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Dive into the research topics where Víctor S. Blancato is active.

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Featured researches published by Víctor S. Blancato.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2008

Transcriptional Regulation of the Citrate Gene Cluster of Enterococcus faecalis Involves the GntR Family Transcriptional Activator CitO

Víctor S. Blancato; Guillermo D. Repizo; Cristian A. Suárez; Christian Magni

The genome of the gram-positive bacterium Enterococcus faecalis contains the genes that encode the citrate lyase complex. This complex splits citrate into oxaloacetate and acetate and is involved in all the known anaerobic bacterial citrate fermentation pathways. Although citrate fermentation in E. faecalis has been investigated before, the regulation and transcriptional pattern of the cit locus has still not been fully explored. To fill this gap, in this paper we demonstrate that the GntR transcriptional regulator CitO is a novel positive regulator involved in the expression of the cit operons. The transcriptional analysis of the cit clusters revealed two divergent operons: citHO, which codes for the transporter (citH) and the regulatory protein (citO), and upstream from it and in the opposite direction the oadHDB-citCDEFX-oadA-citMG operon, which includes the citrate lyase subunits (citD, citE, and citF), the soluble oxaloacetate decarboxylase (citM), and also the genes encoding a putative oxaloacetate decarboxylase complex (oadB, oadA, oadD and oadH). This analysis also showed that both operons are specifically activated by the addition of citrate to the medium. In order to study the functional role of CitO, a mutant strain with an interrupted citO gene was constructed, causing a total loss of the ability to degrade citrate. Reintroduction of a functional copy of citO to the citO-deficient strain restored the response to citrate and the Cit(+) phenotype. Furthermore, we present evidence that CitO binds to the cis-acting sequences O(1) and O(2), located in the cit intergenic region, increasing its affinity for these binding sites when citrate is present and allowing the induction of both cit promoters.


FEBS Journal | 2006

Functional characterization and Me2+ ion specificity of a Ca2+–citrate transporter from Enterococcus faecalis

Víctor S. Blancato; Christian Magni; Juke S. Lolkema

Secondary transporters of the bacterial CitMHS family transport citrate in complex with a metal ion. Different members of the family are specific for the metal ion in the complex and have been shown to transport Mg2+–citrate, Ca2+–citrate or Fe3+–citrate. The Fe3+–citrate transporter of Streptococcus mutans clusters on the phylogenetic tree on a separate branch with a group of transporters found in the phylum Firmicutes which are believed to be involved in anaerobic citrate degradation. We have cloned and characterized the transporter from Enterococcus faecalis EfCitH in this cluster. The gene was functionally expressed in Escherichia coli and studied using right‐side‐out membrane vesicles. The transporter catalyzes proton‐motive‐force‐driven uptake of the Ca2+–citrate complex with an affinity constant of 3.5 µm. Homologous exchange is catalyzed with a higher efficiency than efflux down a concentration gradient. Analysis of the metal ion specificity of EfCitH activity in right‐side‐out membrane vesicles revealed a specificity that was highly similar to that of the Bacillus subtilis Ca2+–citrate transporter in the same family. In spite of the high sequence identity with the S. mutans Fe3+–citrate transporter, no transport activity with Fe3+ (or Fe2+) could be detected. The transporter of E. faecalis catalyzes translocation of citrate in complex with Ca2+, Sr2+, Mn2+, Cd2+ and Pb2+ and not with Mg2+, Zn2+, Ni2+ and Co2+. The specificity appears to correlate with the size of the metal ion in the complex.


