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1.
Previous studies localized an alginate lyase gene (algL) within the alginate biosynthetic gene cluster at 34 min on the Pseudomonas aeruginosa chromosome. Insertion of a Tn501 polar transposon in a gene (algX) directly upstream of algL in mucoid P. aeruginosa FRD1 inactivated expression of algX, algL, and other downstream genes, including algA. This strain is phenotypically nonmucoid; however, alginate production could be restored by complementation in trans with a plasmid carrying all of the genes inactivated by the insertion, including algL and algX. Alginate production was also recovered when a merodiploid that generated a complete alginate gene cluster on the chromosome was constructed. However, alginate production by merodiploids formed in the algX::Tn501 mutant using an alginate cluster with an algL deletion was not restored to wild-type levels unless algL was provided on a plasmid in trans. In addition, complementation studies of Tn501 mutants using plasmids containing specific deletions in either algL or algX revealed that both genes were required to restore the mucoid phenotype. Escherichia coli strains which expressed algX produced a unique protein of approximately 53 kDa, consistent with the gene product predicted from the DNA sequencing data. These studies demonstrate that AlgX, whose biochemical function remains to be defined, and AlgL, which has alginate lyase activity, are both involved in alginate production by P. aeruginosa.  相似文献   

2.
The biochemical mechanism by which alpha-L-guluronate (G) residues are incorporated into alginate by Pseudomonas aeruginosa is not understood. P. aeruginosa first synthesizes GDP-mannuronate, which is used to incorporate beta-D-mannuronate residues into the polymer. It is likely that the conversion of some beta-D-mannuronate residues to G occurs by the action of a C-5 epimerase at either the monomer (e.g., sugar-nucleotide) or the polymer level. This study describes the results of a molecular genetic approach to identify a gene involved in the formation or incorporation of G residues into alginate by P. aeruginosa. Mucoid P. aeruginosa FRD1 was chemically mutagenized, and mutants FRD462 and FRD465, which were incapable of incorporating G residues into alginate, were independently isolated. Assays using a G-specific alginate lyase from Klebsiella aerogenes and 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance analyses showed that G residues were absent in the alginates secreted by these mutants. 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance analyses also showed that alginate from wild-type P. aeruginosa contained no detectable blocks of G. The mutations responsible for defective incorporation of G residues into alginate in the mutants FRD462 and FRD465 were designated algG4 and algG7, respectively. Genetic mapping experiments revealed that algG was closely linked (greater than 90%) to argF, which lies at 34 min on the P. aeruginosa chromosome and is adjacent to a cluster of genes required for alginate biosynthesis. The clone pALG2, which contained 35 kilobases of P. aeruginosa DNA that included the algG and argF wild-type alleles, was identified from a P. aeruginosa gene bank by a screening method that involved gene replacement. A DNA fragment carrying algG was shown to complement algG4 and algG7 in trans. The algG gene was physically mapped on the alginate gene cluster by subcloning and Tn501 mutagenesis.  相似文献   

3.
Mucoid strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa overproduce alginate, a linear exopolysaccharide Of D-mannuronate and variable amounts of L-guluronate. The mannuronate residues undergo modification by C-5 epimerization to form the L-guluronates and by the addition of acetyl groups at the 0-2 and 0-3 positions. Through genetic analysis, we previously identified algF, located upstream of algA in the 18-kb alginate biosynthetic operon, as a gene required for alginate acetylation. Here, we show the sequence of a 3.7-kb fragment containing the open reading frames termed algI, algJ, and algF. An algI::Tn5O1 mutant, which was defective in algIJFA because of the polar nature of the transposon insertion, produced alginate when algA was provided in trans. This indicated that the algIJF gene products were not required for polymer biosynthesis. To examine the potential role of these genes in alginate modification, mutants were constructed by gene replacement in which each gene (algI, algJ, or algF) was replaced by a polar gentamicin resistance cassette. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy showed that polymers produced by strains deficient in algIJF still contained a mixture of D-mannuronate and L-guluronate, indicating that C-5 epimerization was not affected. Alginate acetylation was evaluated by a colorimetric assay and Fourier transform-infrared spectroscopy, and this analysis showed that strains deficient in algIJF produced nonacetylated alginate. Plasmids that supplied the downstream gene products affected by the polar mutations were introduced into each mutant. The strain defective only in algF expression produced an alginate that was not acetylated, confirming previous results. Strains missing only algJ or algI also produced nonacetylated alginates. Providing the respective missing gene (algI, algJ, or algF) in trans restored alginate acetylation. Mutants defective in algI or algJ, obtained by chemical and transposon mutagenesis, were also defective in their ability to acetylate alginate. Therefore, algI and algJ represent newly identified genes that, in addition to algF, are required for alginate acetylation.  相似文献   

