Exploring the molecular mechanisms of Ag(I) transporters involved in bacterial Ag(I) resistance

Silver (Ag(I)) displays multiple antimicrobial properties that have led to its widespread use in the medical field. However, extensive use of Ag(I) has led to the emergence of bacterial resistance to Ag(I). Resistance to Ag(I) was inferred through the presence of plasmid pMG101 that contains a gene...

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Main Author: Lithgo, Ryan
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69232/
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author Lithgo, Ryan
author_facet Lithgo, Ryan
author_sort Lithgo, Ryan
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Silver (Ag(I)) displays multiple antimicrobial properties that have led to its widespread use in the medical field. However, extensive use of Ag(I) has led to the emergence of bacterial resistance to Ag(I). Resistance to Ag(I) was inferred through the presence of plasmid pMG101 that contains a gene cluster, sil, which allowed bacteria to survive six times the normal lethal dose of Ag(I). The proteins of the sil system were given putative functions based on their sequence homology to the more extensively studied cue and cus systems, involved in copper homeostasis. To date only SilE has been characterised. This work herein describes the functional and structural characterisation of three more of the proteins of the sil system; SilP, SilF and SilC. Functional characterisation involved the use of a variety of biophysical and biochemical assays, with the former giving information on the oligomeric state of the proteins and the effects of metal binding. The biochemical assays showed that the proteins are able to bind or interact with Ag(I) and Cu(I), with preferential binding to Ag(I). SilP, a P-type ATPase, activity assays suggest a modified catalytic cycle that challenges the current cycles attributed to other P-type ATPases. Structural studies utilised x-Ray crystallography to produce atomic models for both SilF and SilC. While SilP was investigated using Cryo-Electron Microscopy, which showed the protein is dimeric on grids and a viable target for future work. The functional and structural analysis within this thesis expands the limited understanding of the sil system and has significance for the future development of inhibitors of the proteins involved in bacterial silver resistance.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:53:18Z
publishDate 2022
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spelling nottingham-692322022-08-03T04:40:25Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69232/ Exploring the molecular mechanisms of Ag(I) transporters involved in bacterial Ag(I) resistance Lithgo, Ryan Silver (Ag(I)) displays multiple antimicrobial properties that have led to its widespread use in the medical field. However, extensive use of Ag(I) has led to the emergence of bacterial resistance to Ag(I). Resistance to Ag(I) was inferred through the presence of plasmid pMG101 that contains a gene cluster, sil, which allowed bacteria to survive six times the normal lethal dose of Ag(I). The proteins of the sil system were given putative functions based on their sequence homology to the more extensively studied cue and cus systems, involved in copper homeostasis. To date only SilE has been characterised. This work herein describes the functional and structural characterisation of three more of the proteins of the sil system; SilP, SilF and SilC. Functional characterisation involved the use of a variety of biophysical and biochemical assays, with the former giving information on the oligomeric state of the proteins and the effects of metal binding. The biochemical assays showed that the proteins are able to bind or interact with Ag(I) and Cu(I), with preferential binding to Ag(I). SilP, a P-type ATPase, activity assays suggest a modified catalytic cycle that challenges the current cycles attributed to other P-type ATPases. Structural studies utilised x-Ray crystallography to produce atomic models for both SilF and SilC. While SilP was investigated using Cryo-Electron Microscopy, which showed the protein is dimeric on grids and a viable target for future work. The functional and structural analysis within this thesis expands the limited understanding of the sil system and has significance for the future development of inhibitors of the proteins involved in bacterial silver resistance. 2022-08-03 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69232/1/Write%20Up%20final%20with%20amendments_22042022.pdf Lithgo, Ryan (2022) Exploring the molecular mechanisms of Ag(I) transporters involved in bacterial Ag(I) resistance. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Silver resistance Silver transporters Sil SilP P-type ATPase SilF Metallochaperone SilC Outer membrane factor OMF
spellingShingle Silver resistance
Silver transporters
Sil
SilP
P-type ATPase
SilF
Metallochaperone
SilC
Outer membrane factor
OMF
Lithgo, Ryan
Exploring the molecular mechanisms of Ag(I) transporters involved in bacterial Ag(I) resistance
title Exploring the molecular mechanisms of Ag(I) transporters involved in bacterial Ag(I) resistance
title_full Exploring the molecular mechanisms of Ag(I) transporters involved in bacterial Ag(I) resistance
title_fullStr Exploring the molecular mechanisms of Ag(I) transporters involved in bacterial Ag(I) resistance
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the molecular mechanisms of Ag(I) transporters involved in bacterial Ag(I) resistance
title_short Exploring the molecular mechanisms of Ag(I) transporters involved in bacterial Ag(I) resistance
title_sort exploring the molecular mechanisms of ag(i) transporters involved in bacterial ag(i) resistance
topic Silver resistance
Silver transporters
Sil
SilP
P-type ATPase
SilF
Metallochaperone
SilC
Outer membrane factor
OMF
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69232/