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  • HlyD mutants  (1)
  • Photopigments  (1)
  • Springer  (2)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Keywords: Leiothrix lutea ; Photopigments ; Oil droplets ; Spectral sensitivity ; UV-cone
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The visual receptors in the retina of the passeriform bird Leiothrix lutea were examined microspectro-photometrically. The rods had a maximum absorbance close to 500 nm. Four spectrally different classes of single cone were identified with typical combinations of photopigments and oil droplets: a long-wave sensitive cone with a photopigment P568 and a droplet with a cut-off wavelength at 564 nm, a middle-wave sensitive cone with a P499 and a droplet with a cut-off at 506 nm, a short-wave sensitive cone with a P454 and a droplet with maximum absorbance below 410nm and an ultraviolet sensitive cone with a P355 and a transparent droplet. Double cones possessed a P568 in both the principal and accessory members. A pale droplet with variable absorbance (maximal at about 420 nm) was associated with the principal member whereas the ellipsoid region of the accessory member contained only low concentrations of carotenoid. The effective spectral sensitivities of the different cone classes were calculated from the characteristic combinations of oil droplets and photopigments and corrected for the absorbance of the ocular media. Comparison of these results with the behavioural spectral sensitivity function of Leiothrix lutea suggests that the increment threshold photopic spectral sensitivity of this avian species is mediated by the 4 single cone classes modified by neural opponent mechanisms.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Key words Hemolysin secretion ; HlyD mutants ; HlyD/HlyB suppressor mutants ; TolC ; Vancomycin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The glycopeptide antibiotic vancomycin blocks cell wall synthesis in Escherichia coli only when it can reach its target site in the periplasm. In vivo, sensitivity to vancomycin is enhanced in the presence of the hemolysin (hly) determinant of E. coli or its translocator portion hlyBD. Two different mutations in hlyD alter the cell's susceptibility to vancomycin: mutations in the tolC-homologous region of hlyD increase vancomycin resistance, whereas mutations at the 3′-terminus of hlyD lead to hypersensitivity to vancomycin and to the accumulation of large periplasmic and cytoplasmic pools of this antibiotic in E. coli. These effects are only observed in the presence of functional HlyB and TolC, the two other components of the hemolysin secretion machinery. A defect in TolC causes hyperresistance to vancomycin, even when present together with a mutant HlyD protein which in the presence of TolC renders E. coli hypersensitive to vancomycin. Lipid bilayer experiments in vitro revealed specific interactions between TolC and vancomycin or HlyD protein. Second-site suppressor mutations in hlyD and hlyB were obtained, which abolish the hypersensitive phenotype caused by the 3′-terminal mutations in hlyD. Our results are compatible with the idea that (a) TolC, together with the TolC-homologous part of HlyD, forms a pore in the outer membrane through which hemolysin is released and vancomycin taken up; and (b) the C-terminal sequence of HlyD interacts with periplasmic loop(s) of HlyB to form a closed channel spanning the periplasm.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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