4.
The algB gene, which is involved in the production of alginate in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, was localized to approximately 2.2 kilobases of DNA from strain FRD by using transposon Tn501 insertion mutagenesis, subcloning, and complementation techniques. The previously reported alg-50(Ts) mutation, which confers the phenotype of temperature-sensitive alginate production, was here designated as an algB allele. A transduction-mediated gene replacement technique was used for site-directed mutagenesis to isolate and characterize algB::Tn501 mutants of P. aeruginosa FRD. Although algB::Tn501 mutants had a nonmucoid phenotype (indicating an alginate deficiency), they still produced about 1 to 5% of wild-type levels of alginate in most growth media and up to 16% in very rich media. The algB::Tn501 mutations had no apparent effect on growth rate or growth requirements. Using another gene replacement technique called excision marker rescue, we constructed a chromosomal algB deletion (delta algB) mutant of P. aeruginosa FRD. The delta algB mutant also produced low levels of alginate as did the algB::Tn501 mutants. The alginate produced by algB::Tn501 mutants resembled wild-type alginate by all criteria studied: molecular weight, acetylation, and proportion of mannuronic and guluronic acids. Thus, the algB gene product is apparently involved in the high-level production of alginate by P. aeruginosa and is not directly involved in the pathway leading to its biosynthesis. Chromosomal mapping of an algB::Tn501 insertion showed linkage to the trp-2 marker on the FRD chromosome as does the algB50(Ts) mutation. The excision marker rescue technique was also used to place the algB::Tn501 marker on the chromosome of characterized strains of P. aeruginosa PAO. The algB::Tn501 mutation mapped near 21 min on the PAO chromosome.  相似文献   

