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We report here the isolation and recombinational cloning of a large plasmid, pZL12, from endophytic Streptomyces sp. 9R-2. pZL12 comprises 90,435 bp, encoding 112 genes, 30 of which are organized in a large operon resembling bacteriophage genes. A replication locus (repA) and a conjugal transfer locus (traA-traC) were identified in pZL12. Surprisingly, the supernatant of a 9R-2 liquid culture containing partially purified phage particles infected 9R-2 cured of pZL12 (9R-2X) to form plaques, and a phage particle (φZL12) was observed by transmission electron microscopy. Major structural proteins (capsid, portal, and tail) of φZL12 virions were encoded by pZL12 genes. Like bacteriophage P1, linear φZL12 DNA contained ends from a largely random pZL12 sequence. There was also a hot end sequence in linear φZL12. φZL12 virions efficiently infected only one host, 9R-2X, but failed to infect and form plaques in 18 other Streptomyces strains. Some 9R-2X spores rescued from lysis by infection of φZL12 virions contained a circular pZL12 plasmid, completing a cycle comprising autonomous plasmid pZL12 and lytic phage φZL12. These results confirm pZL12 as the first example of a plasmid-phage in Streptomyces.Streptomyces species, a major source of antibiotics and pharmacologically active metabolites, are Gram-positive, mycelial bacteria with high G+C content in their DNA (15). They usually harbor conjugative circular and/or linear plasmids, propagating in autonomous and/or chromosomally integrated forms (14). Most Streptomyces circular plasmids reported are small (8 to 14 kb), including rolling-circle-replication (RCR) plasmids (pIJ101, pJV1, pSG5, pSN22, pSVH1, pSB24.2, pSY10, pSNA1, pSLG33, pEN2701, etc.) (12, 14) and chromosomally integrating/autonomous plasmids (SLP1 and pSAM2) (4, 27, 28). Some theta replication plasmids are of intermediate size (31 to 39 kb), such as SCP2, pFP1, and pFP11 (13, 40). These theta replication loci comprise a rep gene and an adjacent noncoding or iteron sequence, to which Rep protein binds specifically in vitro (10, 40). The occurrence of an ∼163-kb large plasmid, pSV1, in Streptomyces violaceoruber SANK95570 was confirmed (1, 37), but this plasmid could not be physically isolated by standard procedures for plasmid preparation (17). In contrast to more than 30 genes for conjugal transfer on the Escherichia coli F plasmid (20), Streptomyces plasmids usually need a single tra gene (encoding a DNA translocase containing a cell division FtsK/SpoIIIE domain) (15, 29). The transfer of Streptomyces circular plasmids involves binding of the nonnicked double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) by multimers of Tra proteins at a noncoding sequence and ATP hydrolysis-dependent translocation of this DNA through the hyphal tips of the Streptomyces mycelium (15, 32).Numerous Streptomyces phages have been described, including φC31 (22), SAt1 (26), TG1 (11), FP43 (24), φSPK1 (19), φSC623 (34), DAH2/DAH4/DAH5/DAH6 (6), and mu1/6 (9). They range in size from 36 kb (19) to 121 kb (6), with 50 to 71.2% GC content (9, 23, 35). Streptomyces phages often have a wide host range; for example, 16 of 27 Streptomyces strains are susceptible to infection by φSPK1 (19), and phage FP43 transduces species of Streptoverticillium, Chainia, and Sacchropolyspora (24). φC31 is the most-studied Streptomyces phage and cloning vector (8). The sequences of the φC31 head proteins (e.g., portal, capsid, and head protease) resemble those of other bacterial dsDNA phages, suggesting evolutionary relationships to other viruses (35).We report here the isolation and recombinational cloning of a 90,435-bp plasmid, pZL12, from endophytic Streptomyces sp. 9R-2 and the characterization of its replication and transfer. Surprisingly, the supernatant of 9R-2 liquid culture infected 9R-2 cured of pZL12 to form plaques. A cycle comprising autonomous plasmid pZL12 and lytic phage φZL12 is described.  相似文献   

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Bacteria such as Escherichia coli will often consume one sugar at a time when fed multiple sugars, in a process known as carbon catabolite repression. The classic example involves glucose and lactose, where E. coli will first consume glucose, and only when it has consumed all of the glucose will it begin to consume lactose. In addition to that of lactose, glucose also represses the consumption of many other sugars, including arabinose and xylose. In this work, we characterized a second hierarchy in E. coli, that between arabinose and xylose. We show that, when grown in a mixture of the two pentoses, E. coli will consume arabinose before it consumes xylose. Consistent with a mechanism involving catabolite repression, the expression of the xylose metabolic genes is repressed in the presence of arabinose. We