Joost Teixeira de Mattos
University of Amsterdam
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Featured researches published by Joost Teixeira de Mattos.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Laurent Loiseau; Catherine Gerez; Martijn Bekker; Sandrine Ollagnier de Choudens; Béatrice Py; Yannis Sanakis; Joost Teixeira de Mattos; Marc Fontecave; Frédéric Barras
Understanding the biogenesis of iron–sulfur (Fe–S) proteins is relevant to many fields, including bioenergetics, gene regulation, and cancer research. Several multiprotein complexes assisting Fe–S assembly have been identified in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Here, we identify in Escherichia coli an A-type Fe–S protein that we named ErpA. Remarkably, erpA was found essential for growth of E. coli in the presence of oxygen or alternative electron acceptors. It was concluded that isoprenoid biosynthesis was impaired by the erpA mutation. First, the eukaryotic mevalonate-dependent pathway for biosynthesis of isopentenyl diphosphate restored the respiratory defects of an erpA mutant. Second, the erpA mutant contained a greatly reduced amount of ubiquinone and menaquinone. Third, ErpA bound Fe–S clusters and transferred them to apo-IspG, a protein catalyzing isopentenyl diphosphate biosynthesis in E. coli. Surprisingly, the erpA gene maps at a distance from any other Fe–S biogenesis-related gene. ErpA is an A-type Fe–S protein that is characterized by an essential role in cellular metabolism.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Matthew D. Rolfe; Alex Ter Beek; Alison I. Graham; Eleanor W. Trotter; H. M. Shahzad Asif; Guido Sanguinetti; Joost Teixeira de Mattos; Robert K. Poole; Jeffrey Green
Oxygen availability is the major determinant of the metabolic modes adopted by Escherichia coli. Although much is known about E. coli gene expression and metabolism under fully aerobic and anaerobic conditions, the intermediate oxygen tensions that are encountered in natural niches are understudied. Here, for the first time, the transcript profiles of E. coli K-12 across the physiologically significant range of oxygen availabilities are described. These suggested a progressive switch to aerobic respiratory metabolism and a remodeling of the cell envelope as oxygen availability increased. The transcriptional responses were consistent with changes in the abundance of cytochrome bd and bo′ and the outer membrane protein OmpW. The observed transcript and protein profiles result from changes in the activities of regulators that respond to oxygen itself or to metabolic and environmental signals that are sensitive to oxygen availability (aerobiosis). A probabilistic model (TFInfer) was used to predict the activity of the indirect oxygen-sensing two-component system ArcBA across the aerobiosis range. The model implied that the activity of the regulator ArcA correlated with aerobiosis but not with the redox state of the ubiquinone pool, challenging the idea that ArcA activity is inhibited by oxidized ubiquinone. The amount of phosphorylated ArcA correlated with the predicted ArcA activities and with aerobiosis, suggesting that fermentation product-mediated inhibition of ArcB phosphatase activity is the dominant mechanism for regulating ArcA activity under the conditions used here.
Current Microbiology | 2011
Christoph Engl; Alex Ter Beek; Martijn Bekker; Joost Teixeira de Mattos; Goran Jovanovic; Martin Buck
Phage shock proteins (Psp) and their homologues are found in species from the three domains of life: Bacteria, Archaea and Eukarya (e.g. higher plants). In enterobacteria, the Psp response helps to maintain the proton motive force (PMF) of the cell when the inner membrane integrity is impaired. The presumed ability of ArcB to sense redox changes in the cellular quinone pool and the strong decrease of psp induction in ΔubiG or ΔarcAB backgrounds suggest a link between the Psp response and the quinone pool. The authors now provide evidence indicating that the physiological signal for inducing psp by secretin-induced stress is neither the quinone redox state nor a drop in PMF. Neither the loss of the H+-gradient nor the dissipation of the electrical potential alone is sufficient to induce the Psp response. A set of electron transport mutants differing in their redox states due to the lack of a NADH dehydrogenase and a quinol oxidase, but retaining a normal PMF displayed low levels of psp induction inversely related to oxidised ubiquinone levels under microaerobic growth and independent of PMF. In contrast, cells displaying higher secretin induced psp expression showed increased levels of ubiquinone. Taken together, this study suggests that not a single but likely multiple signals are needed to be integrated to induce the Psp response.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2011
Zhong Yu; Martijn Bekker; Angela Tramonti; Gregory M. Cook; Peter van Ulsen; Dirk-Jan Scheffers; Joost Teixeira de Mattos; Daniela De Biase; Joen Luirink
The function of the essential inner membrane protein (IMP) YidC in Escherichia coli has been studied for a limited number of model IMPs and primarily using targeted approaches. These studies suggested that YidC acts at the level of insertion, folding, and quality control of IMPs, both in the context of the Sec translocon and as a separate entity. To further our understanding of YidCs role in IMP biogenesis, we screened a random overexpression library for factors that rescued the growth of cells upon YidC depletion. We found that the overexpression of the GadX and GadY regulators of the glutamate-dependent acid resistance system complemented the growth defect of YidC-depleted cells. Evidence is presented that GadXY overexpression counteracts the deleterious effects of YidC depletion on at least two fronts. First, GadXY prepares the cells for the decrease in respiratory capacity upon the depletion of YidC. Most likely, GadXY-regulated processes reduce the drop in proton-motive force that impairs the fitness of YidC-depleted cells. Second, in GadXY-overproducing cells increased levels of the general chaperone GroEL cofractionate with the inner membranes, which may help to keep newly synthesized inner membrane proteins in an insertion-competent state when YidC levels are limiting.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2002
Marian J. A. Groot Koerkamp; Martijn Rep; Harmen J. Bussemaker; Guy P.M.A. Hardy; Adri Mul; Kasia Piekarska; Cristina Al-Khalili Szigyarto; Joost Teixeira de Mattos; Henk F. Tabak
Microbiology | 2004
Romeo Lascaris; Jan Piwowarski; Hans van der Spek; Joost Teixeira de Mattos; Les A. Grivell; Jolanda Blom
The International Journal of Advanced Manufacturing Technology | 2011
Christoph Engl; Alex Ter Beek; Martijn Bekker; Joost Teixeira de Mattos; Goran Jovanovic; Martin Buck
Health Research Policy and Systems | 2011
Joost Teixeira de Mattos; Dirk-Jan Scheffers; Peter van Ulsen; Gregory M. Cook; Joen Luirink; Daniela De Biase; Angela Tramonti; Martijn Bekker; Zhong Yu
Methods of Information in Medicine | 2010
Matthew F. Bekker; Svetlana Alexeeva; W H van der Laan; Gary Sawers; Joost Teixeira de Mattos; Klaas J. Hellingwerf
Journal of Biotechnology | 2007
Gertjan Kramer; JaapWillem Back; Merel A. Nessen; Michael A. van der Horst; Luitzen de Jong; Leo J. de Koning; Jan H. van Maarseveen; Joost Teixeira de Mattos; Klaas J. Hellingwerf; Chris G. de Koster