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Dive into the research topics where Wayne S. Kontur is active.

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Featured researches published by Wayne S. Kontur.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

One-step DNA melting in the RNA polymerase cleft opens the initiation bubble to form an unstable open complex

Theodore J. Gries; Wayne S. Kontur; Michael W. Capp; Ruth M. Saecker; M. Thomas Record

Though opening of the start site (+1) region of promoter DNA is required for transcription by RNA polymerase (RNAP), surprisingly little is known about how and when this occurs in the mechanism. Early events at the λPR promoter load this region of duplex DNA into the active site cleft of Escherichia coli RNAP, forming the closed, permanganate-unreactive intermediate I1. Conversion to the subsequent intermediate I2 overcomes a large enthalpic barrier. Is I2 open? Here we create a burst of I2 by rapidly destabilizing open complexes (RPo) with 1.1 M NaCl. Fast footprinting reveals that thymines at positions from -11 to +2 in I2 are permanganate-reactive, demonstrating that RNAP opens the entire initiation bubble in the cleft in a single step. Rates of decay of all observed thymine reactivities are the same as the I2 to I1 conversion rate determined by filter binding. In I2, permanganate reactivity of the +1 thymine on the template (t) strand is the same as the RPo control, whereas nontemplate (nt) thymines are significantly less reactive than in RPo. We propose that: (i) the +1(t) thymine is in the active site in I2; (ii) conversion of I2 to RPo repositions the nt strand in the cleft; and (iii) movements of the nt strand are coupled to the assembly and DNA binding of the downstream clamp and jaw that occurs after DNA opening and stabilizes RPo. We hypothesize that unstable open intermediates at the λPR promoter resemble the unstable, transcriptionally competent open complexes formed at ribosomal promoters.


Biochemistry | 2010

Probing DNA binding, DNA opening, and assembly of a downstream clamp/jaw in Escherichia coli RNA polymerase-lambdaP(R) promoter complexes using salt and the physiological anion glutamate.

Wayne S. Kontur; Michael W. Capp; Theodore J. Gries; Ruth M. Saecker; M. Thomas Record

Transcription by all RNA polymerases (RNAPs) requires a series of large-scale conformational changes to form the transcriptionally competent open complex RP(o). At the lambdaP(R) promoter, Escherichia coli sigma(70) RNAP first forms a wrapped, closed 100 bp complex I(1). The subsequent step opens the entire DNA bubble, creating the relatively unstable (open) complex I(2). Additional conformational changes convert I(2) to the stable RP(o). Here we probe these events by dissecting the effects of Na(+) salts of Glu(-), F(-), and Cl(-) on each step in this critical process. Rapid mixing and nitrocellulose filter binding reveal that the binding constant for I(1) at 25 degrees C is approximately 30-fold larger in Glu(-) than in Cl(-) at the same Na(+) concentration, with the same log-log salt concentration dependence for both anions. In contrast, both the rate constant and equilibrium constant for DNA opening (I(1) to I(2)) are only weakly dependent on salt concentration, and the opening rate constant is insensitive to replacement of Cl(-) with Glu(-). These very small effects of salt concentration on a process (DNA opening) that is strongly dependent on salt concentration in solution may indicate that the backbones of both DNA strands interact with polymerase throughout the process and/or that compensation is present between ion uptake and release. Replacement of Cl(-) with Glu(-) or F(-) at 25 degrees C greatly increases the lifetime of RP(o) and greatly reduces its salt concentration dependence. By analogy to Hofmeister salt effects on protein folding, we propose that the excluded anions Glu(-) and F(-) drive the folding and assembly of the RNAP clamp/jaw domains in the conversion of I(2) to RP(o), while Cl(-) does not. Because the Hofmeister effect of Glu(-) or F(-) largely compensates for the destabilizing Coulombic effect of any salt on the binding of this assembly to downstream promoter DNA, RP(o) remains long-lived even at 0.5 M Na(+) in Glu(-) or F(-) salts. The observation that Esigma(70) RP(o) complexes are exceedingly long-lived at moderate to high Glu(-) concentrations argues that Esigma(70) RNAP does not dissociate from strong promoters in vivo when the cytoplasmic glutamate concentration increases during osmotic stress.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011

Pathways Involved in Reductant Distribution during Photobiological H2 Production by Rhodobacter sphaeroides

Wayne S. Kontur; Eva C. Ziegelhoffer; Melanie A. Spero; Saheed Imam; Daniel R. Noguera; Timothy J. Donohue

ABSTRACT We used global transcript analyses and mutant studies to investigate the pathways that impact H2 production in the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. We found that H2 production capacity is related to the levels of expression of the nitrogenase and hydrogenase enzymes and the enzymes of the Calvin-Benson-Bassham pathway.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2012

Revised Sequence and Annotation of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1 Genome

Wayne S. Kontur; Wendy Schackwitz; Natalia Ivanova; Joel Martin; Kurt LaButti; Shweta Deshpande; Hope Tice; Christa Pennacchio; Erica Sodergren; George M. Weinstock; Daniel R. Noguera; Timothy J. Donohue