FEBS Journal | 2011

Identification of malic and soluble oxaloacetate decarboxylase enzymes in Enterococcus faecalis

Martín Espariz; Guillermo D. Repizo; Víctor S. Blancato; Pablo Mortera; Sergio Alarcón; Christian Magni

Two paralogous genes, maeE and citM, that encode putative malic enzyme family members were identified in the Enterococcus faecalis genome. MaeE (41 kDa) and CitM (42 kDa) share a high degree of homology between them (47% identities and 68% conservative substitutions). However, the genetic context of each gene suggested that maeE is associated with malate utilization whereas citM is linked to the citrate fermentation pathway. In the present work, we focus on the biochemical characterization and physiological contribution of these enzymes in E. faecalis. With this aim, the recombinant versions of the two proteins were expressed in Escherichia coli, affinity purified and finally their kinetic parameters were determined. This approach allowed us to establish that MaeE is a malate oxidative decarboxylating enzyme and CitM is a soluble oxaloacetate decarboxylase. Moreover, our genetic studies in E. faecalis showed that the citrate fermentation phenotype is not affected by citM deletion. On the other hand, maeE gene disruption resulted in a malate fermentation deficient strain indicating that MaeE is responsible for malate metabolism in E. faecalis. Lastly, it was demonstrated that malate fermentation in E. faecalis is associated with cytoplasmic and extracellular alkalinization which clearly contributes to pH homeostasis in neutral or mild acidic conditions.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Expression of the Agmatine Deiminase Pathway in Enterococcus faecalis Is Activated by the AguR Regulator and Repressed by CcpA and PTSMan Systems

Cristian A. Suárez; Martín Espariz; Víctor S. Blancato; Christian Magni

Although the agmatine deiminase system (AgDI) has been investigated in Enterococcus faecalis, little information is available with respect to its gene regulation. In this study we demonstrate that the presence of exogenous agmatine induces the expression of agu genes in this bacterium. In contrast to the homologous and extensively characterized AgDI system of S. mutants, the aguBDAC operon in E. faecalis is not induced in response to low pH. In spite of this, agmatine catabolism in this bacterium contributes by neutralizing the external medium while enhancing bacterial growth. Our results indicate that carbon catabolic repression (CCR) operates on the AgDI system via a mechanism that involves interaction of CcpA and P-Ser-HPr with a cre site found in an unusual position considering the aguB promoter (55 nt upstream the +1 position). In addition, we found that components of the mannose phosphotransferase (PTSMan) system also contributed to CCR in E. faecalis since a complete relief of the PTS-sugars repressive effect was observed only in a PTSMan and CcpA double defective strain. Our gene context analysis revealed that aguR is present in oral and gastrointestinal microorganisms. Thus, regulation of the aguBDAC operon in E. faecalis seems to have evolved to obtain energy and resist low pH conditions in order to persist and colonize gastrointestinal niches.


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2016

Aroma compounds generation in citrate metabolism of Enterococcus faecium: Genetic characterization of type I citrate gene cluster.

Gabriela P. Martino; Ingrid M. Quintana; Martín Espariz; Víctor S. Blancato; Christian Magni

Enterococcus is one of the most controversial genera belonging to Lactic Acid Bacteria. Research involving this microorganism reflects its dual behavior as regards its safety. Although it has also been associated to nosocomial infections, natural occurrence of Enterococcus faecium in food contributes to the final quality of cheese. This bacterium is capable of fermenting citrate, which is metabolized to pyruvate and finally derives in the production of the aroma compounds diacetyl, acetoin and 2,3 butanediol. Citrate metabolism was studied in E. faecium but no data about genes related to these pathways have been described. A bioinformatic approach allowed us to differentiate cit(-) (no citrate metabolism genes) from cit(+) strains in E. faecium. Furthermore, we could classify them according to genes encoding for the transcriptional regulator, the oxaloacetate decarboxylase and the citrate transporter. Thus we defined type I organization having CitI regulator (DeoR family), CitM cytoplasmic soluble oxaloacetate decarboxylase (Malic Enzyme family) and CitP citrate transporter (2-hydroxy-carboxylate transporter family) and type II organization with CitO regulator (GntR family), OAD membrane oxaloacetate decarboxylase complex (Na(+)-transport decarboxylase enzyme family) and CitH citrate transporter (CitMHS family). We isolated and identified 17 E. faecium strains from regional cheeses. PCR analyses allowed us to classify them as cit(-) or cit(+). Within the latter classification we could differentiate type I but no type II organization. Remarkably, we came upon E. faecium GM75 strain which carries the insertion sequence IS256, involved in adaptative and evolution processes of bacteria related to Staphylococcus and Enterococcus genera. In this work we describe the differential behavior in citrate transport, metabolism and aroma generation of three strains and we present results that link citrate metabolism and genetic organizations in E. faecium for the first time.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Biochemical and Genetic Characterization of the Enterococcus faecalis Oxaloacetate Decarboxylase Complex

