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Dive into the research topics where Philip Youderian is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip Youderian.


Molecular Microbiology | 2003

Identification of genes required for adventurous gliding motility in Myxococcus xanthus with the transposable element mariner

Philip Youderian; Neal Burke; David J. White; Patricia L. Hartzell

Myxococcus xanthus glides over solid surfaces without the use of flagella, dependent upon two large sets of adventurous (A) and social (S) genes, using two different mechanisms of gliding motility. Myxococcus xanthus A–S– double mutants form non‐motile colonies lacking migratory cells at their edges. We have isolated 115 independent mutants of M. xanthus with insertions of transposon magellan‐4 in potential A genes by screening for insertions that reduce the motility of a mutant S– parental strain. These insertions are found not only in the three loci known to be required for A motility, mglBA, cglB, and aglU, but also in 30 new genes. Six of these new genes encode different homologues of the TolR, TolB, and TolQ transport proteins, suggesting that adventurous motility is dependent on biopolymer transport. Other insertions which affect both A and S motility suggest that both systems share common energy and cell wall determinants. Because the spectrum of magellan‐4 insertions in M. xanthus is extraordinarily broad, transposon mutagenesis with this eukaryotic genetic element permits the rapid genetic analysis of large sets of genes that contribute to a complex microbial behaviors such as A motility.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2004

Precise Excision of the Large Pathogenicity Island, SPI7, in Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhi

Susan M. Bueno; Carlos A. Santiviago; Alejandro A. Murillo; Juan A. Fuentes; A. Nicole Trombert; Paula I. Rodas; Philip Youderian; Guido C. Mora

The large pathogenicity island (SPI7) of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi is a 133,477-bp segment of DNA flanked by two 52-bp direct repeats overlapping the pheU (phenylalanyl-tRNA) gene, contains 151 potential open reading frames, and includes the viaB operon involved in the synthesis of Vi antigen. Some clinical isolates of S. enterica serovar Typhi are missing the entire SPI7, due to its precise excision; these strains have lost the ability to produce Vi antigen, are resistant to phage Vi-II, and invade a human epithelial cell line more rapidly. Excision of SPI7 occurs spontaneously in a clinical isolate of S. enterica serovar Typhi when it is grown in the laboratory, leaves an intact copy of the pheU gene at its novel join point, and results in the same three phenotypic consequences. SPI7 is an unstable genetic element, probably an intermediate in the pathway of lateral transfer of such pathogenicity islands among enteric gram-negative bacteria.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

The Salmonella enterica sv. Typhimurium smvA, yddG and ompD (porin) genes are required for the efficient efflux of methyl viologen

Carlos A. Santiviago; Juan A. Fuentes; Susan M. Bueno; A. Nicole Trombert; Alejandro A. Hildago; L. Teresa Socias; Philip Youderian; Guido C. Mora

In Gram‐negative bacteria, a subset of inner membrane proteins in the major facilitator superfamily (MFS) acts as efflux pumps to decrease the intracellular concentrations of multiple toxic substrates and confers multidrug resistance. The Salmonella enterica sv. Typhimurium smvA gene encodes a product predicted to be an MFS protein most similar to QacA of Staphylococcus aureus. Like mutations in qacA, mutations in smvA confer increased sensitivity to methyl viologen (MV). Mutations in the adjacent ompD (porin) and yddG (drug/metabolite transporter) genes also confer increased sensitivity to MV, and mutations in smvA are epistatic to mutations in ompD or yddG for this phenotype. YddG and OmpD probably comprise a second efflux pump in which the OmpD porin acts as an outer membrane channel (OMC) protein for the efflux of MV and functions independently of the SmvA pump. In support of this idea, the pump dependent on YddG and OmpD has a different substrate specificity from the pump dependent on SmvA. Mutations in tolC, which encodes an OMC protein, confer increased resistance to MV. TolC apparently facilitates the import of MV, and a subset of OMC proteins including the OmpD porin and TolC may facilitate both import and export of distinct subsets of toxic substrates.