5.
Mucoid strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa produce a viscous exopolysaccharide called alginate and also express alginate lyase activity which can degrade this polymer. By transposon mutagenesis and gene replacement techniques, the algL gene encoding a P. aeruginosa alginate lyase enzyme was found to reside between algG and algA within the alginate biosynthetic gene cluster at 35 min on the P. aeruginosa chromosome. DNA sequencing data for algL predicted a protein product of ca. 41 kDa, including a 27-amino-acid signal sequence, which would be consistent with its possible localization in the periplasmic space. Expression of the algL gene in Escherichia coli cells resulted in the expression of alginate lyase activity and the appearance of a new protein of ca. 39 kDa detected on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. In mucoid P. aeruginosa strains, expression of algL was regulated by AlgB, which also controls expression of other genes within the alginate gene cluster. Since alginate lyase activity is associated with the ability to produce and secrete alginate polymers, alginate lyase may play a role in alginate production.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa causing chronic pulmonary infections in patients with cystic fibrosis are known to convert to a mucoid form in vivo characterized by the production of the exopolysaccharide alginate. The alginate production trait is not stable, and mucoid strains frequently convert back to the nonmucoid form in vitro. The DNA involved in these spontaneous alginate conversions, referred to as algS, was shown here to map near hisI and pru markers on the chromosome of strain FRD, an isolate from a cystic fibrosis patient. Although cloning algS+ by trans-complementation was not possible, a clone (pJF5) was isolated that caused algS mutants to convert to the Alg+ phenotype at detectable frequencies (approximately 0.1%) in vitro. Gene replacement with transposon-marked pJF5 followed by mapping studies showed that pJF5 contained DNA transducibly close to algS in the chromosome. Another clone was identified called pJF15 which did contain algS+ from mucoid P. aeruginosa. The plasmid-borne algS+ locus could not complement spontaneous algS mutations in trans, but its cis-acting activity was readily observed after gene replacement with the algS mutant chromosome by using an adjacent transposon as the selectable marker. pJF15 also contained a trans-active gene called algT+ in addition to the cis-active gene algS+. The algT gene was localized on pJF15 by using deletion mapping and transposon mutagenesis. By using gene replacement, algT::Tn501 mutants of P. aeruginosa were constructed which were shown to be complemented in trans by pJF15. Both algS and algT were located on a DNA fragment approximately 3 kilobases in size. The algS gene may be a genetic switch which regulates the process of alginate conversion.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Alginate is an extracellular polysaccharide produced by mucoid strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa that are typically isolated from the pulmonary tracts of chronically infected cystic fibrosis patients. Alginate is a linear polymer of D-mannuronate and L-guluronate with O-acetyl ester linkages on the O-2 and/or O-3 position of the mannuronate residues. The presence of O-acetyl groups plays an important role in the ability of the polymer to act as a virulence factor, and the algF, algJ, and algI genes are known to be essential for the addition of O-acetyl groups to alginate. To better understand the mechanism of O acetylation of alginate, the cellular locations of the AlgI, AlgJ, and AlgF proteins were determined. For these studies, defined nonpolar algI, algJ, and algF deletion mutants of P. aeruginosa strain FRD1 were constructed, and each mutant produced alginate lacking O-acetyl groups. Expression of algI, algJ, or algF in trans in the corresponding mutant complemented each O acetylation defect. Random phoA (alkaline phosphatase [AP] gene) fusions to algF, algJ, and algI were constructed. All in-frame fusions to algF and algJ had AP activity, indicating that both AlgF and AlgJ were exported to the periplasm. Immunoblot analysis of spheroplasts and periplasmic fractions showed that AlgF was released with the periplasmic contents but that AlgJ remained with the spheroplast fraction. An N-terminal sequence analysis of AlgJ showed that its putative AlgJ signal peptide was not cleaved, suggesting that AlgJ is anchored to the cytoplasmic membrane by its uncleaved signal peptide. AP gene fusions were also used to map the membrane topology of AlgI, and the results suggest that it is an integral membrane protein with seven transmembrane domains. These results suggest that AlgI-AlgJ-AlgF may form a complex in the membrane that is the reaction center for O acetylation of alginate.  相似文献   

10.
Alginate, an exopolysaccharide produced by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, provides the bacterium with a selective advantage that makes it difficult to eradicate from the lungs of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients. Previous studies identified a gene, algX, within the alginate biosynthetic gene cluster on the P. aeruginosa chromosome. By probing cell fractions with anti-AlgX antibodies in a Western blot, AlgX was localized within the periplasm. Consistent with these results is the presence of a 26-amino-acid signal sequence. To examine the requirement for AlgX in alginate biosynthesis, part of algX in P. aeruginosa strain FRD1::pJLS3 was replaced with a nonpolar gentamicin resistance cassette. The resulting algXDelta::Gm mutant was verified by PCR and Western blot analysis and was phenotypically nonmucoid (non-alginate producing). The algXDelta::Gm mutant was restored to the mucoid phenotype with wild-type P. aeruginosa algX provided on a plasmid. The algXDelta::Gm mutant was found to secrete dialyzable oligouronic acids of various lengths. Mass spectroscopy and Dionex chromatography indicated that the dialyzable uronic acids are mainly mannuronic acid dimers resulting from alginate lyase (AlgL) degradation of polymannuronic acid. These studies suggest that AlgX is part of a protein scaffold that surrounds and protects newly formed polymers from AlgL degradation as they are transported within the periplasm for further modification and eventual transport out of the cell.  相似文献   