found that this repression is AraC dependent and involves a mechanism where arabinose-bound AraC binds to the xylose promoters and represses gene expression. Collectively, these results demonstrate that sugar utilization in E. coli involves multiple layers of regulation, where cells will consume first glucose, then arabinose, and finally xylose. These results may be pertinent in the metabolic engineering of E. coli strains capable of producing chemical and biofuels from mixtures of hexose and pentose sugars derived from plant biomass.The transporters and enzymes in many sugar metabolic pathways are conditionally expressed in response to their cognate sugar or a downstream pathway intermediate. While the induction of these pathways in response to a single sugar has been studied extensively (28), far less is known about how these pathways are induced in response to multiple sugars. One notable exception is the phenomenon observed when bacteria are grown in the presence of glucose and another sugar (10, 15). In such mixtures, the bacteria will often consume glucose first before consuming the other sugar, a process known as carbon catabolite repression (27). The classic example of carbon catabolite repression is the diauxic shift seen in the growth of Escherichia coli on mixtures of glucose and lactose, where the cells first consume glucose before consuming lactose. When the cells are consuming glucose, the genes in the lactose metabolic pathway are not induced, thus preventing the sugar from being consumed. A number of molecules participate in this regulation, including the cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP), adenylate cyclase, cyclic AMP (cAMP), and EIIA from the phosphoenolpyruvate:glucose phosphotransferase system (PTS) (33). In addition to lactose, the metabolic genes for many other sugars are subject to catabolite repression by glucose in E. coli (27). While the preferential utilization of glucose is well known, it is an open question whether additional hierarchies exist among other sugars.Recently, substantial effort has been directed toward developing microorganisms capable of producing chemicals and biofuels from plant biomass (1, 34, 42). After glucose, l-arabinose and d-xylose are the next most abundant sugars found in plant biomass. Therefore, a key step in producing various chemicals and fuels from plant biomass will be the engineering of strains capable of efficiently fermenting these three sugars. However, one challenge concerns catabolite repression, which prevents microorganisms from fermenting these three sugars simultaneously and, as a consequence, may decrease the efficiency of the fermentation process. E. coli cells will first consume glucose before consuming either arabinose or xylose. As in the case of lactose, the genes in the arabinose and xylose metabolic pathways are not expressed when glucose is being consumed. In addition to glucose catabolite repression, a second hierarchy, between arabinose and xylose, appears to exist. Kang and coworkers have observed that the genes in the xylose metabolic pathway were repressed when cells were grown in a mixture of arabinose and xylose (21). Hernandez-Montalvo and coworkers also observed that E. coli utilizes arabinose before xylose (19). While a number of strategies exist for breaking the glucose-mediated repression of arabinose and xylose metabolism (8, 16, 19, 31), none exist for breaking the arabinose-mediated repression of xylose metabolism. Moreover, little is known about this repression beyond the observations made by these researchers.In this work, we investigate how the arabinose and xylose metabolic pathways are jointly regulated. We demonstrate that E. coli will consume arabinose before consuming xylose when it is grown in a mixture of the two sugars. Consistent with a mechanism involving catabolite repression, the genes in the xylose metabolic pathway are repressed in the presence of arabinose. We found that this repression is AraC dependent and is most likely due to binding by arabinose-bound AraC to the xylose promoters, with consequent inhibition of gene expression.  相似文献   

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The main siderophores produced by streptomycetes are desferrioxamines. Here we show that Streptomyces sp. ATCC 700974 and several Streptomyces griseus strains, in addition, synthesize a hitherto unknown siderophore with a catechol-peptide structure, named griseobactin. The production is repressed by iron. We sequenced a 26-kb DNA region comprising a siderophore biosynthetic gene cluster encoding proteins similar to DhbABCEFG, which are involved in the biosynthesis of 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate (DHBA) and in the incorporation of DHBA into siderophores via a nonribosomal peptide synthetase. Adjacent to the biosynthesis genes are genes that encode