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The present work illustrates the structural and biochemical characterization of two diverse proteins, BadI and MenD from Rhodopseudomonas palustris and Staphylococcus aureus, respectively.
BadI or 2-ketocyclohexanecarboxyl-CoA is one of the key enzymes involved in the anaerobic degradation of aromatic compounds. The degradation of aromatic compounds is a vital process for the maintenance of the biogeochemical carbon cycle and bioremediation of xenobiotic compounds, which if present at higher concentrations can cause potential hazards to humans. Due to the relatively inert nature of aromatic compounds, enzymes catalyzing their degradation are of special interest for industrial applications. BadI is one of the key enzymes involved in the anaerobic degradation of aromatic compounds into an aliphatic moiety.
The major focus of this study was to provide mechanistic insights into the reaction catalyzed by BadI. BadI belongs to the crotonase superfamily and shares high sequence homology with the family members of MenB or dihydroxynaphthoate synthase. BadI is known to catalyze the cleavage of the cyclic ring of 2-ketocyclohexane carboxyl-CoA by hydrolyzing the C-C bond leading to the formation of the aliphatic compound pimelyl CoA. On the other hand MenB catalyzes the condensation reaction of o-succinylbenzoyl-CoA to dihydroxylnaphthoyl-CoA. A comprehensive amino acid sequence analysis between BadI and MenB showed that the active site residues of MenB from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (mtMenB) are conserved in BadI from Rhodopseudomonas palustris. MenB is involved in the menaquinone biosynthesis pathway and is a potential drug target against Mycobacterium tuberculosis as it has no known human homologs. Due to the high homology between MenB and BadI and the inability to obtain MenB-inhibitor complex structures we extended our interest to BadI to explore a potential substitute model for mtMenB as a drug target.
In addition, BadI possesses some unique mechanistic characteristics. As mentioned before, it hydrolyzes the substrate via a retro Dieckmann’s reaction contrasting its closest homolog MenB that catalyzes a ring closing reaction through a Dieckmann’s reaction. Nevertheless the active site residues in both enzymes seem to be highly conserved. We therefore decided to pursue the structural characterization of BadI to shed light on the similarities and differences between BadI and MenB and thereby provide some insights how they accomplish the contrasting reactions described above.
We determined the first structures of BadI, in its apo and a substrate mimic bound form. The crystal structures revealed that the overall fold of BadI is similar to other crotonase superfamily members. However, there is no indication of domain swapping in BadI as observed for MenB. The absence of domain swapping is quite remarkable because the domain swapped C-terminal helical domain in MenB provides a tyrosine that is imperative for catalysis and is also conserved in the BadI sequence. Comparison of the active sites revealed that the C-terminus of BadI folds onto its core in such a way that the conserved tyrosine is located in the same position as in MenB and can form interactions with the ligand molecule. The structure of BadI also confirms the role of a serine and an aspartate in ligand interaction, thus validating that the conserved active site triad participates in the enzymatic reaction. The structures also reveal a noteworthy movement of the active site aspartate that adopts two major conformations. Structural studies further illuminated close proximity of the active site serine to a water and chlorine molecule and to the carbon atom at which the carbonyl group of the true substrate would reside. Biochemical characterization of BadI using enzyme kinetics validated that the suggested active site residues are involved in substrate interaction. However, the role of these residues is very distinct, with the serine assuming a major role. Thus, the present work ascertain the participation of putative active site residues and demonstrates that the active site residues of BadI adopt very distinctive roles compared to their closest homolog MenB.
The MenD protein also referred to as SEPHCHC (2-succinyl-5-enolpyruvyl-6- hydroxy-3-cyclohexene-1-carboxylic acid) synthase is one of the enzymes involved in menaquinone biosynthesis in Staphylococcous aureus. Though S. aureus is usually considered as a commensal it can act as a remarkable pathogen when it crosses the epithelium, causing a wide spectrum of disorders ranging from skin infection to life threatening diseases. Small colony variants (SCVs), a slow growing, small sized subpopulation of the bacteria has been associated with persistent, recurrent and antibiotic resistant infections. These variants show autotrophy for thiamine, menaquinone or hemin. Menaquinone is an essential component in the electron transport pathway in gram-positive organisms. Therefore, enzymes partaking in this pathway are attractive drug targets against pathogens such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Bacillus subtilis. MenD, an enzyme catalyzing the first irreversible step in the menaquinone biosynthetic pathway has been implicated in the SCV phenotype of S. aureus. In the present work we explored biochemical and structural properties of this important enzyme.
