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1.
Reversion analysis has been employed to isolate suppressors that restore export of a unique LamB signal sequence mutant. The mutation results in a substitution of Arg for Met at position 19, which prevents LamB export to the outer membrane and leads to a Dex- phenotype. Unlike other LamB signal sequence mutants utilized for reversion analysis, LamB19R becomes stably associated with the inner membrane in an export-specific manner. In this study, Dex+ revertants were selected and various suppressors were isolated. One of the extragenic suppressors, designated prlZ1, was chosen for further study. prlZ1 maps to 69 min on the Escherichia coli chromosome. The suppressor is dominant and SecB dependent. In addition to its effect on lamB19R, prlZ1 suppresses the export defect of signal sequence point mutations at positions 12, 15, and 16, as well as several point mutations in the maltose-binding protein signal sequence. prlZ1 does not suppress deletion mutations in either signal sequence. This pattern of suppression can be explained by interaction of a helical LamB signal sequence with the suppressor.  相似文献   

2.
The Escherichia coli LamB protein is located in the outer membrane. It is both a component of the maltose and maltodextrin transport system, and the receptor for phages lambda and K10. It is a trimer composed of three identical polypeptide chains, each containing 421 residues. Six independent mutants have been isolated, in which the LamB protein is altered in its interaction with one or more monoclonal antibodies specific for regions of the protein that are exposed at the cell surface. Some of the mutations also altered the binding site for phage lambda. All of the mutations were clustered in the same region of the lamB gene, corresponding to residues 333-394 in the polypeptide. This and previous results strongly suggest that a rather large segment of the LamB polypeptide, extending from residue 315 to 401, is exposed at the outer face of the outer membrane. This segment would bear the epitopes for the four available anti-LamB monoclonal antibodies that react with the cell surface, and part of the binding site for phage lambda.  相似文献   

3.
Mutants affected in lamB, the structural gene for phage lambda receptor, are unable to utilize maltose when it is present at low concentrations (less than or equal 10 muM). During growth in a chemostat at limiting maltose concentrations, the lamB mutants tested were selected against in the presence of the wild-type strain. Transport studies demonstrate that most lamB mutants have deficient maltose transport capacities at low maltose concentrations. When antibodies against purified phage lambda receptor are added to a wild-type strain, transport of maltose at low concentrations is significantly reduced. These results strongly suggest that the phage lambda receptor molecule is involved in maltose transport.  相似文献   

4.
Chemotaxis towards maltose is specifically defective in many strains of Escherichia coli carrying mutations affecting lamB, the gene coding for the outer membrane receptor for bacteriophage lambda. However, with one exception, the most extreme effect of lamB mutants on the maltose response as determined in the capillary assay is a shift to higher sugar concentrations and a reduction in the number of bacteria accumulated to about 25% of the wild-type level. The severity of the taxis defect is strongly correlated with reduced ability of the cells to take up the maltose present at 1 and 10 muM. Evidence presented here and in the accompanying paper indicates that the lambda receptor is involved in the transport of maltose at these concentrations. The effects of lamB mutations on maltose taxis can be explained by postulating that the high-affinity maltose transport system in which the lambda receptor participates transfers maltose from the surrounding medium across the outer membrane and into the periplasmic space. If the maltose chemoreceptor detects sugar present in the periplasmic space, and not molecules external to the outer membrane, then defective transport of low concentrations of maltose into the periplasm would result in the observed apparent reduction in the sensitivity of the maltose receptor. Thus, the lambda receptor protein would participate in maltose chemorecepton only indirectly through its role in maltose transport.  相似文献   

5.
Affinity-chromatographic selection on immobilized starch was used to selectively enhance the affinity of the maltodextrin-specific pore protein ( maltoporin , LamB protein, or lambda receptor protein) in the outer membrane of E. coli. Selection strategies were established for rare bacteria in large populations producing maltoporin variants with enhanced affinities for both starch and maltose, for starch but not maltose and for maltose but not starch. Three classes of lamB mutants with up to eight-fold increase in affinity for particular ligands were isolated. These mutants provide a unique range of modifications in the specificity of a transport protein.  相似文献   