11.
Alginate, a co-polymer of O-acetylated beta-1,4-linked D-mannuronic acid and L-guluronic acid, has been reported to function in the virulence of Pseudomonas syringae, although genetic studies to test this hypothesis have not been undertaken previously. In the present study, we used a genetic approach to evaluate the role of alginate in the pathogenicity of P. syringae pv. syringae 3525, which causes bacterial brown spot on beans. Alginate biosynthesis in strain 3525 was disrupted by recombining Tn5 into algL, which encodes alginate lyase, resulting in 3525.L. Alginate production in 3525.L was restored by the introduction of pSK2 or pAD4033, which contain the alginate biosynthetic gene cluster from P. syringae pv. syringae FF5 or the algA gene from P. aeruginosa respectively. The role of alginate in the epiphytic fitness of strain 3525 was assessed by monitoring the populations of 3525 and 3525.L on tomato, which is not a host for this pathogen. The mutant 3525.L was significantly impaired in its ability to colonize tomato leaves compared with 3525, indicating that alginate functions in the survival of strain 3525 on leaf surfaces. The contribution of alginate to the virulence of strain 3525 was evaluated by comparing the population dynamics and symptom development of 3525 and 3525.L in bean leaves. Although 3525. L retained the ability to form lesions on bean leaves, symptoms were less severe, and the population was significantly reduced in comparison with 3525. These results indicate that alginate contributes to the virulence of P. syringae pv. syringae 3525, perhaps by facilitating colonization or dissemination of the bacterium in planta.  相似文献   

12.
The availability of a technique for site-directed mutagenesis by gene replacement provides a powerful tool for genetic analysis in any bacterial species. We report here a general technique for gene replacement in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Genes on fragments of cloned P. aeruginosa DNA, altered by transposon mutagenesis, can be transduced into a recipient strain and can replace homologous genes in the P. aeruginosa genome. In this study we applied this technique to the construction of recA mutants of P. aeruginosa. A cloned segment of P. aeruginosa FRD1 DNA was isolated which encoded a protein analogous to the recA gene product of Escherichia coli. The P. aeruginosa recA gene was able to complement several defects associated with recA mutation in E. coli. Transposon Tn1 and Tn501 insertions in the cloned recA gene of P. aeruginosa were used to generate chromosomal recA mutants by gene replacement. These recA strains of P. aeruginosa were more sensitive to UV irradiation and methyl methane sulfonate and showed reduced recombination proficiency compared with the wild type. Also examined was the effect of recA mutations on the expression of alginate, a virulence trait. Alginate is a capsulelike polysaccharide associated with certain pulmonary infections, and its expression is typically unstable. The genetic mechanism responsible for the instability of alginate biosynthesis was shown to be recA independent.  相似文献   

13.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa can convert to a mucoid colony morphology by a genetic mechanism called alginate conversion; this results in the production of copious amounts of the exopolysaccharide alginate. The mucoid phenotype of P. aeruginosa is commonly associated with its ability to cause chronic pulmonary tract infections in patients with cystic fibrosis. In this study we isolated the cis-acting locus involved in alginate conversion, called algS, from both mucoid and nonmucoid isogenic strains. We then examined the role of algS in the control of algT, a trans-active gene required for alginate production in P. aeruginosa. We used a new cosmid cloning vector, called pEMR2, that permitted both the cloning of large DNA fragments and their subsequent gene replacement in P. aeruginosa. To verify the predicted properties of this vector, we isolated and tested a pEMR2 hisI+ clone. Using cloned algS-containing DNA and a method for gene replacement, we constructed isogenic strains of P. aeruginosa that had Tn501 adjacent to algS on the chromosome. Two pEMR2 clone banks containing genomic fragments from isogenic algS(On) (exhibiting the alginate production phenotype) and algS(Off) (exhibiting the non-alginate production phenotype) strains were constructed, and Tn501 served as an adjacent marker to select for clones containing the respective algS allele. The pEMR2 algS(On) and pEMR2 algS(Off) clones were shown to contain the indicated algS allele by gene replacement with the chromosome of strains that carried the opposite allele. To test whether algS controls the expression of the adjacent algT gene, we constructed a pLAFR1 algS(Off)T clone and showed it to be unable to complement an algT::Tn501 mutation in trans. In contrast, a pLAFR1 algS(On)T clone did complement algT::Tn501 in trans. Thus, algS appears to control the activation of algT expression, bringing about alginate conversion.  相似文献   

