National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Production of toxins by Bacillus subtilis and their roles in interspecies competitions.
Šureková, Kristína ; Krásný, Libor (advisor) ; Mikušová, Gabriela (referee)
Bacillus subtilis is a gram positive soil bacterium that is surrounded by many other microorganisms its environment. That is why it is necessary for the bacterium to be able to fight with these microorganisms for the nutrients and living space. B. subtilis contains the modules in its genetic make-up that improve its ability to compete. These modules are called the toxin-antitoxin systems. This Diploma Thesis is trying to identify yet undescribed extracellular toxins produced by the wild type BSB1 strain of B. subtilis. The related microorganism Bacillus megaterium was used as a competing bacterium. The contact-dependent or independent manner of killing the competing bacterium was demonstrated using this model. By deletion analysis and comparisons of the genomes of the various strains of B. subtilis, the SPβ prophage was first identified as a region containing an unknown toxin(s). Analysis of the extracellular proteome of B. subtilis subsequently revealed an unknown toxin (or toxin complex, respectively) of the molecular weight exceeding 100 kDa. Even more fascinating was the finding that such a large protein molecule is resistant to the pancreatic protease, trypsin. Subsequent non-enzymatic cyanogen bromide cleavage of the extracellular proteins and their analysis by mass spectrometry revealed...
The phenomenon of persistence in bacteria - the role of toxin-antitoxin systems.
Váchal, Martin ; Lichá, Irena (advisor) ; Seydlová, Gabriela (referee)
Most bacterial species currently studied are able to generate a small fraction of heterogeneous persister cells which are tolerant to antibiotics or other antimicrobials and still genetically identical to the susceptible parental population. Bacterial persisters emerge as a result of the stochastic regulation of cellular processes. Persistence can be triggered by stressful environmental stimuli or emerge spontaneously under favourable growth conditions. According to their origin, persistent subpopulations were divided into type I and type II persisters. Many recent studies indicate that toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems increase persistence. TA systems are ubiquitous genetic elements in prokaryotes and consist of a stable toxin, inhibiting essential cellular functions in persister cells, and an unstable antitoxin, which counteracts the activity of its toxin. Overexpression of toxin parts in excess of their corresponding antitoxin leads to multidrug tolerance (MDT). This work summarizes causes of persister formation and their hypothetical survival strategies and deals primarily with TA systems, controlling bacterial persistence of model organism Escherichia coli. The emphasis is put on the description of type I TA system TisB/IstR-1, type II TA systems HipBA, RelBE, MazEF, DinJ-YafQ, MqsRA, type V TA...

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