Rd (FluMu), Neisseria meningitidis type A strain Z2491 (Pnme1) and H. influenzae biotype aegyptius ATCC 11116 do not possess a Mom-encoding gene. Instead, at the position occupied by mom in Mu they carry an unrelated gene that encodes a protein with homology to DNA adenine N6-methyltransferases (hin1523, nma1821, hia5, respectively). Products of the hin1523, hia5 and nma1821 genes modify adenine residues to N6-methyladenine, both in vitro and in vivo. All of these enzymes catalyzed extensive DNA methylation; most notably the Hia5 protein caused the methylation of 61% of the adenines in λ DNA. Kinetic analysis of oligonucleotide methylation suggests that all adenine residues in DNA, with the possible exception of poly(A)-tracts, constitute substrates for the Hia5 and Hin1523 enzymes. Their potential ‘sequence specificity’ could be summarized as AB or BA (where B = C, G or T). Plasmid DNA isolated from Escherichia coli cells overexpressing these novel DNA methyltransferases was resistant to cleavage by many restriction enzymes sensitive to adenine methylation.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1981
Andrzej Piekarowicz; Thomas A. Bickle; John C.W. Shepherd; Kurt Ineichen
HinfIII is a type III restriction enzyme (Kauc & Piekarowicz, 1978) isolated from Haemophilus influenzae Rf. Like other type III restriction endonucleases, the enzyme also catalyses the modification of susceptible DNA. It requires ATP for DNA cleavage and S-adenosyl methionine for DNA methylation. We have determined the DNA sequence recognised by HinfIII to be: 5′-C-G-A-A-T-3′·····3′-G-C-T-T-A-5′ In restriction, the enzyme cleaves the DNA about 25 base-pairs to the right of this sequence. In the modification reaction only one of the strands is methylated, that containing the 5′-C-G-A-A-T-3′ sequence.
Molecular Microbiology | 2008
Andrzej Piekarowicz; Aneta Kłyż; Agnieszka Kwiatek; Daniel C. Stein
The hsd locus (host specificity of DNA) was identified in the Neisseria gonorrhoeae genome. The DNA fragment encoding this locus produced an active restriction and modification (R/M) system when cloned into Escherichia coli. This R/M system was designated NgoAV. The cloned genomic fragment (7800 bp) has the potential to encode seven open reading frames (ORFs). Several of these ORFs had significant homology with other proteins found in the databases: ORF1, the hsdM, a methylase subunit (HsdM); ORF2, a homologue of dinD; ORF3, a homologue of hsdS; ORF4, a homologue of hsdS; and ORF5, an endonuclease subunit hsdR. The endonuclease and methylase subunits possessed strongest protein sequence homology to the EcoR124II R/M system, indicating that NgoAV belongs to the type IC R/M family. Deletion analysis showed that only ORF3 imparted the sequence specificity of the RM.NgoAV system, which recognizes an interrupted palindrome sequence (GCAN8TGC). The genetic structure of ORF3 (208 amino acids) is almost identical to the structure of the 5′ truncated hsdS genes of EcoDXXI or EcoR124II R/M systems obtained by in vitro manipulation. Genomic sequence analysis allowed us to identify hsd loci with a very high homology to RM.NgoAV in two strains of Neisseria meningitidis. However, significant differences in the organization and structure of the hsdS genes in both these systems suggests that, if functional, they would possess recognition sites that differ from the gonococcus and from themselves.
Microbiology | 1974
Andrzej Piekarowicz; L. Kauc; S. W. Glover
Summary: Haemophilus influenzae Rf possesses two distinct host specificity systems F1 and F2 each of which is able to restrict and modify Haemophilus phage HP1c1, while strain Rb possesses only one system, B. Among restriction-deficient mutants isolated from strain Rf, the r-m+ as well as r-m- phenotypes for these two systems were obtained after either one or two mutational steps. The F1 system was introduced into H. influenzae Rd by genetic transformation to show that the D1 and F1 systems are not allelic.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2002
Andrzej Piekarowicz; Daniel C. Stein
A fragment of chromosomal DNA encoding the lgtE gene of Neisseria gonorrhoeae strain F62 was amplified by PCR and cloned into the expression vector pET15b. Functional LgtE was purified and its biochemical properties were determined. The purified enzyme was maximally active in buffer containing manganese; minimal activity was obtained in buffer containing other divalent cations. LgtE was only able to mediate the addition of UDP-galactose into neisserial lipooligosaccharides (LOSs). We used a variety of genetically defined and chemically verified LOS structures to determine acceptor specificity. LgtE was able to mediate the addition of galactose into a variety of LOS structures, indicating the this enzyme possesses broad acceptor specificity. Furthermore, it was able to add multiple galactose residues onto LOS. We also determined that this enzyme was capable of adding galactose onto both the alpha and beta chains of neisserial LOS.