14.
Conversion of the mucoid phenotype, which results from the production of the exopolysaccharide alginate, is a feature typical of Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains causing chronic pulmonary infections in patients with cystic fibrosis. In this study, we further characterized a recombinant plasmid, called pJF15, that contains DNA from the 65- to 70-min region of the chromosome of mucoid P. aeruginosa FRD1 and has loci involved in alginate conversion. Plasmid pJF15 complements algT mutations in trans and confers the mucoid phenotype in cis following gene replacement. However, the phenotype of nonmucoid P. aeruginosa carrying pJF15 is unchanged. Here we report the identification of a locus immediately downstream of algT, called algN, that may be a negative regulator that blocks algT from activating alginate production. Inactivation of algN by transposon Tn501 insertion allowed algT to stimulate alginate production in trans. The DNA sequence of this region identified an open reading frame that predicts an algN gene product of 33 kDa, but no homology was found to other proteins in a sequence data base. Clones of algT in which algN was deleted caused the activation of alginate biosynthesis in transconjugants of several P. aeruginosa strains. DNA containing algT was shown to hybridize to the genomes of several Pseudomonas species, including P. putida, P. stutzeri, and P. fluorescens. Transconjugants of these species carrying algT DNA (with a deletion of algN) from pJF15 showed a mucoid phenotype and increased production of uronic acid-containing polymers that resembled alginate.  相似文献   

15.
16.
An enzymatic in vitro alginate polymerization assay was developed by using 14C-labeled GDP-mannuronic acid as a substrate and subcellular fractions of alginate overproducing Pseudomonas aeruginosa FRD1 as a polymerase source. The highest specific alginate polymerase activity was detected in the envelope fraction, suggesting that cytoplasmic and outer membrane proteins constitute the functional alginate polymerase complex. Accordingly, no alginate polymerase activity was detected using cytoplasmic membrane or outer membrane proteins, respectively. To determine the requirement of Alg8, which has been proposed as catalytic subunit of alginate polymerase, nonpolar isogenic alg8 knockout mutants of alginate-overproducing P. aeruginosa FRD1 and P. aeruginosa PDO300 were constructed, respectively. These mutants were deficient in alginate biosynthesis, and alginate production was restored by introducing only the alg8 gene. Surprisingly, this resulted in significant alginate overproduction of the complemented P. aeruginosa Deltaalg8 mutants compared to nonmutated strains, suggesting that Alg8 is the bottleneck in alginate biosynthesis. (1)H-NMR analysis of alginate isolated from these complemented mutants showed that the degree of acetylation increased from 4.7 to 9.3% and the guluronic acid content was reduced from 38 to 19%. Protein topology prediction indicated that Alg8 is a membrane protein. Fusion protein analysis provided evidence that Alg8 is located in the cytoplasmic membrane with a periplasmic C terminus. Subcellular fractionation suggested that the highest specific PhoA activity of Alg8-PhoA is present in the cytoplasmic membrane. A structural model of Alg8 based on the structure of SpsA from Bacillus subtilis was developed.  相似文献   

17.
J.H. LEITÃO AND i. SÁ-CORREIA. 1993. The manipulation of the alginate pathway in two Pseudomonas aeruginosa mucoid variants was attempted at growth temperatures within the range 20C-40C. This was carried out by increasing the level of either phosphomannose isomerase (PMI) and GDP-mannose pyrophosphorylase (GMP) or GDP-mannose dehydrogenase (GMD) encoded by algA or algD respectively, present in recombinant plasmids derived from the controlled expression vector pMMB24. The specific growth rate of cells expressing either algA or algD genes from recombinant plasmids was lower than that of cells harbouring the cloning vector only. Stimulation of alginate synthesis was observed when the expression of the alginate genes was low, in the absence of isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) induction. The further increase of the level of alginate enzymes in induced cells, without the simultaneous increase of other limiting steps, had no positive effect on the strictly regulated alginate pathway. Temperature profiles for alginate synthesis were modified reflecting changes in rate limiting steps. Limitations on the polymerization ability and the competition between cell growth and alginate synthesis were possibly involved in the modification of the temperature profiles for alginate production, or in the decrease of the molecular weight of polymers produced by recombinants under conditions that led to highly active alginate synthesis. The acetyl content of alginates produced by the recombinants was higher than that of the biopolymer controls, possibly due to the higher acetyl-CoA availability in slower growing cells.  相似文献   