Guillermo D. Repizo; Víctor S. Blancato; Pablo Mortera; Juke S. Lolkema; Christian Magni

ABSTRACT Enterococcus faecalis encodes a biotin-dependent oxaloacetate decarboxylase (OAD), which is constituted by four subunits: E. faecalis carboxyltransferase subunit OadA (termed Ef-A), membrane pump Ef-B, biotin acceptor protein Ef-D, and the novel subunit Ef-H. Our results show that in E. faecalis, subunits Ef-A, Ef-D, and Ef-H form a cytoplasmic soluble complex (termed Ef-AHD) which is also associated with the membrane. In order to characterize the role of the novel Ef-H subunit, coexpression of oad genes was performed in Escherichia coli, showing that this subunit is vital for Ef-A and Ef-D interaction. Diminished growth of the oadA and oadD single deletion mutants in citrate-supplemented medium indicated that the activity of the complex is essential for citrate utilization. Remarkably, the oadB-deficient strain was still capable of growing to wild-type levels but with a delay during the citrate-consuming phase, suggesting that the soluble Ef-AHD complex is functional in E. faecalis. These results suggest that the Ef-AHD complex is active in its soluble form, and that it is capable of interacting in a dynamic way with the membrane-bound Ef-B subunit to achieve its maximal alkalinization capacity during citrate fermentation.


BMC Genomics | 2014

Genomic comparative analysis of the environmental Enterococcus mundtii against enterococcal representative species

Guillermo D. Repizo; Martín Espariz; Víctor S. Blancato; Cristian A. Suárez; Luis Esteban; Christian Magni

BackgroundEnterococcus mundtii is a yellow-pigmented microorganism rarely found in human infections. The draft genome sequence of E. mundtii was recently announced. Its genome encodes at least 2,589 genes and 57 RNAs, and 4 putative genomic islands have been detected. The objective of this study was to compare the genetic content of E. mundtii with respect to other enterococcal species and, more specifically, to identify genes coding for putative virulence traits present in enterococcal opportunistic pathogens.ResultsAn in-depth mining of the annotated genome was performed in order to uncover the unique properties of this microorganism, which allowed us to detect a gene encoding the antimicrobial peptide mundticin among other relevant features. Moreover, in this study a comparative genomic analysis against commensal and pathogenic enterococcal species, for which genomic sequences have been released, was conducted for the first time. Furthermore, our study reveals significant similarities in gene content between this environmental isolate and the selected enterococci strains (sharing an “enterococcal gene core” of 805 CDS), which contributes to understand the persistence of this genus in different niches and also improves our knowledge about the genetics of this diverse group of microorganisms that includes environmental, commensal and opportunistic pathogens.ConclusionAlthough E. mundtii CRL1656 is phylogenetically closer to E. faecium, frequently responsible of nosocomial infections, this strain does not encode the most relevant relevant virulence factors found in the enterococcal clinical isolates and bioinformatic predictions indicate that it possesses the lowest number of putative pathogenic genes among the most representative enterococcal species. Accordingly, infection assays using the Galleria mellonella model confirmed its low virulence.


Molecular Microbiology | 2013

Enterococcus faecalis utilizes maltose by connecting two incompatible metabolic routes via a novel maltose 6′-phosphate phosphatase (MapP)

Abdelhamid Mokhtari; Víctor S. Blancato; Guillermo D. Repizo; Céline Henry; Andreas Pikis; Alexa Bourand; María de Fátima Alvarez; Stefan Immel; Aicha Mechakra-Maza; Axel Hartke; John Thompson; Christian Magni; Josef Deutscher

