首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 484 毫秒
1.
2.
3.
In Escherichia coli K-12, the rcsA and rcsB gene products are positive regulators in expression of the slime polysaccharide colanic acid. We have previously demonstrated the presence of rcsA sequences in E. coli K1 and K5, strains with group II capsular K antigens, and shown that introduction of multicopy rcsA into these strains results in the expression of colanic acid. We report here the presence of rcsB sequences in E. coli K1 and K5 and demonstrate that RcsB also plays a role in the biosynthesis of colanic acid in strains with group II K antigens. In E. coli K1 and K5 grown at 37 degrees C, multicopy rcsB and the resulting induction of colanic acid synthesis had no significant effect on synthesis of the group II K antigens. K-antigen-specific sugar transferase activities were not significantly different in the presence or absence of multicopy rcsB, and introduction of a cps mutation to eliminate colanic acid biosynthesis in a K1-derivative strain did not influence the activity of the polysialyltransferase enzyme responsible for synthesis of the K1 polymer. Furthermore, immunoelectron microscopy showed no detectable difference in the size or distribution of the group II K-antigen capsular layer in cells which produced colanic acid. Colanic acid expression therefore does not appear to significantly affect synthesis of the group II K-antigen capsule and, unlike for group I K antigens, expression of group II K antigens is not positively regulated by the rcs system.  相似文献   

4.
5.
6.
In Escherichia coli K-12, RcsC and RcsB are thought to act as the sensor and effector components, respectively, of a two-component regulatory system which regulates expression of the slime polysaccharide colanic acid (V. Stout and S. Gottesman, J. Bacteriol. 172:659-669, 1990). Here, we report the cloning and DNA sequence of a 4.3-kb region containing rcsC and rcsB from E. coli O9:K30:H12. This strain does not produce colanic acid but does synthesize a K30 (group I) capsular polysaccharide. The rcsB gene from E. coli K30 (rcsBK30) is identical to the rcsB gene from E. coli K-12 (rcsBK-12). rcsCK30 has 16 nucleotide changes, resulting in six amino acid changes in the predicted protein. To examine the function of the rcs regulatory system in expression of the K30 capsular polysaccharide, chromosomal insertion mutations were constructed in E. coli O9:K30:H12 to independently inactivate rcsBK30 and the auxiliary positive regulator rcsAK30. Strains with these mutations maintained wild-type levels of K30 capsular polysaccharide expression and still produced a K30 capsule, indicating that the rcs system is not essential for expression of low levels of the group I capsular polysaccharide in lon+ E. coli K30. However, K30 synthesis is increased by introduction of a multicopy plasmid carrying rcsBK30. K30 polysaccharide expression is also markedly elevated in an rcsBK30-dependent fashion by a mutation in rcsCK30, suggesting that the rcs system is involved in high levels of synthesis. To determine whether the involvement of the rcs system in E. coli K30 expression is typical of group I (K antigen) capsules, multicopy rcsBK30 was introduced into 22 additional strains with structurally different group I capsules. All showed an increase in mucoid phenotype, and the polysaccharides produced in the presence and absence of multicopy rcsBK30 were examined. It is has been suggested that E. coli strains with group I capsules can be subdivided based on K antigen structure. For the first time, we show that strains with group I capsules can also be subdivided by the ability to produce colanic acid. Group IA contains capsular polysaccharides (including K30) with repeating-unit structures lacking amino sugars, and expression of group IA capsular polysaccharides is increased by multicopy rcsBK30. Group IB capsular polysaccharides all contain amino sugars. In group IB strains, multicopy rcsBK30 activates synthesis of colanic acid.  相似文献   

7.
Escherichia coli and other enteric microorganisms produce an extracellular polysaccharide capsule, called colanic acid, under certain environmental conditions. This capsular synthesis is regulated by the RcsC (sensor kinase)→YojN (phosphotransfer intermediate)→RcsB (response regulator) phosphorelay signal transduction under certain growth conditions. Nonetheless, little is known about signals that exaggerate the Rcs-system. To gain insight into signals that activate the Rcs-system, here we searched for genes that activate the Rcs-system, provided that those on a multicopy plasmid were introduced into E. coli. We identified several such genes, namely, rcsB, rcsA, djlA, lolA, and ompG. The DjlA, LolA, and OmpG proteins are particularly interesting in that they are all located on the cell surface, where the primary sensor RcsC histidine-kinase is localized. Implications of these findings are discussed with special reference to the mechanism by which RcsC perceives external signals.  相似文献   