The DNA sequences of chromosomes I and II of Rhodobacter sphaeroides strain 2.4.1 have been revised, and the annotation of the entire genomic sequence, including both chromosomes and the five plasmids, has been updated. Errors in the originally published sequence have been corrected, and ~11% of the coding regions in the original sequence have been affected by the revised annotation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Probing the protein-folding mechanism using denaturant and temperature effects on rate constants

Emily J. Guinn; Wayne S. Kontur; Oleg V. Tsodikov; Irina A. Shkel; Record Mt

Significance Analysis of effects of denaturants and temperature on folding and unfolding rate constants of 13 globular proteins yields the amount and composition of the surface buried in folding to and from the high–free-energy transition state (TS), and thereby provides information about folding mechanisms and early unstable folding intermediates. All 13 proteins preferentially bury amide surface in folding to TS; amounts of amide and hydrocarbon surface buried in folding to TS generally exceed those buried in forming the native secondary structure. From this, we conclude that most native secondary structure forms in early unstable folding intermediates and that conversion of these intermediates to TS involves nucleation of tertiary interactions, allowing preferential burial of hydrocarbon surface as TS folds. Protein folding has been extensively studied, but many questions remain regarding the mechanism. Characterizing early unstable intermediates and the high–free-energy transition state (TS) will help answer some of these. Here, we use effects of denaturants (urea, guanidinium chloride) and temperature on folding and unfolding rate constants and the overall equilibrium constant as probes of surface area changes in protein folding. We interpret denaturant kinetic m-values and activation heat capacity changes for 13 proteins to determine amounts of hydrocarbon and amide surface buried in folding to and from TS, and for complete folding. Predicted accessible surface area changes for complete folding agree in most cases with structurally determined values. We find that TS is advanced (50–90% of overall surface burial) and that the surface buried is disproportionately amide, demonstrating extensive formation of secondary structure in early intermediates. Models of possible pre-TS intermediates with all elements of the native secondary structure, created for several of these proteins, bury less amide and hydrocarbon surface than predicted for TS. Therefore, we propose that TS generally has both the native secondary structure and sufficient organization of other regions of the backbone to nucleate subsequent (post-TS) formation of tertiary interactions. The approach developed here provides proof of concept for the use of denaturants and other solutes as probes of amount and composition of the surface buried in coupled folding and other large conformational changes in TS and intermediates in protein processes.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2012

Maximizing reductant flow into microbial H2 production.

Wayne S. Kontur; Daniel R. Noguera; Timothy J. Donohue

Developing microbes into a sustainable source of hydrogen gas (H2) will require maximizing intracellular reductant flow toward the H2-producing enzymes. Recent attempts to increase H2 production in dark fermentative bacteria include increasing oxidation of organic substrates through metabolic engineering and expression of exogenous hydrogenases. In photofermentative bacteria, H2 production can be increased by minimizing reductant flow into competing pathways such as biomass formation and the Calvin cycle. One method of directing reductant toward H2 production being investigated in oxygenic phototrophs, which could potentially be applied to other H2-producing organisms, is the tethering of electron donors and acceptors, such as hydrogenase and photosystem I, to create new intermolecular electron transfer pathways.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2015

A Cardiolipin-Deficient Mutant of Rhodobacter sphaeroides Has an Altered Cell Shape and Is Impaired in Biofilm Formation

Ti-Yu Lin; Thiago M. A. Santos; Wayne S. Kontur; Timothy J. Donohue; Douglas B. Weibel

UNLABELLED Cell shape has been suggested to play an important role in the regulation of bacterial attachment to surfaces and the formation of communities associated with surfaces. We found that a cardiolipin synthase (Δcls) mutant of the rod-shaped bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides--in which synthesis of the anionic, highly curved phospholipid cardiolipin (CL) is reduced by 90%--produces ellipsoid-shaped cells that are impaired in biofilm formation. Reducing the concentration of CL did not cause significant defects in R. sphaeroides cell growth, swimming motility, lipopolysaccharide and exopolysaccharide production, surface adhesion protein expression, and membrane permeability. Complementation of the CL-deficient mutant by ectopically expressing CL synthase restored cells to their rod shape and increased biofilm formation. Treating R. sphaeroides cells with a low concentration (10 μg/ml) of the small-molecule MreB inhibitor S-(3,4-dichlorobenzyl)isothiourea produced ellipsoid-shaped cells that had no obvious growth defect yet reduced R. sphaeroides biofilm formation. This study demonstrates that CL plays a role in R. sphaeroides cell shape determination, biofilm formation, and the ability of the bacterium to adapt to its environment. IMPORTANCE Membrane composition plays a fundamental role in the adaptation of many bacteria to environmental stress. In this study, we build a new connection between the anionic phospholipid cardiolipin (CL) and cellular adaptation in Rhodobacter sphaeroides. We demonstrate that CL plays a role in the regulation of R. sphaeroides morphology and is important for the ability of this bacterium to form biofilms. This study correlates CL concentration, cell shape, and biofilm formation and provides the first example of how membrane composition in bacteria alters cell morphology and influences adaptation. This study also provides insight into the potential of phospholipid biosynthesis as a target for new chemical strategies designed to alter or prevent biofilm formation.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2015

