Raúl A. Salomón
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Featured researches published by Raúl A. Salomón.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2001
María J. Chiuchiolo; Mónica A. Delgado; Ricardo N. Farías; Raúl A. Salomón
Microcin J25 is a 2,107-Da, plasmid-encoded, cyclopeptide antibiotic produced by Escherichia coli. We have isolated lacZ fusions to mcjA (encoding the 58-amino-acid microcin precursor) and mcjB and mcjC (which are required for microcin maturation), and the regulation of these fusions was used to identify factors that control the expression of these genes. The mcjA gene was found to be dramatically induced as cells entered the stationary phase. Expression of mcjA could be induced by resuspending uninduced exponential-phase cells in spent supernatant obtained from an early-stationary-phase culture. Induction of mcjA expression was not dependent on high cell density, pH changes, anaerobiosis, or the buildup of some inducer. A starvation for carbon and inorganic phosphate induced mcjA expression, while under nitrogen limitation there was no induction at all. These results taken together suggest that stationary-phase induction of mcjA is triggered by nutrient depletion. The mcjB and mcjC genes were also regulated by the growth phase of the culture, but in contrast to mcjA, they showed substantial expression already during exponential growth. Induction of the microcin genes was demonstrated to be independent of RpoS, the cyclic AMP-Crp complex, OmpR, and H-NS. Instead, we found that the growth-phase-dependent expression of mcjA, mcjB, and mcjC may be explained by the concerted action of the positively acting transition state regulators ppGpp, Lrp, and integration host factor. Measurements of microcin J25 production by strains defective in these global regulators showed a good correlation with the reduced expression of the fusions in such mutant backgrounds.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2005
Mónica A. Delgado; Paula A. Vincent; Ricardo N. Farías; Raúl A. Salomón
In the present study, we showed that yojI, an Escherichia coli open reading frame with an unknown function, mediates resistance to the peptide antibiotic microcin J25 when it is expressed from a multicopy vector. Disruption of the single chromosomal copy of yojI increased sensitivity of cells to microcin J25. The YojI protein was previously assumed to be an ATP-binding-cassette-type exporter on the basis of sequence similarities. We demonstrate that YojI is capable of pumping out microcin molecules. Thus, one obvious explanation for the protective effect against microcin J25 is that YojI action keeps the intracellular concentration of the peptide below a toxic level. The outer membrane protein TolC in addition to YojI is required for export of microcin J25 out of the cell. Microcin J25 is thus the first known substrate for YojI.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009
María Fernanda Pomares; Raúl A. Salomón; Olga Pavlova; Konstantin Severinov; Ricardo N. Farías; Paula A. Vincent
ABSTRACT Microcin J25 (MccJ25) is a 21-residue ribosomally synthesized lariat peptide antibiotic. MccJ25 is active against such food-borne disease-causing pathogens as Salmonella spp., Shigella spp., and Escherichia coli, including E. coli O157:H7 and non-O157 strains. MccJ25 is highly resistant to digestion by proteolytic enzymes present in the stomach and intestinal contents. MccJ25 would therefore remain active in the gastrointestinal tract, affecting normal intestinal microbiota, and this limits the potential use of MccJ25 as a food preservative. In the present paper, we describe a chymotrypsin-susceptible MccJ25 derivative with a mutation of Gly12 to Tyr that retained almost full antibiotic activity and efficiently inhibited the growth of pathogenic Salmonella enterica serovar Newport and Escherichia coli O157:H7 in skim milk and egg yolk. However, unlike the wild-type MccJ25, the MccJ25(G12Y) variant was inactivated by digestive enzymes both in vitro and in vivo. To our knowledge, our results represent the first example of a rational modification of a microcin aimed at increasing its potential use in food preservation.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2006
Ricardo E. de Cristóbal; José O. Solbiati; Ana M. Zenoff; Paula A. Vincent; Raúl A. Salomón; Julia Yuzenkova; Konstantin Severinov; Ricardo N. Farías