Our structural analysis revealed that despite its low sequence identity of 28%, the overall fold of staphylococcal MenD (saMenD) is similar to Escherichia coli MenD (ecMenD) albeit with some significant disparities. Major structural differences can be observed near the active site region of the protein and are profound in the C-terminal helix and a loop near the active site. The loop contains critical residues for cofactor binding and is well ordered only in the ecMenD-ThDP structure, while in the apo and substrate bound structures of ecMenD the loop is primarily disordered. In our saMenD structure the loop is for the first time completely ordered in the apo form and displays a novel conformation of the cofactor-binding loop. The loop adopts an unusual open conformation and the conserved residues, which are responsible for cofactor binding are located too far away to form a productive complex with the cofactor in this conformation. Additionally, biochemical studies in conjugation with the structural data aided in the identification of the substrate-binding pocket and delineated residues contributing to its binding and catalysis. Thus the present work successfully divulged the unique biochemical and structural characteristics of saMenD.
Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) is well known to express a plethora of toxins of which the pore-forming hemolysin A (α-toxin) is the best-studied cytolysin. Pore-forming toxins (PFT) permeabilize host membranes during infection thereby causing concentration-dependent effects in host cell membranes ranging from disordered ion fluxes to cytolysis. Host cells possess defense mechanisms against PFT attack, resulting in endocytosis of the breached membrane area and delivery of repair vesicles to the insulted plasma membrane as well as a concurrent release of membrane repair enzymes. Since PFTs from several pathogens have been shown to recruit membrane repair components, we here investigated whether staphylococcal α-toxin is able to induce these mechanisms in endothelial cells. We show that S. aureus α-toxin induced increase in cytosolic Ca2+ in endothelial cells, which was accompanied by p38 MAPK phosphorylation. Toxin challenge led to increased endocytosis of an extracellular fluid phase marker as well as increased externalization of LAMP1-positive membranes suggesting that peripheral lysosomes are recruited to the insulted plasma membrane. We further observed that thereby the lysosomal protein acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) was released into the cell culture medium. Thus, our results show that staphylococcal α-toxin triggers mechanisms in endothelial cells, which have been implicated in membrane repair after damage of other cell types by different toxins.
Community-acquired (CA) Staphylococcus aureus cause various diseases even in healthy individuals. Enhanced virulence of CA-strains is partly attributed to increased production of toxins such as phenol-soluble modulins (PSM). The pathogen is internalized efficiently by mammalian host cells and intracellular S. aureus has recently been shown to contribute to disease. Upon internalization, cytotoxic S. aureus strains can disrupt phagosomal membranes and kill host cells in a PSM-dependent manner. However, PSM are not sufficient for these processes. Here we screened for factors required for intracellular S. aureus virulence. We infected escape reporter host cells with strains from an established transposon mutant library and detected phagosomal escape rates using automated microscopy. We thereby, among other factors, identified a non-ribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) to be required for efficient phagosomal escape and intracellular survival of S. aureus as well as induction of host cell death. By genetic complementation as well as supplementation with the synthetic NRPS product, the cyclic dipeptide phevalin, wild-type phenotypes were restored. We further demonstrate that the NRPS is contributing to virulence in a mouse pneumonia model. Together, our data illustrate a hitherto unrecognized function of the S. aureus NRPS and its dipeptide product during S. aureus infection.