Metabolism of Multiple Aromatic Compounds in Corn Stover Hydrolysate by Rhodopseudomonas palustris

Samantha Austin; Wayne S. Kontur; Arne Ulbrich; J. Zachary Oshlag; Weiping Zhang; Alan Higbee; Yaoping Zhang; Joshua J. Coon; David B. Hodge; Timothy J. Donohue; Daniel R. Noguera

Lignocellulosic biomass hydrolysates hold great potential as a feedstock for microbial biofuel production, due to their high concentration of fermentable sugars. Present at lower concentrations are a suite of aromatic compounds that can inhibit fermentation by biofuel-producing microbes. We have developed a microbial-mediated strategy for removing these aromatic compounds, using the purple nonsulfur bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris. When grown photoheterotrophically in an anaerobic environment, R. palustris removes most of the aromatics from ammonia fiber expansion (AFEX) treated corn stover hydrolysate (ACSH), while leaving the sugars mostly intact. We show that R. palustris can metabolize a host of aromatic substrates in ACSH that have either been previously described as unable to support growth, such as methoxylated aromatics, and those that have not yet been tested, such as aromatic amides. Removing the aromatics from ACSH with R. palustris, allowed growth of a second microbe that could not grow in the untreated ACSH. By using defined mutants, we show that most of these aromatic compounds are metabolized by the benzoyl-CoA pathway. We also show that loss of enzymes in the benzoyl-CoA pathway prevents total degradation of the aromatics in the hydrolysate, and instead allows for biological transformation of this suite of aromatics into selected aromatic compounds potentially recoverable as an additional bioproduct.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2015

Using solutes and kinetics to probe large conformational changes in the steps of transcription initiation.

Emily Ruff; Wayne S. Kontur; M. Thomas Record

Small solutes are useful probes of large conformational changes in RNA polymerase-promoter interactions and other biopolymer processes. In general, a large effect of a solute on an equilibrium constant (or rate constant) indicates a large change in water-accessible biopolymer surface area in the corresponding step (or transition state), resulting from conformational changes, interface formation, or both. Here, we describe nitrocellulose filter binding assays from series used to determine the urea dependence of open complex formation and dissociation with Escherichia coli RNA polymerase and phage λPR promoter DNA. Then, we describe the subsequent data analysis and interpretation of these solute effects.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2017

In Vitro Enzymatic Depolymerization of Lignin with Release of Syringyl, Guaiacyl, and Tricin Units

Daniel L. Gall; Wayne S. Kontur; Wu Lan; Hoon Kim; Yanding Li; John Ralph; Timothy J. Donohue; Daniel R. Noguera

ABSTRACT New environmentally sound technologies are needed to derive valuable compounds from renewable resources. Lignin, an abundant polymer in terrestrial plants comprised predominantly of guaiacyl and syringyl monoaromatic phenylpropanoid units, is a potential natural source of aromatic compounds. In addition, the plant secondary metabolite tricin is a recently discovered and moderately abundant flavonoid in grasses. The most prevalent interunit linkage between guaiacyl, syringyl, and tricin units is the β-ether linkage. Previous studies have shown that bacterial β-etherase pathway enzymes catalyze glutathione-dependent cleavage of β-ether bonds in dimeric β-ether lignin model compounds. To date, however, it remains unclear whether the known β-etherase enzymes are active on lignin polymers. Here we report on enzymes that catalyze β-ether cleavage from bona fide lignin, under conditions that recycle the cosubstrates NAD+ and glutathione. Guaiacyl, syringyl, and tricin derivatives were identified as reaction products when different model compounds or lignin fractions were used as substrates. These results demonstrate an in vitro enzymatic system that can recycle cosubstrates while releasing aromatic monomers from model compounds as well as natural and engineered lignin oligomers. These findings can improve the ability to produce valuable aromatic compounds from a renewable resource like lignin. IMPORTANCE Many bacteria are predicted to contain enzymes that could convert renewable carbon sources into substitutes for compounds that are derived from petroleum. The β-etherase pathway present in sphingomonad bacteria could cleave the abundant β–O–4-aryl ether bonds in plant lignin, releasing a biobased source of aromatic compounds for the chemical industry. However, the activity of these enzymes on the complex aromatic oligomers found in plant lignin is unknown. Here we demonstrate biodegradation of lignin polymers using a minimal set of β-etherase pathway enzymes, the ability to recycle needed cofactors (glutathione and NAD+) in vitro, and the release of guaiacyl, syringyl, and tricin as depolymerized products from lignin. These observations provide critical evidence for the use and future optimization of these bacterial β-etherase pathway enzymes for industrial-level biotechnological applications designed to derive high-value monomeric aromatic compounds from lignin.

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Timothy J. Donohue

Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation

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Daniel R. Noguera

Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center

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M. Thomas Record

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Michael W. Capp

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Ruth M. Saecker

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Theodore J. Gries

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Arne Ulbrich

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Caroline A. Davis

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Daniel L. Gall

Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center

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Emily J. Guinn

California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences

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