PLOS ONE | 2006

Catalases are NAD(P)H-dependent tellurite reductases

Iván L. Calderón; Felipe A. Arenas; José M. Pérez; Derie E. Fuentes; Manuel A. Araya; Claudia P. Saavedra; Juan C. Tantaleán; Sergio Pichuantes; Philip Youderian; Claudio C. Vásquez

Reactive oxygen species damage intracellular targets and are implicated in cancer, genetic disease, mutagenesis, and aging. Catalases are among the key enzymatic defenses against one of the most physiologically abundant reactive oxygen species, hydrogen peroxide. The well-studied, heme-dependent catalases accelerate the rate of the dismutation of peroxide to molecular oxygen and water with near kinetic perfection. Many catalases also bind the cofactors NADPH and NADH tenaciously, but, surprisingly, NAD(P)H is not required for their dismutase activity. Although NAD(P)H protects bovine catalase against oxidative damage by its peroxide substrate, the catalytic role of the nicotinamide cofactor in the function of this enzyme has remained a biochemical mystery to date. Anions formed by heavy metal oxides are among the most highly reactive, natural oxidizing agents. Here, we show that a natural isolate of Staphylococcus epidermidis resistant to tellurite detoxifies this anion thanks to a novel activity of its catalase, and that a subset of both bacterial and mammalian catalases carry out the NAD(P)H-dependent reduction of soluble tellurite ion (TeO3 2−) to the less toxic, insoluble metal, tellurium (Te°), in vitro. An Escherichia coli mutant defective in the KatG catalase/peroxidase is sensitive to tellurite, and expression of the S. epidermidis catalase gene in a heterologous E. coli host confers increased resistance to tellurite as well as to hydrogen peroxide in vivo, arguing that S. epidermidis catalase provides a physiological line of defense against both of these strong oxidizing agents. Kinetic studies reveal that bovine catalase reduces tellurite with a low Michaelis-Menten constant, a result suggesting that tellurite is among the natural substrates of this enzyme. The reduction of tellurite by bovine catalase occurs at the expense of producing the highly reactive superoxide radical.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2007

Production of tyrosine from sucrose or glucose achieved by rapid genetic changes to phenylalanine-producing Escherichia coli strains

Monica Olson; Lori J. Templeton; Wonchul Suh; Philip Youderian; F. Sima Sariaslani; Anthony A. Gatenby; Tina K. Van Dyk

Escherichia coli K12 strains producing l-phenylalanine were converted to l-tyrosine-producing strains using a novel genetic method for gene replacement. We deleted a region of the E. coli K12 chromosome including the pheA gene encoding chorismate mutase/prephenate dehydratase, its leader peptide (pheL), and its promoter using a new polymerase chain reaction-based method that does not leave a chromosomal scar. For high level expression of tyrA, encoding chorismate mutase/prephenate dehydrogenase, its native promoter was replaced with the strong trc promoter. The linked ΔpheLA and Ptrc-tyrA::KanR genetic modifications were moved into l-phenylalanine producing strains by generalized transduction to convert l-phenylalanine-producing strains to l-tyrosine-producing strains. Moreover, introduction of a plasmid carrying genes responsible for sucrose degradation into these strains enabled l-tyrosine-production from sucrose.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

The Geobacillus stearothermophilus V iscS gene, encoding cysteine desulfurase, confers resistance to potassium tellurite in escherichia coli K-12

Juan C. Tantaleán; Manuel A. Araya; Claudia P. Saavedra; Derie E. Fuentes; José M. Pérez; Iván L. Calderón; Philip Youderian; Claudio C. Vásquez

Many eubacteria are resistant to the toxic oxidizing agent potassium tellurite, and tellurite resistance involves diverse biochemical mechanisms. Expression of the iscS gene from Geobacillus stearothermophilus V, which is naturally resistant to tellurite, confers tellurite resistance in Escherichia coli K-12, which is naturally sensitive to tellurite. The G. stearothermophilus iscS gene encodes a cysteine desulfurase. A site-directed mutation in iscS that prevents binding of its pyridoxal phosphate cofactor abolishes both enzyme activity and its ability to confer tellurite resistance in E. coli. Expression of the G. stearothermophilus iscS gene confers tellurite resistance in tellurite-hypersensitive E. coli iscS and sodA sodB mutants (deficient in superoxide dismutase) and complements the auxotrophic requirement of an E. coli iscS mutant for thiamine but not for nicotinic acid. These and other results support the hypothesis that the reduction of tellurite generates superoxide anions and that the primary targets of superoxide damage in E. coli are enzymes with iron-sulfur clusters.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