Livestock-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LA-MRSA) of clonal complex CC398 typically carry various antimicrobial resistance genes, many of them located on plasmids. In the bovine LA-MRSA isolate Rd11, we previously identified plasmid pAFS11 in which resistance genes are co-localized with a novel ica-like gene cluster, harboring genes required for polysaccharide intercellular adhesin (PIA)-mediated biofilm formation. The ica genes on pAFS11 were acquired in addition to a pre-existing ica locus on the S. aureus Rd11 chromosomal DNA. Both loci consist of an icaADBC operon and icaR, encoding a corresponding icaADBC repressor. Despite carrying two biofilm gene copies, strain Rd11 did not produce PIA and transformation of pAFS11 into another S. aureus strain even slightly diminished PIA-mediated biofilm formation. By focusing on the molecular background of the biofilm-negative phenotype of pAFS11-carrying S. aureus, we identified the pAFS11-borne ica locus copy as functionally fully active. However, transcription of both plasmid- and core genome-derived icaADBC operons were efficiently suppressed involving IcaR. Surprisingly, although being different on the amino acid sequence level, the two IcaR repressor proteins are mutually replaceable and are able to interact with the icaA promoter region of the other copy. We speculate that this regulatory crosstalk causes the biofilm-negative phenotype in S. aureus Rd11. The data shed light on an unexpected regulatory interplay between pre-existing and newly acquired DNA traits in S. aureus. This also raises interesting general questions regarding functional consequences of gene transfer events and their putative implications for the adaptation and evolution of bacterial pathogens.
The role of multicellularity as the predominant microbial lifestyle has been affirmed by studies on the genetic regulation of biofilms and the conditions driving their formation. Biofilms are of prime importance for the pathology of chronic infections of the opportunistic human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus.
The recent development of a macrocolony biofilm model in S. aureus opened new opportunities to study evolution and physiological specialization in biofilm communities in this organism. In the macrocolony biofilm model, bacteria form complex aggregates with a sophisticated spatial organization on the micro- and macroscale. The central positive and negative regulators of this organization in S. aureus are the alternative sigma factor σB and the quorum sensing system Agr, respectively. Nevertheless, nothing is known on additional factors controlling the macrocolony morphogenesis.
In this work, the genome of S. aureus was screened for novel factors that are required for the development of the macrocolony architecture. A central role for basic metabolic pathways was demonstrated in this context as the macrocolony architecture was strongly altered by the disruption of nucleotide and carbohydrate synthesis. Environmental signals further modulate macrocolony morphogenesis as illustrated by the role of an oxygen-sensitive gene regulator, which is required for the formation of complex surface structures. A further application of the macrocolony biofilm model was demonstrated in the study of interstrain interactions. The integrity of macrocolony communities was macroscopically visibly disturbed by competitive interactions between clinical isolates of S. aureus.
The results of this work contribute to the characterization of the macrocolony biofilm model and improve our understanding of developmental processes relevant in staphylococcal infections. The identification of anti-biofilm effects exercised through competitive interactions could lead to the design of novel antimicrobial strategies targeting multicellular bacterial communities.
Um Änderungen in seiner Umwelt wahrnehmen zu können, benötigt S. aureus unterschiedliche Signaltransduktionssysteme. In dieser Arbeit wurde erstmals die Eukaryoten-ähnliche Serin/Threonin-Proteinkinase (STPK) PknB umfassend charakterisiert. Die posttranslationale Proteinmodifikation mittels Phosphorylierung spielt sowohl in Eukaryoten als auch in Prokaryoten eine wichtige Rolle. Man glaubte lange, dass die Phosphorylierung von Serin-, Threonin- und Tyrosinresten ein nur auf Eukaryoten beschränkter Regulationsmechanismus ist. Dagegen wurde die Phosphorylierung an Histidin- und Aspartatresten durch die Zweikomponenten-Systeme allein den Prokaryoten zugeordnet. Die Genomanalysen der letzten Jahre identifizierten jedoch STPKs und Serin/Threonin-Proteinphosphatasen (STPP) in nahezu allen prokaryotischen Genomen. Auch S. aureus codiert für eine STPK, die eine hohe Homologie zu den beschriebenen STPKs aufweist. In dieser Arbeit wurden mittels Microarray-Analyse einer ΔpknB-Mutante im Stamm 8325 erste Hinweise zur Funktion von PknB als Regulator der Zellwandsynthese sowie zentraler Stoffwechselwege gewonnen. Es wurden mittels Phosphopreoteom-Analysen in vivo-Substrate identifiziert und weiterhin die Kinase biochemisch charakterisiert.
