Silvia Bezoušková
Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
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Featured researches published by Silvia Bezoušková.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999
Tümay Basar; Vladimír Havlíček; Silvia Bezoušková; Petr Halada; Murray Hackett; Peter Sebo
The Bordetella pertussis RTX (repeat in toxin family protein) adenylate cyclase toxin-hemolysin (ACT) acquires biological activity upon a single amide-linked palmitoylation of the ε-amino group of lysine 983 (Lys983) by the accessory fatty-acyltransferase CyaC. However, an additional conserved RTX acylation site can be identified in ACT at lysine 860 (Lys860), and this residue becomes palmitoylated when recombinant ACT (r-Ec-ACT) is produced together with CyaC in Escherichia coli K12. We have eliminated this additional acylation site by replacing Lys860 of ACT with arginine, leucine, and cysteine residues. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and microcapillary high performance liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometric analyses of mutant proteins confirmed that the two sites are acylated independently in vivo and that mutations of Lys860 did not affect the quantitative acylation of Lys983 by palmitoyl (C16:0) and palmitoleil (cis Δ9 C16:1) fatty-acyl groups. Nevertheless, even the most conservative substitution of lysine 860 by an arginine residue caused a 10-fold decrease of toxin activity. This resulted from a 5-fold reduction of cell association capacity and a further 2-fold reduction in cell penetration efficiency of the membrane-bound K860R toxin. These results suggest that lysine 860 plays by itself a crucial structural role in membrane insertion and translocation of the toxin, independently of its acylation status.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Tümay Basar; Vladimír Havlíček; Silvia Bezoušková; Murray Hackett; Peter S̆ebo
The capacity of adenylate cyclase toxin (ACT) to penetrate into target cells depends on post-translational fatty-acylation by the acyltransferase CyaC, which can palmitoylate the conserved lysines 983 and 860 of ACT. Here, the in vivoacylating capacity of a set of mutated CyaC acyltransferases was characterized by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometric analyses of the ACT product. Substitutions of the potentially catalytic serine 20 and histidine 33 residues ablated acylating activity of CyaC. Conservative replacements of alanine 140 by glycine (A140G) and valine (A140V) residues, however, affected selectivity of CyaC for the two acylation sites on ACT. Activation by the A140G variant of CyaC generated a mixture of bi- and monoacylated ACT molecules, modified either at both Lys-860 and Lys-983, or only at Lys-860, respectively. In contrast, the A140V CyaC produced a nearly 1:1 mixture of nonacylated pro-ACT with ACT monoacylated almost exclusively at Lys-983. The respective proportion of toxin molecules acylated at Lys-983 correlated well with the cell-invasive activity of both ACT mixtures, which was about half of that of ACT fully acylated on Lys-983 by intact CyaC. These results show that acylation of Lys-860 alone does not confer cell-invasive activity on ACT, whereas acylation of Lys-983 is necessary and sufficient.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2010
Linda Nováková; Silvia Bezoušková; Petr Pompach; Petra Špidlová; Lenka Sasková; Jaroslav Weiser; Pavel Branny
Monitoring the external environment and responding to its changes are essential for the survival of all living organisms. The transmission of extracellular signals in prokaryotes is mediated mainly by two-component systems. In addition, genomic analyses have revealed that many bacteria contain eukaryotic-type Ser/Thr protein kinases. The human pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae encodes 13 two-component systems and has a single copy of a eukaryotic-like Ser/Thr protein kinase gene designated stkP. Previous studies demonstrated the pleiotropic role of the transmembrane protein kinase StkP in pneumococcal physiology. StkP regulates virulence, competence, and stress resistance and plays a role in the regulation of gene expression. To determine the intracellular signaling pathways controlled by StkP, we used a proteomic approach for identification of its substrates. We detected six proteins phosphorylated on threonine by StkP continuously during growth. We identified three new substrates of StkP: the Mn-dependent inorganic pyrophosphatase PpaC, the hypothetical protein spr0334, and the cell division protein DivIVA. Contrary to the results of a previous study, we did not confirm that the alpha-subunit of RNA polymerase is a target of StkP. We showed that StkP activation and substrate recognition depend on the presence of a peptidoglycan-binding domain comprising four extracellular penicillin-binding protein- and Ser/Thr kinase-associated domain (PASTA domain) repeats. We found that StkP is regulated in a growth-dependent manner and likely senses intracellular peptidoglycan subunits present in the cell division septa. In addition, stkP inactivation results in cell division defects. Thus, the data presented here suggest that StkP plays an important role in the regulation of cell division in pneumococcus.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2002
Karel Mikulík; Jan Bobek; Silvia Bezoušková; Oldrich Benada; Olga Kofronova
Dormant aerial spores of Streptomyces granaticolor contain pre-existing pool of mRNA and active ribosomes for rapid translation of proteins required for earlier steps of germination. Activated spores were labeled for 30 min with [35S]methionine/cysteine in the presence or absence of rifamycin (400 microg/ml) and resolved by two-dimensional electrophoresis. About 320 proteins were synthesized during the first 30 min of cultivation at the beginning of swelling, before the first DNA replication. Results from nine different experiments performed in the presence of rifamycin revealed 15 protein spots. Transition from dormant spores to swollen spores is not affected by the presence of rifamycin but further development of spores is stopped. To support existence of pre-existing pool of mRNA in spores, cell-free extract of spores (S30 fraction) was used for in vitro protein synthesis. These results indicate that RNA of spores possesses mRNA functionally competent and provides templates for protein synthesis. Cell-free extracts isolated from spores, activated spores, and during spore germination were further examined for in vitro protein phosphorylation. The analyses show that preparation from dormant spores catalyzes phosphorylation of only seven proteins. In the absence of phosphatase inhibitors, several proteins were partially dephosphorylated. The activation of spores leads to a reduction in phosphorylation activity. Results from in vitro phosphorylation reaction indicate that during germination phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of proteins is a complex function of developmental changes.
