Toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems are implicated in prokaryotic stress adaptation. Previously, bioinformatics analysis predicted that such systems are abundant in some slowly growing chemolithotrophs; e.g., Nitrosomonas europaea. Nevertheless, the molecular functions of these stress-response modules remain largely unclear, limiting insight regarding their physiological roles. Herein, we show that one of the putative MazF family members, encoded at the ALW85_RS04820 locus, constitutes a functional toxin that engenders a TA pair with its cognate MazE antitoxin. The coordinate application of a specialised RNA-Seq and a fluorescence quenching technique clarified that a unique triplet, UGG, serves as the determinant for MazF cleavage. Notably, statistical analysis predicted that two transcripts, which are unique in the autotroph, comprise the prime targets of the MazF endoribonuclease: hydroxylamine dehydrogenase (hao), which is essential for ammonia oxidation, and a large subunit of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rbcL), which plays an important role in carbon assimilation. Given that N. europaea obtains energy and reductants via ammonia oxidation and the carbon for its growth from carbon dioxide, the chemolithotroph might use the MazF endoribonuclease to modulate its translation profile and subsequent biochemical reactions.
Lectin is a biomolecule that recognizes a specific part of glycans and, thus, has been used widely as a probe for glycoprotein analysis. Owing to the wide repertoire in nature combined with the recent two decades of advances in microarray technology, the multiplexed use of lectins has been widely used for glycan profiling of endogenous proteins. Because protein glycosylation is recognized as being biologically important and is expected to be a reliable disease marker, lectin microarray analysis with highly sensitive detection has been used to discover disease‐relevant glycosylation alterations. However, the conventional system is limited to research purposes; thus, its implementation in clinical settings is warranted. Here, we provide an automatic glycan profiling method using GlycoBIST. A unique array format is used for 10‐plexed lectin–glycoprotein interaction analysis on 1‐mm‐sized beads, which are arranged vertically in a capillary‐shaped plastic tip. Using a one‐boxed autopipetting machine, the whole process (including interaction, washing, and detection) is performed automatically and serially, resulting in reproducible measurements. In this article, a typical method for glycan profiling of a purified glycoprotein and the fabrication of GlycoBIST tips is explained. © 2020 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Basic Protocol 1: Fabrication of a GlycoBIST tip Basic Protocol 2: Automatic profiling of a target glycoprotein using GlycoBIST
The toxin-antitoxin (TA) system, inherent to various prokaryotes, plays a critical role in survival and adaptation to diverse environmental stresses. The toxin MazF, belonging to the type II TA system, functions as a sequence-specific ribonuclease that recognizes 3 to 7 bases. In recent studies, crystallographic analysis of MazFs from several species have suggested the presence of amino acid sites important for MazF substrate RNA binding and for its catalytic activity. Herein, we characterized MazF obtained from Candidatus Desulforudis audaxviator (MazF-Da) and identified the amino acid residues necessary for its catalytic function. MazF-Da, expressed using a cell-free protein synthesis system, is a six-base-recognition-specific ribonuclease that preferentially cleaves UACAAA sequences and weakly cleaves UACGAA and UACUAA sequences. We found that MazF-Da exhibited the highest activity at around 60°C. Analysis using mutants with a single mutation at an amino acid residue site that is well conserved across various MazF toxins showed that G18, E20, R25, and P26 were important for the ribonuclease activity of MazF-Da. The recognition sequence of the N36A mutant differed from that of the wild type. This mutant cleaved UACAAG sequences in addition to UACAAA sequences, but did not cleave UACGAA or UACUAA sequences, suggesting that Asn36 affects the loosening and narrowing of MazF-Da cleavage sequence recognition. Our study posits UACAAA as the recognition sequence of MazF-Da and provides insight into the amino acid sites that are key to its unique enzymatic properties.
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