8.
Regulation of capsular biosynthesis (rcs) genes, encoding the ability to induce the production of a colanic acid polysaccharide capsule, were transferred to Escherichia coli by conjugation with Klebsiella pneumoniae (aerogenes) of capsular serotype K36. Transfer was mediated by a 58.4-MDa conjugative plasmid of incompatibility group IncM, which carried a copy of Tn7 (specifying resistance to trimethoprim and streptomycin) together with determinants for several further resistances. This plasmid did not carry the rcs genes itself, but mediated the conjugative recA-dependent transfer of part of the Klebsiella chromosome to E. coli. Once resident in E. coli, the rcs gene(s) could not be mobilised to other strains of E. coli, and the mobilising plasmid could be cured from capsulate transconjugants without loss of the ability to produce colanic acid. All such cured transconjugants contained an insertion of Tn7 in the chromosome, suggesting that the transposon might be involved in mobilisation of the rcs genes from Klebsiella sp. to E. coli. These findings explain previous observations that the ability to manufacture capsular polysaccharide could be transferred by plasmids between Klebsiella sp. and E. coli.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Abstract Regulation of capsular biosynthesis ( rcs ) genes, encoding the ability to induce the production of a colanic acid polysaccharide capsule, were transferred to Escherichia coli by conjugation with Klebsiella pneumoniae (aerogenes) of capsular serotype K36. Transfer was mediated by a 58.4-MDa conjugative plasmid of incompatibility group IncM, which carried a copy of Tn7 (specifying resistance to trimethoprim and streptomycin) together with determinants for several further resistances. This plasmid did not carry the rcs genes itself, but mediated the conjugative recA -dependent transfer of part of the Klebsiella chromosome to E. coli . Once resident in E. coli , the rcs gene(s) could not be mobilised to other strains of E. coli , and the mobilising plasmid could be cured from capsulate transconjugants without loss of the ability to produce colanic acid. All such cured transconjugants contained an insertion of Tn7 in the chromosome, suggesting that the transposon might be involved in mobilisation of the rcs genes from Klebsiella sp. to E. coli . These findings explain previous observations that the ability to manufacture capsular polysaccharide could be transferred by plasmids between Klebsiella sp. and E. coli .  相似文献   

11.
Escherichia coli and other enteric microorganisms produce an extracellular polysaccharide capsule, called colanic acid, under certain environmental conditions. This capsular synthesis is regulated by the RcsC (sensor kinase)-->YojN (phosphotransfer intermediate)-->RcsB (response regulator) phosphorelay signal transduction under certain growth conditions. Nonetheless, little is known about signals that exaggerate the Rcs-system. To gain insight into signals that activate the Rcs-system, here we searched for genes that activate the Rcs-system, provided that those on a multicopy plasmid were introduced into E. coli. We identified several such genes, namely, rcsB, rcsA, djlA, lolA, and ompG. The DjlA, LolA, and OmpG proteins are particularly interesting in that they are all located on the cell surface, where the primary sensor RcsC histidine-kinase is localized. Implications of these findings are discussed with special reference to the mechanism by which RcsC perceives external signals.  相似文献   

12.
The synthesis of the Escherichia coli capsular polysaccharide varies with growth medium, temperature of growth, and genetic background. lac fusions to genes necessary for capsule synthesis (cps) demonstrated that these genes are regulated negatively in vivo by the lon gene product. We have now isolated, characterized, and mapped mutations in three new regulatory genes (rcs, for regulator of capsule synthesis) that control expression of these same fusions. rcsA and rcsB are positive regulators of capsule synthesis. rcsA is located at min 43 on the E. coli map, whereas rcsB lies at 47 min. rcsC, a negative regulator of capsule synthesis, is located at min 47, close to rcsB. All three regulatory mutations are unlinked to either the structural genes cpsA-F or lon. Mutations in all three rcs genes are recessive to the wild type. We postulate that lon may regulate capsule synthesis indirectly, by regulating the availability of one of the positive regulators.  相似文献   