Staphylococcus aureus ist ein bedeutender opportunistischer Krankheitserreger, der eine Vielzahl von Infektionen in Menschen und Tieren hervorrufen kann. Das Krankheitsbild reicht von leichten Hautinfektionen bis hin zu lebensbedrohlichen Infektionen wie Endokarditis, Sepsis oder Pneumonien. S. aureus ist ein Haupterreger nosokomialer Infektionen. Besonders die Antibiotikaresistenzentwicklung von S. aureus–Stämmen ist problematisch. Als wirksame Antibiotika können zur Zeit oft nur noch Vancomycin, Synercid oder Linezolid zur Therapie eingesetzt werden. Die alarmierende Resistenzentwicklung in S. aureus verdeutlicht, dass die Entwicklung neuer Antibiotika und die Identifizierung neuer bakterieller Angriffsstrukturen dringend erforderlich ist. Gängige antiinfektive Therapeutika sind gegen die bakterielle Zellwandsynthese, den DNA- und RNA-Stoffwechsel oder die Proteinbiosynthese gerichtet. In dieser Arbeit sollten Virulenz-relevante Zielstrukturen für die Entwicklung neuer Antibiotika untersucht werden. Insgesamt wurden sieben Gene analysiert, von denen vier zu Anfang dieser Arbeit in S. aureus noch nicht charakterisiert waren. Die Zielgene (clpP, purH, ssrA und smpB) in S. aureus sollten deletiert werden, um ihre Überlebensnotwendigkeit in vitro- und in vivo zu überprüfen. Eine Deletion gelang bei den Genen clpP und purH, die somit als nicht essenziell in S. aureus zu betrachten sind. Die bereits zuvor als nicht-essenziell charakterisierten Gene arlR, arlS und putP wurden deletiert und die Mutanten dclpP, darlR, darlS, dpurH und dputP wurden phänotypisch in Hinsicht auf ihren Einfluss auf die Pathogenität in S. aureus analysiert. Die differenzielle Genexpression der Mutanten dclpP und darlR wurde mit Hilfe von Microarray-Hybridisierungsexperimenten untersucht. Die ∆clpP-Mutante zeigte einen starken Wachstumsdefekt bei verschiedenen Temperaturen (30, 37, 42°C) und war nicht mehr in der Lage bei 20°C zu wachsen. Ebenso war das Wachstum unter anaeroben Bedingungen stark beeinträchtigt. Der Stamm dclpP wies eine verringerte hämolytische Aktivität sowie eine verminderte Adhärenz an Polystyren auf. Außerdem konnte eine stark erhöhte autolytische Aktivität in einem Triton X-100-Assay beobachtet werden. In einem Invasions-Zellkulturassay mit 293T-Epithelzellen konnte eine ~10-fach erhöhte Invasivität im Vergleich zu dem isogenen Wildtyp festgestellt werden. Die Komplementierung der ∆clpP-Mutante durch Einführung eines clpP-Expressionsvektors führte nahezu bei allen getesteten Bedingungen zur Wiederherstellung des wildtypischen Phänotyps. Die Transkriptomanalyse der dclpP-Mutante ergab eine deutliche Veränderung in der Genexpression (15 % aller Gene). Eine computerunterstützte Analyse der Upstreambereiche der deregulierten Gene führte zu der Identifizierung verschiedener Regulons, die bei der bakteriellen Antwort auf verschiedene Stressbedingungen eine Rolle spielen. Die clpP-Deletion betrifft besonders Regulatoren, deren Aktivität in Abhängigkeit zu veränderten Redox-Bedingungen reguliert wird, wie z. B. verschiedenen Stressbedingungen und Anaerobiose. Die Konstruktion der darlR- und darlS-Mutanten führte zu einer gesteigerten hämolytischen Aktivität, einer erhöhten Adhärenz an Polystyren sowie einer erhöhten autolytischen Aktivität in Triton X-100-Assays. Die Internalisierungsrate durch 293T-Epithelzellen war vermindert. Die darlR-Mutante wurde in einem Katheter-assoziierten Infektionsmodell in Ratten eingesetzt. Die kompetitive Infektion mit Mutante und Wildtyp ergab einen deutlichen Nachteil bei der Etablierung einer Infektion durch die Mutante. Die Transkriptomanalyse der 8325darlR-Mutante in der exponenziellen und in der stationären Phase unterstreicht den großen Einfluss des ArlRS-Zwei-Komponenten-Systems auf die Regulation der Genexpression in S. aureus. In der exponenziellen Phase wurden insgesamt 5 % und in der stationären Phase 15 % der Gene differenziell exprimiert. dpurH- und dputP-Mutanten wiesen in vitro keine Veränderungen im Wachstums-verhalten, der Biofilmbildung oder hämolytischen Aktivität auf. In einem Infektionsmodell in Ratten führte die Deletion von purH in dem S. aureus-Stamm MA12 zu einer signifikanten Verminderung der Virulenz. Die Herstellung von smpB- und ssrA-Deletionsmutanten verlief ohne Erfolg. Es wurde versucht, einen direkten Nachweis für den essenziellen Charakter dieser Gene durch den Einsatz konditional letaler Expressionssysteme zu erbringen. Weder der Austausch des wildtypischen durch einen regulierbaren Promotor noch eine Antisense-RNA-Strategie war für eine eindeutige Klärung dieser Frage ausreichend. Es konnte durch diese Arbeit jedoch gezeigt werden, dass die Antisense-RNA-Strategie eine Beeinträchtigung des Wachstums von S. aureus bewirkt.
