Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9440025 Research in Microbiology 2005 7 Pages PDF
Abstract
Cells of the facultative photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus (MT1131 strain) incubated with 10 μg ml−1 of the toxic oxyanion tellurite (TeO2−3) exhibited an increase in superoxide dismutase activity. The latter effect was also seen upon incubation with sublethal amounts of paraquat, a cytosolic generator of superoxide anions (O2⋅−), in parallel with a strong increase in tellurite resistance (TeR). A mutant strain (CW10) deficient in SenC, a protein with similarities to peroxiredoxin/thiol:disulfide oxidoreductases and a homologue of mitochondrial Sco proteins, was constructed by interposon mutagenesis via the gene transfer agent system. Notably, the absence of SenC affected R. capsulatus resistance to periplasmic O2⋅− generated by xanthine/xanthine oxidase but not to cytosolic O2⋅− produced by paraquat. Further, the absence of SenC did not affect R. capsulatus tellurite resistance. We conclude that: (1) cytosolic-generated O2⋅− enhances TeR of this bacterial species; (2) small amounts of tellurite increase SOD activity so as to mimic the early cell response to oxidative stress; (3) SenC protein is required in protection of R. capsulatus against periplasmic oxidative stress; and finally, (4) SenC protein is not involved in TeR, possibly because tellurite does not generate O⋅−2 at the periplasmic space level.
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