6.
The relationships between the bacteriophage lambda binding site, the starch binding site and the pore formed by maltoporin (LamB protein, lambda receptor protein) were investigated. Bacteria with single amino acid substitutions in the maltoporin sequence, which were previously shown to be strongly reduced in phage lambda sensitivity, were assayed for maltose- (and maltodextrin) selective pore functions. Maltose transport assays was performed at low substrate concentrations, under conditions where LamB is limiting for transport. It revealed three classes of mutants. Class A is composed of mutants with no effect on transport (substitutions at amino acid residues 154, 155, 259, 382 and 401); class B corresponds to mutants with a significant but variable reduction in transport (sites 148, 151, 152, 163, 164, 245, 247 and 250); class C is represented by a single mutant for which transport is almost completely abolished (site 18). Starch binding was assayed by two different methods that gave compatible results. In class A mutants, binding was normal, while no binding was observed in the class C mutant. Binding was impaired to various extents in category B mutants. There was a correlation between the level of impairment of starch binding and impairment of maltose transport, consistent with the notion that the residues influencing starch binding are inside, or in close proximity to, the pore. These results, together with previous data on starch-binding mutants that were not affected in phage binding (substitutions at residues 8, 74, 82, 118 and 121), suggest that the binding sites for starch and phage lambda overlap but are distinct. Mutations affecting transport and starch binding are located in the first third of the protein and in the region of residues 245 to 250. Mutations affecting phage adsorption are located mainly in the last two-thirds of the protein. The topological constraints suggested by the results with the available mutants altered in the lamB gene were used to propose a revised model of maltoporin folding across the outer membrane as well as to define the outlines of footprints of macromolecular binding sites (phage, starch and monoclonal antibodies) on the surface of the protein.  相似文献   

7.
Maltoporin (LamB protein) is a maltodextrin transport protein in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli with binding sites for bacteriophage lambda and maltosaccharides. Binding of starch by bacteria was found to inhibit swarming of Escherichia coli in soft agar plates; the inhibition was dependent on the maltodextrin affinity of maltoporin. On the basis of this observation, chemotactic cell-sorting techniques were developed for the isolation and analysis of mutants with an altered starch-binding phenotype. Fifteen lamB mutations generated by hydroxylamine and linker mutagenesis, as well as spontaneous mutations, were analyzed. The effects of the mutations on starch and lambda-binding, as well as transport specificity, were assayed. Mutations that affect residues near 8 to 18, 74 to 82, and 118 to 121 were found to affect starch binding and maltodextrin-selective functions strongly, confirming and extending previous results with substitutions at these regions. Substitutions and insertions in two previously undefined regions in the protein, in or near residues 194 and 360, also resulted in defects in maltodextrin-specific functions and indicate that C-terminal parts of the protein also contribute to the discontinuous binding and pore domains. There was a detectable transport defect in all binding-affected mutants, and one mutation caused near-total pore blocking towards both maltose and nonmaltoside. The highly discontinuous phage lambda-binding site was affected by mutations near residues 9 and 10 and 194, as well as previously established regions near residues 18, 148 to 165, 245 to 259, and 380 to 400. The significance of these mutations is discussed in the context of a model of the functional topology of maltoporin. The additional role of regions near residues 10 and 120 in maltoporin assembly, as well as starch binding, was suggested by the temperature-sensitive biogenesis of maltoporin in strains with one- or two-codon insertion at these sites.  相似文献   