The Staphylococcus aureus two component system (TCS) sae governs expression of numerous virulence factors, including Eap (extracellular adherence protein), which in turn among other functions also mediates invasion of host cells. The sae TCS is encoded by the saePQRS operon, with saeS coding for the sensor histidine kinase (SaeS) and saeR encoding the response regulator (SaeR). The saeRS system is preceded by two additional open reading frames (ORFs), saeP and saeQ, which are predicted to encode a lipoprotein (SaeP) and a membrane protein (SaeQ), respectively. Earlier, we have shown that SDS-containing subinhibitory concentrations of biocides (Perform®) and SDS alone activate sae transcription and increase cellular invasiveness in S. aureus strain Newman. The effect is associated with an amino acid exchange in the N-terminus of SaeS (L18P), specific to strain Newman.
In this work, the role of whether the two additional genes, saePQ coding for the accessory proteins SaeP and SaeQ, respectively, are involved in SDS-mediated saeRS was investigated. It could demonstrated that the lack of the SaeP protein resulted in an increased saeRS transcription without SDS stress in both SaeSL/P variants, while the SDS effect was less pronounced on sae and eap expression compared to the Newman wildtype, suggesting that the SaeP protein represses the sae system. Also, SDS-mediated inductions of sae and eap transcription along with enhanced invasion were found to be dependent on presence of the SaeSP variant in Newman wildtype. On the other hand, the study also shows that the saePQ region of the sae operon is required for fully functional two-component system saeRS under normal growth conditions, but it is not involved in SDS-mediated activation of the saeS signaling and sae-target class I gene, eap.
In the second approach, the study investigates whether SDS-induced sae expression and host cell invasion is common among S. aureus strains not carrying the (L18P) point mutation. To demonstrate this strain Newman, its isogenic saeS mutants, and various S. aureus isolates were analysed for sae, eap expression and cellular invasiveness. Among the strains tested, SDS exposure resulted only in an increase of sae transcription, Eap production and cellular invasiveness in strain Newman wild type and MRSA strain ST239-635/93R, the latter without an increase in Eap. Interestingly, the epidemic community-associated MRSA strain, USA300 LAC showed a biphasic response in sae transcription at different growth stages, which, however, was not accompanied by increased invasiveness. All other clinical isolates investigated displayed a decrease of the parameters tested. While in strain Newman the SDS effect was due to the saeSP allele, this was not the case in strain ST239-635/93R and the biphasic USA300 strains. Also, increased invasiveness of ST239-635/93R was found to be independent of Eap production. Furthermore, to investigate the global effect of SDS on sae target gene expression, strain Newman wild-type and Newman ∆sae were treated with SDS and analyzed for their transcription profiles of sae target genes using microarray assays. We could show that subinhibitory concentrations of SDS upregulate and downregulate gene expression of several signaling pathways involved in biosynthetic, metabolic pathways as well as virulence, host cell adherence, stress reponse and many hypothetical proteins.
