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Featured researches published by John Munnoch.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

NsrR from Streptomyces coelicolor is a nitric oxide-sensing [4Fe-4S] cluster protein with a specialized regulatory function.

Jason C. Crack; John Munnoch; Erin L. Dodd; Felicity Knowles; Mahmoud Al Bassam; Saeed Kamali; Ashley A. Holland; Stephen P. Cramer; Chris J. Hamilton; Michael K. Johnson; Andrew J. Thomson; Matthew I. Hutchings; Nick E. Le Brun

Background: NsrR family proteins are [2Fe-2S] or [4Fe-4S] cluster-containing global regulators. Results: Streptomyces coelicolor NsrR regulates only three genes, and it is the [4Fe-4S] form of the protein that binds tightly to NsrR-regulated promoters. Conclusion: [4Fe-4S] NsrR has a specialized function associated only with nitric oxide stress response. Significance: Members of the NsrR family are most likely all [4Fe-4S] proteins. The Rrf2 family transcription factor NsrR controls expression of genes in a wide range of bacteria in response to nitric oxide (NO). The precise form of the NO-sensing module of NsrR is the subject of controversy because NsrR proteins containing either [2Fe-2S] or [4Fe-4S] clusters have been observed previously. Optical, Mössbauer, resonance Raman spectroscopies and native mass spectrometry demonstrate that Streptomyces coelicolor NsrR (ScNsrR), previously reported to contain a [2Fe-2S] cluster, can be isolated containing a [4Fe-4S] cluster. ChIP-seq experiments indicated that the ScNsrR regulon is small, consisting of only hmpA1, hmpA2, and nsrR itself. The hmpA genes encode NO-detoxifying flavohemoglobins, indicating that ScNsrR has a specialized regulatory function focused on NO detoxification and is not a global regulator like some NsrR orthologues. EMSAs and DNase I footprinting showed that the [4Fe-4S] form of ScNsrR binds specifically and tightly to an 11-bp inverted repeat sequence in the promoter regions of the identified target genes and that DNA binding is abolished following reaction with NO. Resonance Raman data were consistent with cluster coordination by three Cys residues and one oxygen-containing residue, and analysis of ScNsrR variants suggested that highly conserved Glu-85 may be the fourth ligand. Finally, we demonstrate that some low molecular weight thiols, but importantly not physiologically relevant thiols, such as cysteine and an analogue of mycothiol, bind weakly to the [4Fe-4S] cluster, and exposure of this bound form to O2 results in cluster conversion to the [2Fe-2S] form, which does not bind to DNA. These data help to account for the observation of [2Fe-2S] forms of NsrR.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2011

Spectroscopic analysis of protein Fe–NO complexes

César Bellota-Antón; John Munnoch; Kirsty Robb; Katrin Adamczyk; Marco Candelaresi; Anthony W. Parker; Ray Dixon; Matthew I. Hutchings; Neil T. Hunt; Nicholas P. Tucker

The toxic free radical NO (nitric oxide) has diverse biological roles in eukaryotes and bacteria, being involved in signalling, vasodilation, blood clotting and immunity, and as an intermediate in microbial denitrification. The predominant biological mechanism of detecting NO is through the formation of iron nitrosyl complexes, although this is a deleterious process for other iron-containing enzymes. We have previously applied techniques such as UV-visible and EPR spectroscopy to the analysis of protein Fe-NO complex formation in order to study how NO controls the activity of the bacterial transcriptional regulators NorR and NsrR. These studies have analysed NO-dependent biological activity both in vitro and in vivo using diverse biochemical, molecular and spectroscopic methods. Recently, we have applied ultrafast 2D-IR (two-dimensional IR) spectroscopy to the analysis of NO-protein interactions using Mb (myoglobin) and Cc (cytochrome c) as model haem proteins. The ultrafast fluctuations of Cc and Mb show marked differences, indicating altered flexibility of the haem pockets. We have extended this analysis to bacterial catalase enzymes that are known to play a role in the nitrosative stress response by detoxifying peroxynitrite. The first 2D-IR analysis of haem nitrosylation and perspectives for the future are discussed.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Characterization of a putative NsrR homologue in Streptomyces venezuelae reveals a new member of the Rrf2 superfamily

John Munnoch; Ma Teresa Pellicer Martinez; Dimitri A. Svistunenko; Jason C. Crack; Nick E. Le Brun; Matthew I. Hutchings