proteins for the secretion, uptake, and degradation of siderophores. To correlate the gene cluster with griseobactin synthesis, the dhb genes in ATCC 700974 were disrupted. The resulting mutants no longer synthesized DHBA and griseobactin; production of both was restored by complementation with the dhb genes. Heterologous expression of the dhb genes or of the entire griseobactin biosynthesis gene cluster in the catechol-negative strain Streptomyces lividans TK23 resulted in the synthesis and secretion of DHBA or griseobactin, respectively, suggesting that these genes are sufficient for DHBA and griseobactin biosynthesis. Griseobactin was purified and characterized; its structure is consistent with a cyclic and, to a lesser extent, linear form of the trimeric ester of 2,3-dihydroxybenzoyl-arginyl-threonine complexed with aluminum under iron-limiting conditions. This is the first report identifying the gene cluster for the biosynthesis of DHBA and a catechol siderophore in Streptomyces.Iron is an essential element for the growth and proliferation of nearly all microorganisms. In the presence of oxygen, the soluble ferrous iron is readily oxidized to its ferric form, which exists predominantly as a highly insoluble hydroxide complex at neutral pH. To overcome iron limitation, many bacteria synthesize and secrete low-molecular-weight, high-affinity ferric iron chelators, called siderophores (38, 53). Following the chelation of Fe3+ in the medium, the iron-siderophore complex is actively taken up by its cognate ABC transport system, and Fe3+ is subsequently released by reduction to Fe2+ and/or by hydrolysis of the siderophore (28, 32, 36). The three main classes of siderophores contain catecholates, hydroxamates, or (α-hydroxy-)carboxylates as iron-coordinating ligands, but mixed siderophores and siderophores containing other functional groups, such as diphenolates, imidazoles, and thiazolines, have also been found (16, 38).Siderophores containing peptide moieties are synthesized by proteins belonging to the nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) family (16, 38). These multimodular enzymes function as enzymatic assembly lines in which the order of the modules usually determines the order of the amino acids incorporated into the peptide (19, 34). Each module contains the complete information for an elongation step combining the catalytic functions for the activation of the amino acid by the adenylation (A) domain, the tethering of the corresponding adenylate to the terminal thiol of the enzyme-bound 4′-phosphopantetheinyl (4′-PP) cofactor by the peptidyl carrier protein (PCP) domain, and the formation of the peptide bond by the condensation (C) domain (26, 34, 52). At the end, the product is released by the C-terminal thioesterase (TE) domain by hydrolysis or by cyclization via intramolecular condensation. Each adenylation domain recognizes a specific amino acid, and its substrate specificity can be predicted by its sequence. An NRPS specificity-conferring code consisting of 10 nonadjacent amino acid residues in the A domain has been proposed (49). Exceptions to the “colinearity-rule” (19) have been discovered. For example, in the biosynthesis of the siderophores enterobactin and bacillibactin, all the modules in the NRPS are used iteratively, and the TE domain stitches the chains together into a cyclic product (35, 45). Enterobactin is the trilactone of 2,3-dihydroxybenzoyl-serine, and bacillibactin is the lactone of 2,3-dihydroxybenzoyl-glycyl-threonine.The typical siderophores produced by streptomycetes are desferrioxamines (24), and the genes encoding the enzymes for their biosynthesis have been identified (5). Recently, structurally different siderophores have been reported to be coproduced with desferrioxamines in some species, e.g., coelichelin in Streptomyces coelicolor (9, 30) and enterobactin in Streptomyces tendae (18). The genes encoding the proteins for the biosynthesis of enterobactin in S. tendae remain unknown.Here we describe the gene cluster for the biosynthesis of a new siderophore, named griseobactin, produced by Streptomyces sp. strain ATCC 700974 and some strains of Streptomyces griseus. By sequencing two cosmids isolated from a Streptomyces sp. strain ATCC 700974 genomic library, we assigned the encoded proteins to enzymes that convert chorismate to 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate (DHBA), and to proteins involved in nonribosomal peptide biosynthesis and in the export, uptake, and utilization of siderophores. Knockout mutagenesis and heterologous expression confirmed the requirement of this gene cluster for the biosynthesis of griseobactin. This is the first report on the identification of the genes responsible for DHBA and catechol siderophore biosynthesis in Streptomyces.  相似文献   

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