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  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Bruce, E"

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    Cloning and comparison of ten gene sequences of a Chilean H-pylori strain with other H-pylori strains revealed higher variability for VacA and CagA virulence factors
    (2002) Müller, I; Medina-Selby, A; Palacios, JL; Martinez, P; Opazo, P; Bruce, E; Mancilla, M; Valenzuela, P; Yudelevich, A; Venegas, A
    We have cloned and sequenced ten Helicobacter pylori genes from a Chilean strain (CH-CTX1) including: a cytotoxin VacA fragment, a CagA fragment (A 17), a species-specific protein (TsaA), urease subunits (UreA, UreB), a flagellin subunit (FlaB), heat shock proteins (HspA and HspB), adhesin (HpaA) and a lipoprotein (Lpp20). We compared their deduced amino acid sequences with the corresponding sequences from three unrelated H. pylori strains, including fully sequenced strains 26695(UK) and J99(USA), and found that eight of them (UreA, UreB, FlaB, HspA, HspB, Lpp20, TsaA and HpaA) presented more than 97.3% identity. In contrast, VacA partial sequence showed lower identity values (93.2-94.9%). Moreover, we found major differences in the A] 7 region respect to the number and arrangement of the internal repeated elements when sequences from different strains were aligned. The A17 regions from strains CH-CTX1 and 26695 are very similar (91.8% identity) but lacked 6 repeated elements when compared to the Australian strains ATCC 43526 and NCTC 11637. The CCUG 17874 A17 region showed the largest deletion involving 9 repeats. A 17 size differences between strains CCUG 17874 and CH-CTX1 were verified by PCR and polypeptide size. Such differences may explain variations in virulence among H. pylori strains as well as diversity in serum immunoreactivity.
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    Construction of a gene encoding the insect bactericidal protein attacin. Studies on its expression in Escherichia coli.
    (1997) Santibanez, E; Gomez, I; Martinez, MT; Bruce, E; Venegas, A
    Attacin, a bactericidal small protein is produced by the giant silk moth Hyalophora cecropia. This paper deals with our efforts to clone the attacin cDNA in a bacterial vector to express it in Escherichia coli and produce the protein in sufficient amount for further studies. We chose two inducible expression vector/bacterial cell systems: pPL-lambda/N99cI(+) cells which is able to be induced by nalidixic acid, and pET3d/BL21(DE3) cells carrying a T7 RNA polymerase gene which is IPTG-inducible. After cloning in the pPL-lambda system and under no addition of the inducer, isolated transformants carried this plasmid with at least 2 concurrent deletions that drastically affected attacin expression, even though attacin gene seems to be intact as deduced by its PCR amplification. It was concluded that basal attacin expression occurred in this system and bacterial growth was limited. Plasmid deletions may have emerged by selection pressure as a way to avoid bactericidal expression and allow bacteria survival. The second cloning attempt was done in pET3d vector/BL21 cells, that should not express the cloned sequence (they lack T7 RNA polymerase gene). Transformed BL21 cells gave 3 recombinant plasmids, 2 of them presented a C deletion that generated an early stop signal in the attacin coding region. The third clone, pET-ATT18, carrying an intact gene, was transferred to BL21(DE3)-IPTG inducible cells in order to be expressed. Attacin was undetectable in stained gels or by Western blot analysis. However, expression was visualized in grown cells after 30 min of IPTG induction and 5 min of [S-35]-methionine labeling, as a 22.5 kDa protein bond by using gel electrophoresis and fluorography. This low level of expression drastically affected bacterial growth. Considering that attacin has no lytic activity, these results suggest that this molecule should block bacterial growth directly at the cytoplasm by an unknown mechanism, since no signal peptide coding sequence was incorporated in this gene construction, precluding periplasmic or external destination of this protein.

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