Members of the Rrf2 superfamily of transcription factors are widespread in bacteria but their functions are largely unexplored. The few that have been characterized in detail sense nitric oxide (NsrR), iron limitation (RirA), cysteine availability (CymR) and the iron sulfur (Fe-S) cluster status of the cell (IscR). In this study we combined ChIP- and dRNA-seq with in vitro biochemistry to characterize a putative NsrR homologue in Streptomyces venezuelae. ChIP-seq analysis revealed that rather than regulating the nitrosative stress response like Streptomyces coelicolor NsrR, Sven6563 binds to a conserved motif at a different, much larger set of genes with a diverse range of functions, including a number of regulators, genes required for glutamine synthesis, NADH/NAD(P)H metabolism, as well as general DNA/RNA and amino acid/protein turn over. Our biochemical experiments further show that Sven6563 has a [2Fe-2S] cluster and that the switch between oxidized and reduced cluster controls its DNA binding activity in vitro. To our knowledge, both the sensing domain and the putative target genes are novel for an Rrf2 protein, suggesting Sven6563 represents a new member of the Rrf2 superfamily. Given the redox sensitivity of its Fe-S cluster we have tentatively named the protein RsrR for Redox sensitive response Regulator.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Differentiated, promoter-specific response of [4Fe-4S] NsrR DNA-binding to reaction with nitric oxide

Jason C. Crack; Dimitri A. Svistunenko; John Munnoch; Andrew J. Thomson; Matthew I. Hutchings; Nick E. Le Brun

NsrR is an iron-sulfur cluster protein that regulates the nitric oxide (NO) stress response of many bacteria. NsrR from Streptomyces coelicolor regulates its own expression and that of only two other genes, hmpA1 and hmpA2, which encode HmpA enzymes predicted to detoxify NO. NsrR binds promoter DNA with high affinity only when coordinating a [4Fe-4S] cluster. Here we show that reaction of [4Fe-4S] NsrR with NO affects DNA binding differently depending on the gene promoter. Binding to the hmpA2 promoter was abolished at ∼2 NO per cluster, although for the hmpA1 and nsrR promoters, ∼4 and ∼8 NO molecules, respectively, were required to abolish DNA binding. Spectroscopic and kinetic studies of the NO reaction revealed a rapid, multi-phase, non-concerted process involving up to 8–10 NO molecules per cluster, leading to the formation of several iron-nitrosyl species. A distinct intermediate was observed at ∼2 NO per cluster, along with two further intermediates at ∼4 and ∼6 NO. The NsrR nitrosylation reaction was not significantly affected by DNA binding. These results show that NsrR regulates different promoters in response to different concentrations of NO. Spectroscopic evidence indicates that this is achieved by different NO-FeS complexes.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2017

The Conserved Actinobacterial Two-Component System MtrAB Coordinates Chloramphenicol Production with Sporulation in Streptomyces venezuelae NRRL B-65442

Nicholle F. Som; Daniel Heine; Neil A. Holmes; John Munnoch; Govinda Chandra; Ryan F. Seipke; Paul A. Hoskisson; Barrie Wilkinson; Matthew I. Hutchings

Streptomyces bacteria make numerous secondary metabolites, including half of all known antibiotics. Production of antibiotics is usually coordinated with the onset of sporulation but the cross regulation of these processes is not fully understood. This is important because most Streptomyces antibiotics are produced at low levels or not at all under laboratory conditions and this makes large scale production of these compounds very challenging. Here, we characterize the highly conserved actinobacterial two-component system MtrAB in the model organism Streptomyces venezuelae and provide evidence that it coordinates production of the antibiotic chloramphenicol with sporulation. MtrAB are known to coordinate DNA replication and cell division in Mycobacterium tuberculosis where TB-MtrA is essential for viability but MtrB is dispensable. We deleted mtrB in S. venezuelae and this resulted in a global shift in the metabolome, including constitutive, higher-level production of chloramphenicol. We found that chloramphenicol is detectable in the wild-type strain, but only at very low levels and only after it has sporulated. ChIP-seq showed that MtrA binds upstream of DNA replication and cell division genes and genes required for chloramphenicol production. dnaA, dnaN, oriC, and wblE (whiB1) are DNA binding targets for MtrA in both M. tuberculosis and S. venezuelae. Intriguingly, over-expression of TB-MtrA and gain of function TB- and Sv-MtrA proteins in S. venezuelae also switched on higher-level production of chloramphenicol. Given the conservation of MtrAB, these constructs might be useful tools for manipulating antibiotic production in other filamentous actinomycetes.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Genome-Wide Discovery of Putative sRNAs in Paracoccus denitrificans Expressed under Nitrous Oxide Emitting Conditions