8.
Among Tn10 insertions isolated in or near the malB region of Escherichia coli, one (zjb-729::Tn10) mapped between malK and lamB or late in malK and allowed MalT-independent expression of lamB. Tn10-dependent expression of a lamB-lacZ protein fusion was 25% of the expression of the fusion from the malK-lamB operon promoter in malTc constitutive strains. The maltoporin content of a strain carrying this Tn10 was about 20% that of a malTc malB+ strain. Transport of maltose at concentrations of below 10(-6) M was reduced about threefold. When maltoporin was present at about 50% of the level of malTc malB+ strains, maltose transport was largely restored. We conclude that maltoporin is not rate limiting for maltose transport in wild-type cells but becomes rate limiting when the ratio of maltoporin to other maltose transport components is reduced more than twofold.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The kinetics of the appearance at the cell surface of the outer membrane LamB protein after induction were determined by using specific antibodies and radioiodinated protein A as a probe. This was done in two different induction systems. First, LamB protein was induced in a wild-type strain by the simultaneous addition of cyclic AMP and maltose. Second, an operon fusion strain in which the lamB gene is expressed under lac promoter control was used; in this system, LamB protein can be induced by isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside. When uninduced cells were grown in glucose minimal medium, background expression of the lamB gene was found to be ca. 10-fold lower in lac-lamB cells than in wild-type cells. The level of LamB protein present in uninduced wild-type cells could, however, be reduced by supplementing the growth medium with Casamino Acids. After induction, the LamB protein appeared at the cell surface of both strains within a few minutes, and then the LamB level per cell increased linearly. The time lag in cell surface exposure of LamB protein differed slightly under both induction conditions: the LamB protein appeared at the surface of lac-lamB cells within 3 min of induction, whereas in wild-type cells it could not be detected earlier than after 4 to 5 min of induction.  相似文献   

11.
H G Heine  J Kyngdon  T Ferenci 《Gene》1987,53(2-3):287-292
Maltoporin (LamB protein) is a malto-oligosaccharide-selective pore protein in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. The genetic basis of binding and transport specificity was investigated through cloning, mapping and sequencing lamB genes from seven independent mutants with various changes in maltodextrin binding affinities; these mutants were unchanged in binding phage lambda. Single amino acid substitutions specifically resulting in maltodextrin affinity changes were as follows: Arg8----His in two independent mutants resulted in much reduced affinity for all ligands and a smaller pore no longer selective for maltodextrins. A Trp74----Arg substitution resulted in a lower affinity for starch, a slight increase in maltose affinity but no striking pore changes. An Arg82----Ser resulted in lowered maltodextrin affinity, but increased affinity for sucrose in both binding and pore function. A Tyr118----Phe resulted in a higher affinity for both starch and maltose, a slightly larger pore and increased transport of maltohexaose by the pores. Asp121----Gly in two independent isolates resulted in a higher affinity for large dextrins and a marginally larger pore. These results suggest that the maltodextrin-selective functions reside in the N-terminal sequence of maltoporin and are separate from the phage lambda binding domains.  相似文献   

12.
Analysis of the genome sequence of Caulobacter crescentus predicts 67 TonB-dependent outer membrane proteins. To demonstrate that among them are proteins that transport nutrients other than chelated Fe(3+) and vitamin B(12)-the substrates hitherto known to be transported by TonB-dependent transporters-the outer membrane protein profile of cells grown on different substrates was determined by two-dimensional electrophoresis. Maltose induced the synthesis of a hitherto unknown 99.5-kDa protein, designated here as MalA, encoded by the cc2287 genomic locus. MalA mediated growth on maltodextrins and transported [(14)C]maltodextrins from [(14)C]maltose to [(14)C]maltopentaose. [(14)C]maltose transport showed biphasic kinetics, with a fast initial rate and a slower second rate. The initial transport had a K(d) of 0.2 microM, while the second transport had a K(d) of 5 microM. It is proposed that the fast rate reflects binding to MalA and the second rate reflects transport into the cells. Energy depletion of cells by 100 microM carbonyl cyanide 3-chlorophenylhydrazone abolished maltose binding and transport. Deletion of the malA gene diminished maltose transport to 1% of the wild-type malA strain and impaired transport of the larger maltodextrins. The malA mutant was unable to grow on maltodextrins larger than maltotetraose. Deletion of two C. crescentus genes homologous to the exbB exbD genes of Escherichia coli abolished [(14)C]maltodextrin binding and transport and growth on maltodextrins larger than maltotetraose. These mutants also showed impaired growth on Fe(3+)-rhodotorulate as the sole iron source, which provided evidence of energy-coupled transport. Unexpectedly, a deletion mutant of a tonB homolog transported maltose at the wild-type rate and grew on all maltodextrins tested. Since Fe(3+)-rhodotorulate served as an iron source for the tonB mutant, an additional gene encoding a protein with a TonB function is postulated. Permeation of maltose and maltotriose through the outer membrane of the C. crescentus malA mutant was slower than permeation through the outer membrane of an E. coli lamB mutant, which suggests a low porin activity in C. crescentus. The pores of the C. crescentus porins are slightly larger than those of E. coli K-12, since maltotetraose supported growth of the C. crescentus malA mutant but failed to support growth of the E. coli lamB mutant. The data are consistent with the proposal that binding of maltodextrins to MalA requires energy and MalA actively transports maltodextrins with K(d) values 1,000-fold smaller than those for the LamB porin and 100-fold larger than those for the vitamin B(12) and ferric siderophore outer membrane transporters. MalA is the first example of an outer membrane protein for which an ExbB/ExbD-dependent transport of a nutrient other than iron and vitamin B(12) has been demonstrated.  相似文献   