Plasmid | 1989
Elżbieta Skrzypek; Andrzej Piekarowicz
The Escherichia coli plasmid pDXX1 codes for a type I restriction and modification system, EcoDXX1. A 15.5-kb BamHI fragment from pDXX1 has been cloned and contains the hsdR, hsdM, and hsdS genes that encode the EcoDXX1 system. The EcoDXX1 hsd genes can complement the gene products of the EcoR124 and EcoR124/3 hsd systems, but not those of EcoK and EcoB. Hybridization experiments using EcoDXX1 hsd genes as a probe demonstrate homology between EcoDXX1 and EcoR124 and EcoR124/3 restriction-modification systems, but weak or no homology between EcoDXX1 and EcoK or EcoB systems.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2015
Agnieszka Kwiatek; Agnieszka Mrozek; Pawel Bacal; Andrzej Piekarowicz; Monika Adamczyk-Popławska
Neisseria gonorrhoeae is the etiological factor of the sexually transmitted gonorrhea disease that may lead, under specific conditions, to systemic infections. The gonococcal genome encodes many restriction modification (RM) systems, which main biological role is to defend the pathogen from potentially harmful foreign DNA. However, RM systems seem also to be involved in several other functions. In this study, we examined the effect of inactivation the N. gonorrhoeae FA1090 ngoAXmod gene encoding M.NgoAX methyltransferase on the global gene expression, biofilm formation, interactions with human epithelial host cells and overall bacterial growth. Expression microarrays showed at least a twofold deregulation of a total of 121 genes in the NgoAX knock-out mutant compared to the wild-type (wt) strain under standard grow conditions. Genes with changed expression levels encoded mostly proteins involved in cell metabolism, DNA replication and repair or regulating cellular processes and signaling (such as cell wall/envelop biogenesis). As determined by the assay with crystal violet, the NgoAX knock-out strain formed a slightly larger biofilm biomass per cell than the wt strain. Live biofilm observations showed that the biofilm formed by the gonococcal ngoAXmod gene mutant is more relaxed, dispersed and thicker than the one formed by the wt strain. This more relaxed feature of the biofilm, in respect to adhesion and bacterial interactions, can be involved in pathogenesis. Moreover, the overall adhesion of mutant bacterial cells to human cells was lower than adhesion of the wt gonococci [adhesion index = 0.672 (±0.2) and 2.15 (±1.53), respectively]; yet, a higher number of mutant than wt bacteria were found inside the Hec-1-B epithelial cells [invasion index = 3.38 (±0.93) × 105 for mutant and 4.67 (±3.09) × 104 for the wt strain]. These results indicate that NgoAX knock-out cells have lower ability to attach to human cells, but more easily penetrate inside the host cells. All these data suggest that the NgoAX methyltransferase, may be implicated in N. gonorrhoeae pathogenicity, involving regulation of biofilm formation, adhesion to host cells and epithelial cell invasion.
Proteins | 1999
Monika Radlinska; Janusz M. Bujnicki; Andrzej Piekarowicz
Two adjacent genes encoding DNA methyltransferases (MTases) of Neisseria gonorrhoeae MS11, an active N4‐cytosine specific M.NgoMXV and an inactive 5‐cytosine type M.NgoMorf2P, were cloned into Escherichia coli and sequenced. We analyzed the deduced amino acid sequence of both gene products and localized conserved regions characteristic for DNA MTases. Structure prediction, threading‐derived alignments, and comparison with the common fold for DNA MTases allowed for construction of super‐secondary and tertiary models for M.NgoMorf2P and M.NgoMXV, respectively. These models helped in identification of amino acids and structural elements essential for function of both enzymes. The implications of this putative structural model on the catalytic mechanism of M.NgoMXV and its possible relation to the common ancestor of modern DNA amino‐MTases are also discussed. Proteins 1999;37:717–728. ©1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.