Pradosh Roy
Bose Institute
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Featured researches published by Pradosh Roy.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2000
Pratap N. Mukhopadhyaya; Chirajyoti Deb; Chandrajit Lahiri; Pradosh Roy
A mobilizable suicide vector, pSUP5011, was used to introduce Tn5-mob in a new facultative sulfur lithotrophic bacterium, KCT001, to generate mutants defective in sulfur oxidation (Sox(-)). The Sox(-) mutants were unable to oxidize thiosulfate while grown mixotrophically in the presence of thiosulfate and succinate. The mutants were also impaired in oxidizing other reduced sulfur compounds and elemental sulfur as evident from the study of substrate oxidation by the whole cells. Sulfite oxidase activity was significantly diminished in the cell extracts of all the mutants. A soxA gene was identified from the transposon-adjacent genomic DNA of a Sox(-) mutant strain. The sequence analysis revealed that the soxA open reading frame (ORF) is preceded by a potential ribosome binding site and promoter region with -10- and -35-like sequences. The deduced nucleotide sequence of the soxA gene was predicted to code for a protein of 286 amino acids. It had a signal peptide of 26 N-terminal amino acids. The amino acid sequence showed similarity with a putative gene product of Aquifex aeolicus, soluble cytochrome c(551) of Chlorobium limicola, and the available partial SoxA sequence of Paracoccus denitrificans. The soxA-encoded product seems to be a diheme cytochrome c for KCT001 and A. aeolicus, but the amino acid sequence of C. limicola cytochrome c(551) revealed a single heme-binding region. Another transposon insertion mutation was mapped within the soxA ORF. Four other independent transposon insertion mutations were mapped in the 4.4-kb soxA contiguous genomic DNA region. The results thus suggest that a sox locus of KCT001, essential for sulfur oxidation, was affected by all these six independent insertion mutations.
Current Microbiology | 2004
Chirajyoti Deb; Erko Stackebrandt; Silke Pradella; Anupama Saha; Pradosh Roy
Five facultative sulfur chemolithotrophs were isolated from soils to study the diversity of sulfur lithotrophy. Phenotypic characteristics, including sulfur lithotrophic properties and chemotaxonomic features of the isolates, were similar to those of the members of the colorless sulfur bacteria. 16S rDNA sequence analyses rendered placing the isolates to three distinct phylogenetic clusters of α-proteobacteria. Three isolates, AS001, AS002, and KCT002, were identified as members of the genus Paracoccus. The strains AS001 and AS002, having identical 16S-rDNA sequence, showed significant 16S rDNA sequence similarity (99.1%) to Paracoccus versutus. The strain KCT002 showed highest (98%) 16S rDNA sequence similarity to P. alcaliphilus and 96% similarity to the pair AS001 and AS002. Isolate KCT001 appeared to be closely related to Pseudaminobacter salicylatoxidans, although sulfur lithotrophy of P. salicylotoxidans is not known. The other isolate, TCK, showed almost identical 16S rDNA (99.9%) sequence with two recently described unclassified chemolithoautotrophic arsenite oxidizing strains. Physiological and chemotaxonomic characteristics and phylogenetic analyses of the five new strains emphasize the need of polyphasic bacterial taxonomy of sulfur lithotrophs.
Current Microbiology | 2006
Chandrajit Lahiri; Sukhendu Mandal; Wriddhiman Ghosh; Bomba Dam; Pradosh Roy
Chemolithotrophic sulfur oxidation (Sox) in the α-proteobacterium Pseudaminobacter salicylatoxidans KCT001 was found to be governed by the gene cluster soxSRT–soxVWXYZABCD. Independent transposon-insertion mutations in the genes soxB, soxC, soxD, and also in a novel open reading frame (ORF), designated as soxT, afforded revelation of the entire sox locus of this bacterium. The deduced amino acid sequence of the novel ORF soxT comprised 362 residues and exhibited significant homology with hypothetical proteins of diverse origin, including a permease-like transport protein of Escherichia coli. Two contiguous ORFs, soxR and soxS, immediately preceded the soxT gene. The gene cluster soxSRT was located upstream of soxVWXYZABCD and was transcribed divergently with respect to the latter. Chemolithotrophic utilization of both thiosulfate and tetrathionate was observed to have been impaired in all of these Sox− mutants, implicating the involvement of the gene cluster soxSRT–soxVWXYZABCD in the oxidation of both thiosulfate and tetrathionate.
Journal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics | 2005
Angshuman Bagchi; Debjani Roy; Pradosh Roy
Abstract Microbial oxidation of reduced inorganic sulfur compounds in the environment is one of the major reactions of the global sulfur cycle mediated by phylogenetically diverse prokaryotes. The sulfur oxidizing gene cluster (sox) of α-Proteobacteria comprises of at least 15 genes, which form two transcriptional units, viz soxSRT and soxVWXYZABCDEFGH. Sequence analysis reveals that SoxR belongs to the ArsR family of helix-turn-helix DNA binding proteins. Although SoxR proteins do not contain the conserved metal-binding box, ELCVCDL, but there are a number of well conserved residues present throughout the sequence that are previously identified in the known ArsR family proteins. We employed homology modeling to construct the three-dimensional structure of the SoxR from chemolithotrophic α-Proteobacteria Pseudaminobacter salicylatoxidans KCT001. The predicted homology model of SoxR shows an overall structural similarity with winged helix- turn-helix family proteins. Since dimerization is essential for DNA binding and repression by the ArsR family proteins we have generated the dimeric model of SoxR that enables us to predict the DNA binding residues of the protein as well as the interaction of SoxR with the predicted promoter region of sox gene cluster.
Fuel | 1980
Debabrata Chandra; Pradosh Roy; Ajit K. Mishra; Jitendra N. Chakrabarti; Nawal K. Prasad; Swapan Gobinda Chaudhuri
Abstract Pyritic sulphur has effectively been removed from three coal samples by treating with a strain of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans . The acidophilic bacteria present in coals have also been found to efficiently leach pyrite from coal. Addition of an essential bacterial nutrient and a surfactant together with the removal of calcite from coal, favoured the leaching process. Besides pyritic sulphur, significant amount of sulphate sulphur, and a small amount of organic sulphur were removed by the process.
Letters in Applied Microbiology | 1993
Amitabha Das; Pradosh Roy; Ajit K. Mishra
Hydrogen sulphide is a common toxic contaminant in natural gas and oil. In this study, the strictly autotrophic bacterium Thiobacillus ferrooxidans, which oxidizes reduced sulphur compounds, was used to desulphur petroleum oil and gas. The reaction was carried out in a closed vessel containing substrate mixed with a bacterial suspension. The significance of the hydrogen sulphide oxidizing activity of T. ferrooxidans is discussed.
Current Science | 2002
Pradosh Roy; Anupama Saha
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2006
Wriddhiman Ghosh; Pradosh Roy
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2005
Wriddhiman Ghosh; Angshuman Bagchi; Sukhendu Mandal; Bomba Dam; Pradosh Roy
Fems Microbiology Letters | 1992
Amitabha Das; Ajit K. Mishra; Pradosh Roy