13.
Regulation of capsular polysaccharide synthesis in Escherichia coli K12   总被引:39,自引:12,他引:27  
  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
In Escherichia coli, the synthesis of colanic acid, an extracellular polysaccharide imminent in biofilm development, is a complicated process involving numerous genes and not yet wholly elucidated. Using a plasmid-borne E. coli K-12 gene library, we have identified a clone whose presence conferred mucoid colony phenotype onto E. coli CM2555 strain. Our results indicate that overexpression of a gene previously catalogued as ypdI, which encodes a putative lipoprotein, is responsible for this phenotype. We show that the mucoidy of ypdI -overexpressing bacteria is due to increased production of colanic acid. This phenotype depends on the function of the rcsA gene, but not on that of rcsF. These results suggest that the ypdI gene product might be an additional factor playing a role in colanic acid synthesis, indicating that this process can be even more complicated than supposed to date. However, no obvious phenotype was observed in the DeltaypdI::kan mutant cultivated under standard laboratory conditions.  相似文献   

19.
Insertion of factor MudJ in the intergenic region between divergent genes yrfF and yrfE, at centisome 76 in the genome of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2, confers the characteristics recently described for mucM mutants, i.e. mucoidy and resistance to mecillinam. Cloning of the intergenic region plus either the yrfF or the yrfE gene in a multicopy plasmid showed that only the plasmid carrying the yrfF gene complemented mucM mutants, thus suggesting that mucM mutations are in fact yrfF mutations. A null yrfF mutation obtained by insertion of a kanamycin cassette into the yrfF open reading frame (yrfF28::Kan) produced abortive colonies when transduced to a wild-type strain but was normally accepted by rcsB, rcsC or yojN strains. Neither mutations preventing synthesis of the capsular exopolysaccharide colanic acid (cps, galE) nor rcsA mutations, which reduce expression of cps genes, conferred tolerance to the lethal yrfF28::Kan mutation. Spontaneous suppressor mutations arose very frequently in abortive yrfF28::Kan colonies, and all of them affected either rcsC, yojN, or rcsB genes. Thus, the lethal effect caused by inactivation of gene yrfF appears to be mediated by a function that is dependent on the rcsC-yojN-rcsB phosphorelay system but does not involve synthesis of colanic acid.  相似文献   

20.
Group 1 capsular polysaccharides (CPSs) of Escherichia coli and some loosely cell-associated exopolysaccharides (EPSs), such as colanic acid, are assembled by a Wzy-dependent polymerization system. In this biosynthesis pathway, Wza, Wzb, and Wzc homologues are required for surface expression of wild-type CPS or EPS. Multimeric complexes of Wza in the outer membrane are believed to provide a channel for polymer export; Wzc is an inner membrane tyrosine autokinase and Wzb is its cognate phosphatase. This study was performed to determine whether the Wza, Wzb, and Wzc proteins for colanic acid expression in E. coli K-12 could function in the E. coli K30 prototype group 1 capsule system. When expressed together, colanic acid Wza, Wzb, and Wzc could complement a wza-wzb-wzc defect in E. coli K30, suggesting conservation in their collective function in Wzy-dependent CPS and EPS systems. Expressed individually, colanic acid Wza and Wzb could also function in K30 CPS expression. In contrast, the structural requirements for Wzc function were more stringent because colanic acid Wzc could restore translocation of K30 CPS to the cell surface only when expressed with its cognate Wza protein. Chimeric colanic acid-K30 Wzc proteins were constructed to further study this interaction. These proteins could restore K30 biosynthesis but were unable to couple synthesis to export. The chimeric protein comprising the periplasmic domain of colanic acid Wzc was functional for effective K30 CPS surface expression only when coexpressed with colanic acid Wza. These data highlight the importance of Wza-Wzc interactions in group 1 CPS assembly.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号