13.
Outer membrane permeability conferred by lambda receptor protein and porins to maltose-maltodextrins and other oligosaccharides was studied in vitro with reconstituted vesicle membranes and in vivo with mutant strains lacking either one of these proteins. The vesicle membranes reconstituted from phospholipids, lipopolysaccharide, and purified lambda receptor allowed rapid diffusion of maltose and maltose-maltodextrins of up to six glucose residues, but the membranes acted essentially as a molecular sieve for sucrose, raffinose, stachyose, and inulins of molecular weights 800, 920, and 1,380. The vesicle membranes containing porins allowed rapid diffusion of maltose but not of maltose-maltodextrins larger than maltose. The apparent transport Km values for maltose-maltodextrins of up to six glucose residues from the strain carrying lamB+ ompB (lambda receptor+, porin-) were similar (about 5 X 10(-6) M), whereas the transport Km values for maltose- and maltotriose of the strain carrying lamB ompB+ (lambda receptor-, porin+) alleles appeared to be 300 and about 20,000 X 10(-6) M. These results suggest that lambda receptor protein forms permeability pores that facilitate the diffusion of maltose-maltodextrins and function as a molecular sieve for other saccharides.  相似文献   

14.
On Some Genetic Aspects of Phage λ Resistance in E. COLI K12   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
J. P. Thirion  M. Hofnung 《Genetics》1972,71(2):207-216
Most mutations rendering E. coli K12 resistant to phage lambda, map in two genetic regions malA and malB.-The malB region contains a gene lamB specifically involved in the lambda receptor synthesis. Twenty-one independent lamB mutations studied by complementation belonged to a single cistron. This makes it very likely that lamB is monocistronic. Among the lamB mutants some are still sensitive to a host range mutant of phage lambda. Mutations mapping in a proximal gene essential for maltose metabolism inactivate gene lamB by polarity confirming that both genes are part of the same operon. Because cases of intracistronic complementation have been found, the active lamB product may be an oligomeric protein.-Previously all lambda resistant mutations in the malA region have been shown to map in the malT cistron. malT is believed to be a positive regulatory gene necessary for the induction of the "maltose operons" in the malA region and in the malB region of the E. coli K12 genetic map. No trans dominant malT mutation have been found. Therefore if they exist, they occur at a frequency of less than 10(-8), or strongly reduce the growth rate of the mutants.  相似文献   

15.
The conjugative plasmid pRSD2 carries a raf operon that encodes a peripheral raffinose metabolic pathway in enterobacteria. In addition to the previously known raf genes, we identified another gene, rafY, which in Escherichia coli codes for an outer membrane protein (molecular mass, 53 kDa) similar in function to the known glycoporins LamB (maltoporin) and ScrY (sucrose porin). Sequence comparisons with LamB and ScrY revealed no significant similarities; however, both lamB and scrY mutants are functionally complemented by RafY. Expressed from the tac promoter, RafY significantly increases the uptake rates for maltose, sucrose, and raffinose at low substrate concentrations; in particular it shifts the apparent K(m) for raffinose transport from 2 mM to 130 microM. Moreover, RafY permits diffusion of the tetrasaccharide stachyose and of maltodextrins up to maltoheptaose through the outer membrane of E. coli. A comparison of all three glycoporins in regard to their substrate selectivity revealed that both ScrY and RafY have a broad substrate range which includes alpha-galactosides while LamB seems to be restricted to malto-oligosaccharides. It supports growth only on maltodextrins but not, like the others, on raffinose and stachyose.  相似文献   