Folia Microbiologica | 1999
Karel Mikulík; E. Zhoulanova; Quoc-Khanh Hoang; Jiří Janeček; Silvia Bezoušková
Protein kinases can be classified into two main superfamilies on the basis of their sequence similarity and substrate specificity. The protein His kinase superfamily which autophosphorylate a His residue, and superfamily Ser/Thr and Tyr protein kinases, which phosphorylate Ser, Thr or Tyr residues. During the last years genes encoding Ser/Thr protein kinases have been identified in several microorganisms. Phosphorylation of proteins on Ser/Thr residues can be involved in many functions of prokaryotic cells including cell differentiation, signal transduction and protein biosynthesis. Phosphorylation of prokaryotic protein-synthesizing systems showed that the phosphorylation of initiation and elongation factors is subject to alteration during cell differentiation or bacteriophage infection. Protein kinase associated with ribosomes of streptomycetes phosphorylate the elongation factor Tu and 11 ribosomal proteins even in bacteriophage-uninfected cells. After phosphorylation of ribosomal proteins, ribosomes lose about 30% of their activity at the translation of poly(U).
Microbiology | 2014
Zuzana Sochorová; Denisa Petráčková; Barbora Sitařová; Karolína Buriánková; Silvia Bezoušková; Oldřich Benada; Olga Kofroňová; Jiří Janeček; Petr Halada; Jaroslav Weiser
We studied the early stages of pellicle formation by Mycobacterium smegmatis on the surface of a liquid medium [air-liquid interface (A-L)]. Using optical and scanning electron microscopy, we showed the formation of a compact biofilm pellicle from micro-colonies over a period of 8-30 h. The cells in the pellicle changed size and cell division pattern during this period. Based on our findings, we created a model of M. smegmatis A-L early pellicle formation showing the coordinate growth of cells in the micro-colonies and in the homogeneous film between them, where the accessibility to oxygen and nutrients is different. A proteomic approach utilizing high-resolution two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, in combination with mass spectrometry-based protein identification, was used to analyse the protein expression profiles of the different morphological stages of the pellicle. The proteins identified formed four expression groups; the most interesting of these groups contained the proteins with highest expression in the biofilm development phase, when the floating micro-colonies containing long and more robust cells associate into flocs and start to form a compact pellicle. The majority of these proteins, including GroEL1, are involved in cell wall synthesis or modification, mostly through the involvement of mycolic acid biosynthesis, and their expression maxima correlated with the changes in cell size and the rigidity of the bacterial cell wall observed by scanning electron microscopy.
MicrobiologyOpen | 2013
Denisa Petráčková; Jiří Janeček; Silvia Bezoušková; L. Kalachová; Zuzana Techniková; Karolína Buriánková; Petr Halada; Kateřina Haladová; Jaroslav Weiser
We studied the impact of a sublethal concentration of erythromycin on the fitness and proteome of a continuously cultivated population of Escherichia coli. The development of resistance to erythromycin in the population was followed over time by the gradient plate method and minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) measurements. We measured the growth rate, standardized efficiency of synthesis of radiolabeled proteins, and translation accuracy of the system. The proteome changes were followed over time in two parallel experiments that differed in the presence or absence of erythromycin. A comparison of the proteomes at each time point (43, 68, and 103 h) revealed a group of unique proteins differing in expression. From all 35 proteins differing throughout the cultivation, only three were common to more than one time point. In the final population, a significant proportion of upregulated proteins was localized to the outer or inner cytoplasmic membranes or to the periplasmic space. In a population growing for more than 100 generations in the presence of antibiotic, erythromycin‐resistant bacterial clones with improved fitness in comparison to early resistant culture predominated. This phenomenon was accompanied by distinct changes in protein expression during a stepwise, population‐based development of erythromycin resistance.
Proteomics | 2006
Marek Basler; Irena Linhartova; Petr Halada; Jana Novotná; Silvia Bezoušková; Radim Osicka; Jaroslav Weiser; Jiří Vohradský; Peter Sebo
Fems Microbiology Letters | 2013
Denisa Petráčková; Karolína Buriánková; Eva Tesařová; Šárka Bobková; Silvia Bezoušková; Oldřich Benada; Olga Kofroňová; Jiří Janeček; Petr Halada; Jaroslav Weiser
Folia Microbiologica | 2016
Denisa Petráčková; Petr Halada; Silvia Bezoušková; Zdena Křesinová; Kateřina Svobodová