In summary, the study sheds light on the role of the upstream region saePQ in SDS-mediated saeRS and eap expression during S. aureus SDS stress. Most importantly, the study also shows that subinhibitory SDS concentrations have pronounced strain-dependent effects on sae transcription and subsequent host cell invasion in S. aureus, with the latter likely to be mediated in some strains by other factors than the known invasin Eap and FnBP proteins. Moreover, there seems to exist more than the saeSP-mediated mechanism for SDS-induced sae transcription in clinical S. aureus isolates. These results help to further understand and clarify virulence and pathogenesis mechanisms and their regulation in S. aureus.
Staphylococcus aureus asymptomatically colonizes the skin and anterior nares of 20-30% of the healthy human population. As an opportunistic human pathogen it elicits a variety of infections ranging from skin and soft tissue infections to highly severe manifestations such as pneumonia, endocarditis and osteomyelitis. Due to the emergence of multi resistant strains, treatment of staphylococcal infections becomes more and more challenging and the WHO therefore classified S. aureus as a “superbug”. The variety of diseases triggered by S. aureus is the result of a versatile expression of a large set of virulence factors. The most prominent virulence factor is the cytotoxic and haemolytic pore-forming α-toxin whose expression is mediated by a complex regulatory network involving two-component systems such as the agr quorum-sensing system, accessory transcriptional regulators and alternative sigma-factors. However, the intricate regulatory network is not yet understood in its entirety. Recently, a transposon mutation screen identified the AraC-family transcriptional regulator ‘Repressor of surface proteins’ (Rsp) to regulate haemolysis, cytotoxicity and the expression of various virulence associated factors. Deletion of rsp was accompanied by a complete loss of transcription of a 1232 nt long non-coding RNA, SSR42.
This doctoral thesis focuses on the molecular and functional characterization of SSR42. By analysing the transcriptome and proteome of mutants in either SSR42 or both SSR42 and rsp, as well as by complementation of SSR42 in trans, the ncRNA was identified as the main effector of Rsp-mediated virulence. Mutants in SSR42 exhibited strong effects on transcriptional and translational level when compared to wild-type bacteria. These changes resulted in phenotypic alterations such as strongly reduced haemolytic activity and cytotoxicity towards epithelial cells as well as reduced virulence in a murine infection model. Deletion of SSR42 further promoted the formation of small colony variants (SCV) during long term infection of endothelial cells and demonstrated the importance of this molecule for intracellular bacteria. The impact of this ncRNA on staphylococcal haemolysis was revealed to be executed by modulation of sae mRNA stability and by applying mutational studies functional domains within SSR42 were identified.
Moreover, various stressors modulated the transcription of SSR42 and antibiotic challenge resulted in SSR42-dependently increased haemolysis and cytotoxicity. Transcription of SSR42 itself was found under control of various important global regulators including AgrA, SaeS, CodY and σB, thereby illustrating a central position in S. aureus virulence gene regulation.
The present study thus demonstrates SSR42 as a global virulence regulatory RNA which is important for haemolysis, disease progression and adaption of S. aureus to intracellular conditions via formation of SCVs.
Background: Xenobiotics represent an environmental stress and as such are a source for antibiotics, including the isoquinoline (IQ) compound IQ-143. Here, we demonstrate the utility of complementary analysis of both host and pathogen datasets in assessing bacterial adaptation to IQ-143, a synthetic analog of the novel type N,C-coupled naphthyl-isoquinoline alkaloid ancisheynine. Results: Metabolite measurements, gene expression data and functional assays were combined with metabolic modeling to assess the effects of IQ-143 on Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis and human cell lines, as a potential paradigm for novel antibiotics. Genome annotation and PCR validation identified novel enzymes in the primary metabolism of staphylococci. Gene expression response analysis and metabolic modeling demonstrated the adaptation of enzymes to IQ-143, including those not affected by significant gene expression changes. At lower concentrations, IQ-143 was bacteriostatic, and at higher concentrations bactericidal, while the analysis suggested that the mode of action was a direct interference in nucleotide and energy metabolism. Experiments in human cell lines supported the conclusions from pathway modeling and found that IQ-143 had low cytotoxicity. Conclusions: The data suggest that IQ-143 is a promising lead compound for antibiotic therapy against staphylococci. The combination of gene expression and metabolite analyses with in silico modeling of metabolite pathways allowed us to study metabolic adaptations in detail and can be used for the evaluation of metabolic effects of other xenobiotics.