16.
Proteins destined for either the periplasm or the outer membrane of Escherichia coli are translocated from the cytoplasm by a common mechanism. It is generally assumed that outer membrane proteins, such as LamB (maltoporin or lambda receptor), which are rich in beta-structure, contain additional targeting information that directs proper membrane insertion. During transit to the outer membrane, these proteins may pass, in soluble form, through the periplasm or remain membrane associated and reach their final destination via sites of inner membrane-outer membrane contact (zones of adhesion). We report lamB mutations that slow signal sequence cleavage, delay release of the protein from the inner membrane, and interfere with maltoporin biogenesis. This result is most easily explained by proposing a soluble, periplasmic LamB assembly intermediate. Additionally, we found that such lamB mutations confer several novel phenotypes consistent with an abortive attempt by the cell to target these tethered LamB molecules. These phenotypes may allow isolation of mutants in which the process of outer membrane protein targeting is altered.  相似文献   

17.
The barrier function of the Escherichia coli outer membrane against low concentrations of maltose in strains missing the lambda receptor was partially overcome by treating the cells for 3 h with 25 mM Ca2+. Kinetic analysis of maltose-transport revealed a Ca2+-induced shift of the apparent Km of the system from about 100 microM in cells pretreated with Tris to about 15 microM in cells pretreated with Tris plus Ca2+. In contrast to maltose transport in untreated cells, that of Ca2+-treated lamB cells was inhibited by molecules with a high molecular weight, such as amylopectin (molecular weight, 20,000), and anti-maltose-binding protein antibodies. In addition, lysozyme was shown to attack Ca2+-treated cells in contrast to untreated cells. The Ca2+-induced permeability increase of the outer membrane allowed reconstitution of maltose transport in a mutant missing the maltose-binding protein with osmotic shock fluid containing the maltose-binding protein. Even though Ca2+-treatment allowed the entry of large molecules, the release of the periplasmic maltose-binding protein or alkaline phosphatase was negligible.  相似文献   

18.
In one malE mutant known to be deficient in the transport of maltose and maltodextrins across the outer membrane, the altered MalE protein was shown to be defective in its interaction with the phage lambda receptor, or LamB protein, of the outer membrane.  相似文献   

19.
A Death  L Notley    T Ferenci 《Journal of bacteriology》1993,175(5):1475-1483
The level of LamB protein in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli was derepressed in the absence of a known inducer (maltodextrins) under carbohydrate-limiting conditions in chemostats. LamB protein contributed to the ability of the bacteria to remove sugar from glucose-limited chemostats, and well-characterized lamB mutants with reduced stability constants for glucose were less growth competitive under glucose limitation than those with wild-type affinity. In turn, wild-type bacteria were less growth competitive than lamB mutants with enhanced sugar affinity. In contrast to an earlier report, we found that LamB- bacteria were less able to compete in carbohydrate-limited chemostats (with glucose, lactose, arabinose, or glycerol as the carbon and energy sources) when mixed with LamB+ bacteria. The transport Km for [14C]glucose was affected by the presence or affinity of LamB, but only in chemostat-grown bacteria, with their elevated LamB levels. The pattern of expression of LamB and the advantage it confers for growth on low concentrations of carbohydrates are consistent with a wider role in sugar permeation than simply maltosaccharide transport, and hence the well-known maltoporin activity of LamB is but one facet of its role as the general glycoporin of E. coli. A corollary of these findings is that OmpF/OmpC porins, present at high levels in carbon-limited bacteria, do not provide sufficient permeability to sugars or even glycerol to support high growth rates at low concentrations. Hence, the sugar-binding site of LamB protein is an important contributor to the permeability of the outer membrane to carbohydrates in habitats with low extracellular nutrient concentrations.  相似文献   

20.
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