Hannah Gaimster; Lisa Chalklen; Mark Alston; John Munnoch; David J. Richardson; Andrew J. Gates; Gary Rowley

Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a stable, ozone depleting greenhouse gas. Emissions of N2O into the atmosphere continue to rise, primarily due to the use of nitrogen-containing fertilizers by soil denitrifying microbes. It is clear more effective mitigation strategies are required to reduce emissions. One way to help develop future mitigation strategies is to address the currently poor understanding of transcriptional regulation of the enzymes used to produce and consume N2O. With this ultimate aim in mind we performed RNA-seq on a model soil denitrifier, Paracoccus denitrificans, cultured anaerobically under high N2O and low N2O emitting conditions, and aerobically under zero N2O emitting conditions to identify small RNAs (sRNAs) with potential regulatory functions transcribed under these conditions. sRNAs are short (∼40–500 nucleotides) non-coding RNAs that regulate a wide range of activities in many bacteria. Hundred and sixty seven sRNAs were identified throughout the P. denitrificans genome which are either present in intergenic regions or located antisense to ORFs. Furthermore, many of these sRNAs are differentially expressed under high N2O and low N2O emitting conditions respectively, suggesting they may play a role in production or reduction of N2O. Expression of 16 of these sRNAs have been confirmed by RT-PCR. Ninety percent of the sRNAs are predicted to form secondary structures. Predicted targets include transporters and a number of transcriptional regulators. A number of sRNAs were conserved in other members of the α-proteobacteria. Better understanding of the sRNA factors which contribute to expression of the machinery required to reduce N2O will, in turn, help to inform strategies for mitigation of N2O emissions.


bioRxiv | 2016

MtrA is an essential regulator that coordinates antibiotic production and sporulation in Streptomyces species

Nicolle F. Som; Daniel Heine; John Munnoch; Neil A. Holmes; Felicity Knowles; Govind Chandra; Ryan F. Seipke; Paul A. Hoskisson; Barrie Wilkinson; Matthew I. Hutchings

Streptomyces bacteria make numerous secondary metabolites, including half of all known antibiotics. Understanding the global regulation of secondary metabolism is important because most Streptomyces natural products are not made under laboratory conditions and unlocking ‘cryptic’ biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) is a major focus for natural product discovery. Production is coordinated with sporulation but the regulators that coordinate development with antibiotic biosynthesis are largely unknown. Here we characterise a highly conserved actinobacterial response regulator called MtrA in antibiotic-producing Streptomyces species. We show that MtrA is an essential global regulator of secondary metabolism that directly activates antibiotic production in in S. coelicolor and S. venezuelae. MtrA also controls key developmental genes required for DNA replication and cell division and we propose that MtrA is the missing link that coordinates secondary metabolism with development in Streptomyces species.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Cosmid based mutagenesis causes genetic instability in Streptomyces coelicolor, as shown by targeting of the lipoprotein signal peptidase gene

John Munnoch; David Widdick; Govind Chandra; Iain C. Sutcliffe; Tracy Palmer; Matthew I. Hutchings

Bacterial lipoproteins are extracellular proteins tethered to cell membranes by covalently attached lipids. Deleting the lipoprotein signal peptidase (lsp) gene in Streptomyces coelicolor results in growth and developmental defects that cannot be restored by reintroducing lsp. This led us to hypothesise that lsp is essential and that the lsp mutant we isolated previously had acquired compensatory secondary mutations. Here we report resequencing of the genomes of wild-type M145 and the cis-complemented ∆lsp mutant (BJT1004) to map and identify these secondary mutations but we show that they do not increase the efficiency of disrupting lsp and are not lsp suppressors. We provide evidence that they are induced by introducing the cosmid St4A10∆lsp, as part of ReDirect PCR mutagenesis protocol, which transiently duplicates a number of important cell division genes. Disruption of lsp using a suicide vector (which does not result in gene duplication) still results in growth and developmental delays and we conclude that loss of Lsp function results in developmental defects due to the loss of all lipoproteins from the cell membrane. Significantly, our results also indicate the use of cosmid libraries for the genetic manipulation of bacteria can lead to phenotypes not necessarily linked to the gene(s) of interest.