Similar to Bacillus subtilis, Enterococcus faecalis transports and phosphorylates maltose via a phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP):maltose phosphotransferase system (PTS). The maltose‐specific PTS permease is encoded by the malT gene. However, E. faecalis lacks a malA gene encoding a 6‐phospho‐α‐glucosidase, which in B. subtilis hydrolyses maltose 6′‐P into glucose and glucose 6‐P. Instead, an operon encoding a maltose phosphorylase (MalP), a phosphoglucomutase and a mutarotase starts upstream from malT. MalP was suggested to split maltose 6‐P into glucose 1‐P and glucose 6‐P. However, purified MalP phosphorolyses maltose but not maltose 6′‐P. We discovered that the gene downstream from malT encodes a novel enzyme (MapP) that dephosphorylates maltose 6′‐P formed by the PTS. The resulting intracellular maltose is cleaved by MalP into glucose and glucose 1‐P. Slow uptake of maltose probably via a maltodextrin ABC transporter allows poor growth for the mapP but not the malP mutant. Synthesis of MapP in a B. subtilis mutant accumulating maltose 6′‐P restored growth on maltose. MapP catalyses the dephosphorylation of intracellular maltose 6′‐P, and the resulting maltose is converted by the B. subtilis maltose phosphorylase into glucose and glucose 1‐P. MapP therefore connects PTS‐mediated maltose uptake to maltose phosphorylase‐catalysed metabolism. Dephosphorylation assays with a wide variety of phospho‐substrates revealed that MapP preferably dephosphorylates disaccharides containing an O‐α‐glycosyl linkage.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2012

Fine-Tuned Transcriptional Regulation of Malate Operons in Enterococcus faecalis

Pablo Mortera; Martín Espariz; Cristian A. Suárez; Guillermo D. Repizo; Josef Deutscher; Sergio Alarcón; Víctor S. Blancato; Christian Magni

ABSTRACT In Enterococcus faecalis, the mae locus is constituted by two putative divergent operons, maePE and maeKR. The first operon encodes a putative H+/malate symporter (MaeP) and a malic enzyme (MaeE) previously shown to be essential for malate utilization in this bacterium. The maeKR operon encodes two putative proteins with significant similarity to two-component systems involved in sensing malate and activating its assimilation in bacteria. Our transcriptional and genetic assays showed that maePE and maeKR are induced in response to malate by the response regulator MaeR. In addition, we observed that both operons were partially repressed in the presence of glucose. Accordingly, the cometabolism of this sugar and malate was detected. The binding of the complex formed by CcpA and its corepressor P-Ser-HPr to a cre site located in the mae region was demonstrated in vitro and explains the carbon catabolite repression (CCR) observed for the maePE operon. However, our results also provide evidence for a CcpA-independent CCR mechanism regulating the expression of both operons. Finally, a biomass increment of 40 or 75% was observed compared to the biomass of cells grown only on glucose or malate, respectively. Cells cometabolizing both carbon sources exhibit a higher rate of glucose consumption and a lower rate of malate utilization. The growth improvement achieved by E. faecalis during glucose-malate cometabolism might explain why this microorganism employs different regulatory systems to tightly control the assimilation of both carbon sources.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2012

Draft Genome Sequence of Enterococcus mundtii CRL1656

Christian Magni; Carolina Espeche; Guillermo D. Repizo; Lucila Saavedra; Cristian A. Suárez; Víctor S. Blancato; Martín Espariz; Luis Esteban; Raúl R. Raya; Graciela Font de Valdez; Graciela Vignolo; Fernanda Mozzi; María Pía Taranto; Elvira M. Hebert; María Elena Nader-Macías; Fernando Sesma

We report the draft genome sequence of Enterococcus mundtii CRL1656, which was isolated from the stripping milk of a clinically healthy adult Holstein dairy cow from a dairy farm of the northwestern region of Tucumán (Argentina). The 3.10-Mb genome sequence consists of 450 large contigs and contains 2,741 predicted protein-coding genes.

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Christian Magni

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Martín Espariz

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Guillermo D. Repizo

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Luis Esteban

Facultad de Ciencias Médicas

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Cristian A. Suárez

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Sergio Alarcón

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Gabriela P. Martino

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Pablo Mortera

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Josef Deutscher

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Federico Alberto Zuljan

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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