YfdX
From Proteopedia
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You may include any references to papers as in: the use of JSmol in Proteopedia <ref>DOI 10.1002/ijch.201300024</ref> or to the article describing Jmol <ref>PMID:21638687</ref> to the rescue. | You may include any references to papers as in: the use of JSmol in Proteopedia <ref>DOI 10.1002/ijch.201300024</ref> or to the article describing Jmol <ref>PMID:21638687</ref> to the rescue. | ||
| - | == Introduction == YfdX is a family protein that is encoded by several pathogenic bacteria such as Salmonella and E. coli. Particularly YfdX is encoded in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi that causes a fatal disease called Typhoid Fever. Salmonella is a gram-negative bacterium that is excellent at infecting living organisms. They are fast replicating, mobile, and are armed with needle completes that can penetrate cells in the human digestive tract (“Salmonella Are Armed, Agile and Primed for Invasion.”). When Salmonella invade the epithelial cells lining the intestines it can survive and replicate inside membrane bond compartments called vacuoles (“Salmonella Are Armed, Agile and Primed for Invasion.”) The salmonella moves from cells to cell with a flagellum with in the intestine (“Salmonella Are Armed, Agile and Primed for Invasion.”). | + | == Introduction == YfdX<scene name='81/814058/Yfdx/1'>YfdX ribbon structure</scene> is a family protein that is encoded by several pathogenic bacteria such as Salmonella and E. coli. Particularly YfdX is encoded in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi that causes a fatal disease called Typhoid Fever. Salmonella is a gram-negative bacterium that is excellent at infecting living organisms. They are fast replicating, mobile, and are armed with needle completes that can penetrate cells in the human digestive tract (“Salmonella Are Armed, Agile and Primed for Invasion.”). When Salmonella invade the epithelial cells lining the intestines it can survive and replicate inside membrane bond compartments called vacuoles (“Salmonella Are Armed, Agile and Primed for Invasion.”) The salmonella moves from cells to cell with a flagellum with in the intestine (“Salmonella Are Armed, Agile and Primed for Invasion.”). |
== Disease == Typhoid fever is a disease that can be spread by contaminated food or water and causes symptoms of lasting fever, weakness, stomach pains, headache, loss of appetite, constipation and sometimes internal bleeding (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017). S. Typhi it is an etiologic agent, the microbial toxin that causes disease in humans. S Typhi is a human restricted disease however, some higher primates can be infected experimentally (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). S. Typhi is 90% homologous to S Typhimurium but S. Typhimurium can infect both humans and primates (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). S. Typhi is unique for a couple of small reasons. First S. Typhi has a large region specific to it, Salmonella pathogenicity island 7 that encodes the viaB locus (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). This locus consists of ten genes related to the biosynthesis and export of Vi polysaccharides capsule (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). This involves circumventing Toll-Like Receptors mediated immune surveillance (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). Another area that is specific to S. Typhi is a small island with a locus encoding five genes (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). These genes include three typhoid toxins components, a bacteriophage muramidase homolog controlling typhoid toxin secretions and a small gene of unknown function (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). | == Disease == Typhoid fever is a disease that can be spread by contaminated food or water and causes symptoms of lasting fever, weakness, stomach pains, headache, loss of appetite, constipation and sometimes internal bleeding (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017). S. Typhi it is an etiologic agent, the microbial toxin that causes disease in humans. S Typhi is a human restricted disease however, some higher primates can be infected experimentally (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). S. Typhi is 90% homologous to S Typhimurium but S. Typhimurium can infect both humans and primates (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). S. Typhi is unique for a couple of small reasons. First S. Typhi has a large region specific to it, Salmonella pathogenicity island 7 that encodes the viaB locus (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). This locus consists of ten genes related to the biosynthesis and export of Vi polysaccharides capsule (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). This involves circumventing Toll-Like Receptors mediated immune surveillance (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). Another area that is specific to S. Typhi is a small island with a locus encoding five genes (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). These genes include three typhoid toxins components, a bacteriophage muramidase homolog controlling typhoid toxin secretions and a small gene of unknown function (Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017)). | ||
Revision as of 15:38, 22 April 2019
Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag;
refs with no name must have content==Your Heading Here (maybe something like 'Structure')== YfdX linkage to Typhoid Fever
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References
Saha, P. et al. Antibiotic binding of STY3178, a yfdX protein from Salmonella Typhi. Sci. Rep. 6, 21305; doi: 10.1038/srep21305 (2016).- ↑ Hanson, R. M., Prilusky, J., Renjian, Z., Nakane, T. and Sussman, J. L. (2013), JSmol and the Next-Generation Web-Based Representation of 3D Molecular Structure as Applied to Proteopedia. Isr. J. Chem., 53:207-216. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijch.201300024
- ↑ Herraez A. Biomolecules in the computer: Jmol to the rescue. Biochem Mol Biol Educ. 2006 Jul;34(4):255-61. doi: 10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644. PMID:21638687 doi:10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644
Chong, A., Lee, S., Yang, Y. A., & Song, J. (2017). The Role of Typhoid Toxin in Salmonella Typhi Virulence . The Yale journal of biology and medicine, 90(2), 283-290. “Salmonella Are Armed, Agile and Primed for Invasion.” National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 6 July 2015
Nishino, K., Inazumi, Y., & Yamaguchi, A. (2003). Global analysis of genes regulated by EvgA of the two-component regulatory system in Escherichia coli. Journal of bacteriology, 185(8), 2667-72.
Toyota, Cory G., et al. “Differential Substrate Specificity and Kinetic Behavior of Escherichia Coli YfdW and Oxalobacter Formigenes Formyl Coenzyme A Transferase.” Journal of Bacteriology, American Society for Microbiology Journals, 1 Apr. 2008, jb.asm.org/content/190/7/2556#skip-link.
Lee, Hye Seon, et al. “Structural and Physiological Exploration of Salmonella Typhi YfdX Uncovers Its Dual Function in Bacterial Antibiotic Stress and Virulence.” Frontiers in Microbiology, Frontiers Media S.A., 14 Jan. 2019,
Saha, P., Manna, C., Das, S., & Ghosh, M. (2016). Antibiotic binding of STY3178, a yfdX protein from Salmonella Typhi. Scientific reports, 6, 21305. doi:10.1038/srep21305