Archive | 2017

Bound Water is Central to Both Molecular Recognition and Function in the Catalase Enzyme SUPPORTING INFORMATION

Marco Candelaresi; Andrea Gumiero; Katrin Adamczyk; Kirsty Robb; César Bellota-Antón; Vartul Sangal; John Munnoch; Gregory M. Greetham; Michael Towrie; Anthony W. Parker; Paul A. Hoskisson; Nicholas P. Tucker; Martin A. Walsh; Neil T. Hunt

Department of Physics, University of Strathclyde, 107 Rottenrow East, Glasgow, G4 0NG, United Kingdom, Diamond Light Source, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, Didcot, OX11 0QX, United Kingdom Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, University of Strathclyde, 161 Cathedral Street, Glasgow, G4 0RE, United Kingdom, School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, NR4 7TJ, United Kingdom, Central Laser Facility, Research Complex at Harwell, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Didcot, OX11 0QX, United Kingdom Correspondence email: [email protected]


bioRxiv | 2016

RsrR: a novel redox sensitive Rrf2 family transcription factor in Streptomyces venezuelae

John Munnoch; Ma Teresa Pellicer Martinez; Dimitri A. Svistunenko; Jason C. Crack; Nick E. Le Brun; Matthew I. Hutchings

Members of the Rrf2 superfamily of transcription factors are widespread in bacteria but their functions are largely unexplored. The few that have been characterized in detail sense nitric oxide (NsrR), iron limitation (RirA), cysteine availability (CymR) and the iron sulfur (Fe-S) cluster status of the cell (IscR). In this study we combined ChIP- and dRNA-seq with in vitro biochemistry to characterize a putative NsrR homologue in Streptomyces venezuelae. ChIP-seq analysis revealed that rather than regulating the nitrosative stress response like Streptomyces coelicolor NsrR, Sven6563 binds to a conserved motif at a different, much larger set of genes with a diverse range of functions, including a number of regulators, genes required for glutamine synthesis, NADH/NAD(P)H metabolism, as well as general DNA/RNA and amino acid/protein turn over. Our biochemical experiments further show that Sven6563 has a [2Fe-2S] cluster and that the switch between oxidized and reduced cluster controls its DNA binding activity in vitro. To our knowledge, both the sensing domain and the putative target genes are novel for an Rrf2 protein, suggesting Sven6563 represents a new member of the Rrf2 superfamily. Given the redox sensitivity of its Fe-S cluster we have tentatively named the protein RsrR for Redox sensitive response Regulator.Members of the Rrf2 superfamily of transcription factors are widespread in bacteria but their biological functions are largely unknown. The few that have been characterised in detail sense nitric oxide (NsrR), iron limitation (RirA), cysteine availability (CymR) and the iron sulphur (Fe-S) cluster status of the cell (IscR). Here we combine ChIP-seq, ChIP-exo and dRNA-seq with in vitro biochemistry to characterise a new member of the Rrf2 family in the model organism Streptomyces venezuelae. We show that Sven6563 has a redox active [2Fe-2S] cluster and that the switch from oxidized to reduced cluster switches off DNA binding activity. We have named the protein RsrR for Redox sensitive response Regulator. Binding site positions at target promoters combined with expression data suggest RsrR acts primarily as a repressor, like other Rrf2 proteins. ChIP shows that RsrR can bind to class 1 target promoters containing an 11-3-11bp inverted repeat motif and class 2 target promoters containing a single 11 bp motif. All 630 ChIP-exo peaks contain at least one motif, suggesting a global role for RsrR. However, the strongest targets are class 1 and include NAD(P)+ dependent enzymes, NAD(P)+ biosynthetic enzymes, the NADH and NADPH dehydrogenases and a putative NAD(P)+ binding regulator that is divergently transcribed from rsrR. Thus, our data suggest RsrR senses redox changes in the cell and has a primary role in regulating NAD(P)H metabolism.

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Jason C. Crack

University of East Anglia

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Nick E. Le Brun

University of East Anglia

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Anthony W. Parker

Science and Technology Facilities Council

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Katrin Adamczyk

University of Strathclyde

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Neil A. Holmes

University of East Anglia

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