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Featured researches published by Kieran Dilks.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

Prokaryotic Utilization of the Twin-Arginine Translocation Pathway: a Genomic Survey

Kieran Dilks; R. Wesley Rose; Enno Hartmann; Mechthild Pohlschröder

The twin-arginine translocation (Tat) pathway, which has been identified in plant chloroplasts and prokaryotes, allows for the secretion of folded proteins. However, the extent to which this pathway is used among the prokaryotes is not known. By using a genomic approach, a comprehensive list of putative Tat substrates for 84 diverse prokaryotes was established. Strikingly, the results indicate that the Tat pathway is utilized to highly varying extents. Furthermore, while many prokaryotes use this pathway predominantly for the secretion of redox proteins, analyses of the predicted substrates suggest that certain bacteria and archaea secrete mainly nonredox proteins via the Tat pathway. While no correlation was observed between the number of Tat machinery components encoded by an organism and the number of predicted Tat substrates, it was noted that the composition of this machinery was specific to phylogenetic taxa.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

The twin-arginine translocation pathway is a major route of protein export in Streptomyces coelicolor

David Widdick; Kieran Dilks; Govind Chandra; Andrew R. Bottrill; Mike J. Naldrett; Mechthild Pohlschröder; Tracy Palmer

The twin-arginine translocation (Tat) pathway is a protein transport system for the export of folded proteins. Substrate proteins are targeted to the Tat translocase by N-terminal signal peptides harboring a distinctive R-R-x-Φ-Φ “twin-arginine” amino acid motif. Using a combination of proteomic techniques, the protein contents from the cell wall of the model Gram-positive bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor were identified and compared with that of mutant strains defective in Tat transport. The proteomic experiments pointed to 43 potentially Tat-dependent extracellular proteins. Of these, 25 were verified as bearing bona fide Tat-targeting signal peptides after independent screening with a facile, rapid, and sensitive reporter assay. The identified Tat substrates, among others, include polymer-degrading enzymes, phosphatases, and binding proteins as well as enzymes involved in secondary metabolism. Moreover, in addition to predicted extracellular substrates, putative lipoproteins were shown to be Tat-dependent. This work provides strong experimental evidence that the Tat system is used as a major general export pathway in Streptomyces.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2005

Genetic and Biochemical Analysis of the Twin-Arginine Translocation Pathway in Halophilic Archaea

Kieran Dilks; María Inés Giménez; Mechthild Pohlschröder

The twin-arginine translocation (Tat) pathway is present in a wide variety of prokaryotes and is capable of exporting partially or fully folded proteins from the cytoplasm. Although diverse classes of proteins are transported via the Tat pathway, in most organisms it facilitates the secretion of a relatively small number of substrates compared to the Sec pathway. However, computational evidence suggests that haloarchaea route nearly all secreted proteins to the Tat pathway. We have expanded previous computational analyses of the haloarchaeal Tat pathway and initiated in vivo characterization of the Tat machinery in a model haloarchaeon, Haloferax volcanii. Consistent with the predicted usage of the this pathway in the haloarchaea, we determined that three of the four identified tat genes in Haloferax volcanii are essential for viability when grown aerobically in complex medium. This represents the first report of an organism that requires the Tat pathway for viability when grown under such conditions. Deletion of the nonessential gene had no effect on the secretion of a verified substrate of the Tat pathway. The two TatA paralogs TatAo and TatAt were detected in both the membrane and cytoplasm and could be copurified from the latter fraction. Using size exclusion chromatography to further characterize cytoplasmic and membrane TatA proteins, we find these proteins present in high-molecular-weight complexes in both cellular fractions.


Molecular Microbiology | 2007

Haloferax volcanii twin-arginine translocation substates include secreted soluble, C-terminally anchored and lipoproteins

María Inés Giménez; Kieran Dilks; Mechthild Pohlschröder

Recent in silico and in vivo studies have suggested that the majority of proteins destined for secretion in the haloarchaea are trafficked through the twin‐arginine translocation (Tat) pathway. The presence of lipobox motifs in most haloarchaeal Tat signal sequences is intriguing as: (i) bioinformatic searches of archaeal genomes have not identified lipoprotein biogenesis enzymes and (ii) there are no known Tat substrates containing both a twin‐arginine and a bona fide lipobox. We have examined six computationally designated Tat substrates in the haloarchaeon Haloferax volcanii to verify previous computational predictions and to initiate studies of lipoprotein biogenesis via the Tat pathway. Our results confirmed that the six candidate proteins were not only Tat substrates, but also belonged to diverse classes of secretory proteins. Analysis of predicted lipoprotein Tat substrates revealed that they are anchored to the archaeal membrane in a cysteine‐dependent manner. Interestingly, despite the absence of an archaeal lipoprotein signal peptidase II (SPase II) homologue, the SPase II inhibitor globomycin impeded cell growth and specifically prevented maturation of lipoproteins. Together, this work not only represents the first experimental demonstration of a lipoprotein Tat substrate, but also indicates the presence of an unidentified lipoprotein biogenesis pathway in archaea.