Escherichia coli microcin J25 (MccJ25) is a plasmid-encoded antibiotic peptide consisting of 21 L-amino acid residues (G1-G-A-G-H5-V-P-E-Y-F10-V-G-I-G-T15-P-I-S-F-Y20-G). E. coli RNA polymerase (RNAP) is the intracellular target of MccJ25. MccJ25 enters cells after binding to specific membrane transporters: FhuA in the outer membrane and SbmA in the inner membrane. Here, we studied MccJ25 mutants carrying a substitution of His5 by Lys, Arg, or Ala. The inhibitory effects on cellular growth and in vitro RNAP activity were determined for each mutant microcin. The results show that all mutants inhibited RNAP in vitro. However, the mutants were defective in their ability to inhibit cellular growth. Experiments in which the FhuA protein was bypassed showed that substitutions of MccJ25 His5 affected the SbmA-dependent transport. Our results thus suggest that MccJ25 His5 located in the lariat ring is involved, directly or indirectly, in specific interaction with SbmA and is not required for MccJ25 inhibition of RNAP.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2008
Ricardo E. de Cristóbal; Paula A. Vincent; Raúl A. Salomón
Previously, we demonstrated that Escherichia coli tolC mutations reduce the high-level resistance to tetracycline afforded by the transposon Tn10-encoded TetA pump from resistance at 200 microg/ml to resistance at 40 microg/ml. In this study, we found that the addition of an sbmA mutation to a tolC::Tn10 mutant exacerbates this phenotype: the double mutant did not form colonies, even in the presence of tetracycline at a concentration as low as 5 microg/ml. Inactivation of sbmA alone partially inhibited high-level tetracycline resistance, from resistance at 200 microg/ml to resistance at 120 microg/ml. There thus appears to be an additive effect of the mutations, resulting in almost complete suppression of the phenotypic expression of Tn10 tetracycline resistance.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2009
Sergio Benjamin Socías; Paula A. Vincent; Raúl A. Salomón
Many Escherichia coli K-12 strains display an intrinsic resistance to the peptide antibiotic microcin J25. In this study, we present results showing that the leucine-responsive regulatory protein, Lrp, is involved in this phenotype by acting as a positive regulator of YojI, a chromosomally encoded efflux pump which expels microcin out of cells. Exogenous leucine antagonizes the effect of Lrp, leading to a diminished expression of the pump and an increased susceptibility to microcin J25.
Fems Microbiology Letters | 2009
Sergio Benjamin Socías; Konstantin Severinov; Raúl A. Salomón
Entry of the peptide antibiotic microcin J25 (MccJ25) into target cells is mediated by the outer membrane receptor FhuA and the inner membrane protein SbmA. The latter also transports MccB17 into the cell cytoplasm. Comparison of MccJ25 and MccB17 revealed a tetrapeptide sequence (VGIG) common to both antibiotics. We speculated that this structural feature in MccJ25 could be a motif recognized by SbmA. To test this hypothesis, we used a MccJ25 variant in which the isoleucine in VGIG (position 13 in the MccJ25 sequence) was replaced by lysine (I13K). In experiments in which the FhuA receptor was bypassed, the substituted microcin showed an inhibitory activity similar to that of the wild-type peptide. Moreover, MccJ25 interfered with colicin M uptake by FhuA in a competition assay, while the I13K mutant did not. From these results, we propose that the Ile(13) residue is only required for interaction with FhuA, and that VGIG is not a major recognition element by SbmA.
Annals of Microbiology | 2012
Alicia Cecilia Vallejos; Sergio Benjamin Socías; Ricardo E. de Cristóbal; Raúl A. Salomón
The Escherichia coli sbmA gene has been identified in screens for mutants resistant to the peptide antibiotics microcin B17 and microcin J25, the glycopeptide antibiotic bleomycin and eukariotic peptide antibiotics. Homologs of sbmA have been found in a wide variety of bacteria; however, the natural function of SbmA remains unknown. We demonstrate here that the combined loss of the inner membrane protein SbmA and the outer membrane protein TolC results in a heat-sensitive colony formation phenotype. The sbmA and tolC mutations alone do not exhibit such a phenotype. We propose that TolC and SbmA have an overlapping functionality in some cellular process, and that they backup for one another, particularly for cell growth on solid medium at high temperature. This work establishes for the first time a physiological phenotype for sbmA mutants and opens an avenue for an analysis of the role of this inner membrane protein in bacterial cell physiology.
Journal of Bacteriology | 1999
José O. Solbiati; Mirella Ciaccio; Ricardo N. Farías; José Eduardo González-Pastor; Felipe Moreno; Raúl A. Salomón
FEBS Journal | 2001
Alain Blond; Jean Peduzzi; Christophe Goulard; María J. Chiuchiolo; Michel Barthélémy; Yann Prigent; Raúl A. Salomón; Ricardo N. Farías; Felipe Moreno; Sylvie Rebuffat