Global Regulation of the Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium Major Porin, OmpD

Carlos A. Santiviago; Cecilia S. Toro; Alejandro A. Hidalgo; Philip Youderian; Guido C. Mora

The OmpD porin is the most abundant outer membrane protein in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and represents about 1% of total cell protein. Unlike the case with the less abundant OmpC and OmpF porins, the stoichiometry of OmpD in the outer membrane does not change in response to changes in osmolarity. The abundance of OmpD increases in response to anaerobiosis and decreases in response to low pH, conditions encountered by serovar Typhimurium during the infection of its murine host. By constructing an operon fusion of the lacZY genes with the ompD promoter, we show that the abundance of OmpD in the outer membrane is regulated primarily at the level of transcription and is subject to catabolite repression. In response to anaerobiosis, the abundance of OmpD in the outer membrane also appears to be controlled posttranscriptionally by a function dependent on Fnr.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

The Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhi tsx Gene, Encoding a Nucleoside-Specific Porin, Is Essential for Prototrophic Growth in the Absence of Nucleosides

Sergio A. Bucarey; Nicolás A. Villagra; Mara P. Martinic; A. Nicole Trombert; Carlos A. Santiviago; Nancy P. Maulén; Philip Youderian; Guido C. Mora

ABSTRACT The Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi tsx gene encodes a porin that facilitates the import of nucleosides. When serovar Typhi is grown under anaerobic conditions, Tsx is among the outer membrane proteins whose expression increases dramatically. This increase in expression is due, at least in part, to increased transcription and is dependent on Fnr but not on ArcA. A mutant derivative of serovar Typhi strain STH2370 with a deletion of the tsx gene is an auxotroph that requires either adenosine or thymidine for growth on minimal medium. In contrast, an otherwise isogenic nupG nupC double mutant, defective in the inner membrane nucleoside permeases, is a prototroph. Because anaerobic growth enhances the virulence of serovar Typhi in vitro, we assessed the role that the tsx gene plays in pathogenicity and found that the serovar Typhi STH2370 Δtsx mutant is defective in survival within human macrophage-like U937 cells. To understand why the Δtsx mutant is an auxotroph, we selected for insertions of minitransposon T-POP in the Δtsx genetic background that restored prototrophy. One T-POP insertion that suppressed the Δtsx mutation in the presence of the inducer tetracycline was located upstream of the pyrD gene. The results of reverse transcription-PCR analysis showed that addition of the inducer decreased the rate of pyrD transcription. These results suggest that the Tsx porin and the balance of products of the tsx and pyrD genes play critical roles in membrane assembly and integrity and thus in the virulence of serovar Typhi.


Plasmid | 2008

The complete sequence and functional analysis of pANL, the large plasmid of the unicellular freshwater cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942

You Chen; C. Kay Holtman; Roy David Magnuson; Philip Youderian; Susan S. Golden

Two endogenous plasmids are present in Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942, a model organism for studying photosynthesis and circadian rhythms in cyanobacteria. The large plasmid, pANL, was shown previously to be involved in adaptation of S. elongatus cells to sulfur starvation, which provided the first evidence of cellular function of a cyanobacterial plasmid. Here, we report the complete sequence of pANL, which is 46,366 bp in length with 53% GC content and encodes 58 putative ORFs. The pANL plasmid can be divided into four structural and functional regions: the replication origin region, a signal transduction region, a plasmid maintenance region, and a sulfur-regulated region. Cosmid-based deletion analysis suggested that the plasmid maintenance and replication origin regions are required for persistence of pANL in the cells. Transposon-mediated mutagenesis and complementation-based pANL segregation assays confirmed that two predicted toxin-antitoxin cassettes encoded in the plasmid maintenance region, belonging to PemK and VapC families, respectively, are necessary for plasmid exclusion. The compact and efficient organization of sulfur-related genes on pANL may provide selective advantages in environments with limited sulfur.


DNA Research | 2005

High-Throughput Functional Analysis of the Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 Genome

C. Kay Holtman; You Chen; Pamela Y. Sandoval; Alejandra Gonzales; Mark S. Nalty; Terry L. Thomas; Philip Youderian; Susan S. Golden

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You Chen

University of California

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Susan M. Bueno

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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