Archaea | 2010

Mutational and Bioinformatic Analysis of Haloarchaeal Lipobox-Containing Proteins

Stefanie Storf; Friedhelm Pfeiffer; Kieran Dilks; Zhong Qiang Chen; Saheed Imam; Mechthild Pohlschröder

A conserved lipid-modified cysteine found in a protein motif commonly referred to as a lipobox mediates the membrane anchoring of a subset of proteins transported across the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane via the Sec pathway. Sequenced haloarchaeal genomes encode many putative lipoproteins and recent studies have confirmed the importance of the conserved lipobox cysteine for signal peptide processing of three lipobox-containing proteins in the model archaeon Haloferax volcanii. We have extended these in vivo analyses to additional Hfx. volcanii substrates, supporting our previous in silico predictions and confirming the diversity of predicted Hfx. volcanii lipoproteins. Moreover, using extensive comparative secretome analyses, we identified genes encodining putative lipoproteins across a wide range of archaeal species. While our in silico analyses, supported by in vivo data, indicate that most haloarchaeal lipoproteins are Tat substrates, these analyses also predict that many crenarchaeal species lack lipoproteins altogether and that other archaea, such as nonhalophilic euryarchaeal species, transport lipoproteins via the Sec pathway. To facilitate the identification of genes that encode potential haloarchaeal Tat-lipoproteins, we have developed TatLipo, a bioinformatic tool designed to detect lipoboxes in haloarchaeal Tat signal peptides. Our results provide a strong foundation for future studies aimed at identifying components of the archaeal lipoprotein biogenesis pathway.


BMC Biology | 2014

Generation of comprehensive transposon insertion mutant library for the model archaeon, Haloferax volcanii, and its use for gene discovery

Saija Kiljunen; Maria Pajunen; Kieran Dilks; Stefanie Storf; Mechthild Pohlschröder; Harri Savilahti

BackgroundArchaea share fundamental properties with bacteria and eukaryotes. Yet, they also possess unique attributes, which largely remain poorly characterized. Haloferax volcanii is an aerobic, moderately halophilic archaeon that can be grown in defined media. It serves as an excellent archaeal model organism to study the molecular mechanisms of biological processes and cellular responses to changes in the environment. Studies on haloarchaea have been impeded by the lack of efficient genetic screens that would facilitate the identification of protein functions and respective metabolic pathways.ResultsHere, we devised an insertion mutagenesis strategy that combined Mu in vitro DNA transposition and homologous-recombination-based gene targeting in H. volcanii. We generated an insertion mutant library, in which the clones contained a single genomic insertion. From the library, we isolated pigmentation-defective and auxotrophic mutants, and the respective insertions pinpointed a number of genes previously known to be involved in carotenoid and amino acid biosynthesis pathways, thus validating the performance of the methodologies used. We also identified mutants that had a transposon insertion in a gene encoding a protein of unknown or putative function, demonstrating that novel roles for non-annotated genes could be assigned.ConclusionsWe have generated, for the first time, a random genomic insertion mutant library for a halophilic archaeon and used it for efficient gene discovery. The library will facilitate the identification of non-essential genes behind any specific biochemical pathway. It represents a significant step towards achieving a more complete understanding of the unique characteristics of halophilic archaea.


Archive | 2011

Protein Transport Into and Across Haloarchaeal Cytoplasmic Membranes

Kieran Dilks; María Inés Giménez; Manuela Tripepi; Mechthild Pohlschröder

Several pathways have evolved in the three domains of life to facilitate membrane protein insertion and the transport of proteins across lipid membranes. Haloarchaea employ the universally conserved Sec pathway, which transports unfolded proteins, for the transport of biologically important substrates into and across the membrane. However, they also extensively employ the twin arginine translocation (Tat) system, which transports substrates across the lipid bilayer in a folded conformation. Most haloarchaeal Tat substrates appear to be anchored to cytoplasmic membranes via lipid modifications. In silico analyses suggest that the prominent use of the Tat pathway and the lipid tethering of Tat substrates are traits unique to halophilic archaea. We discuss the selective pressures that may have led to these unique adaptations as well as possible explanations for why they are not observed in halobacteria.


Annual Review of Microbiology | 2005

DIVERSITY AND EVOLUTION OF PROTEIN TRANSLOCATION

Mechthild Pohlschröder; Enno Hartmann; Nicholas J. Hand; Kieran Dilks; Alex Haddad


Fems Microbiology Reviews | 2004

Translocation of proteins across archaeal cytoplasmic membranes

Mechthild Pohlschröder; Kieran Dilks; Nicholas J. Hand; R. Wesley Rose


Plant Journal | 2004

Floral induction in tissue culture: a system for the analysis of LEAFY-dependent gene regulation

Doris Wagner; Frank Wellmer; Kieran Dilks; Dilusha William; Michael R. Smith; Prakash P. Kumar; José Luis Riechmann; Andrew James Greenland; Elliot M. Meyerowitz

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Nicholas J. Hand

University of Pennsylvania

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Stefanie Storf

University of Pennsylvania

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David Widdick

University of East Anglia

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