18.
Insertion of the mercury resistance transposon Tn501 into broad-host-range plasmid RP1 greatly enhanced the ability of this plasmid to promote chromosome transfer in the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. Compared with the wild-type RP1, which produced less than 10(-8) recombinants per donor cell, RP1::Tn501 produced between 10(-3) and 10(-7) recombinants per donor cell depending upon the marker selected. Plasmid RP1::Tn501 promoted polarized transfer of the chromosome from one or perhaps two origins on the chromosome, giving rise to two linkage groups. All of the biosynthetic and antibiotic resistance genes that have been mapped, including those involved in photosynthesis, occur on one or another of these linkage groups.  相似文献   

19.
A bacterial strain N-1 was isolated as a decomposer of alginate and identified as Deleya marina. The alyA encoding for alginate lyase was cloned into Escherichia coli. The structural gene, located on a 1.9-kb SalI fragment, revealed 1,122 bp encoding a mature protein of 348 amino acids and a signal peptide of 26 amino acids. The deduced amino acid sequence of the D. marina alginate lyase showed high homology to AlgL of Pseudomonas aeruginosa with 63% identity and belonging to class 1 by hydrophobic cluster analysis.  相似文献   

20.
Attenuated total reflection/Fourier transform-infrared spectrometry (ATR/FT-IR) and scanning confocal laser microscopy (SCLM) were used to study the role of alginate and alginate structure in the attachment and growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa on surfaces. Developing biofilms of the mucoid (alginate-producing) cystic fibrosis pulmonary isolate FRD1, as well as mucoid and nonmucoid mutant strains, were monitored by ATR/FT-IR for 44 and 88 h as IR absorbance bands in the region of 2,000 to 1,000 cm(-1). All strains produced biofilms that absorbed IR radiation near 1,650 cm(-1) (amide I), 1,550 cm(-1) (amide II), 1,240 cm(-1) (P==O stretching, C---O---C stretching, and/or amide III vibrations), 1,100 to 1,000 cm(-1) (C---OH and P---O stretching) 1,450 cm(-1), and 1,400 cm(-1). The FRD1 biofilms produced spectra with an increase in relative absorbance at 1,060 cm(-1) (C---OH stretching of alginate) and 1,250 cm(-1) (C---O stretching of the O-acetyl group in alginate), as compared to biofilms of nonmucoid mutant strains. Dehydration of an 88-h FRD1 biofilm revealed other IR bands that were also found in the spectrum of purified FRD1 alginate. These results provide evidence that alginate was present within the FRD1 biofilms and at greater relative concentrations at depths exceeding 1 micrometer, the analysis range for the ATR/FT-IR technique. After 88 h, biofilms of the nonmucoid strains produced amide II absorbances that were six to eight times as intense as those of the mucoid FRD1 parent strain. However, the cell densities in biofilms were similar, suggesting that FRD1 formed biofilms with most cells at depths that exceeded the analysis range of the ATR/FT-IR technique. SCLM analysis confirmed this result, demonstrating that nonmucoid strains formed densely packed biofilms that were generally less than 6 micrometer in depth. In contrast, FRD1 produced microcolonies that were approximately 40 micrometer in depth. An algJ mutant strain that produced alginate lacking O-acetyl groups gave an amide II signal approximately fivefold weaker than that of FRD1 and produced small microcolonies. After 44 h, the algJ mutant switched to the nonmucoid phenotype and formed uniform biofilms, similar to biofilms produced by the nonmucoid strains. These results demonstrate that alginate, although not required for P. aeruginosa biofilm development, plays a role in the biofilm structure and may act as intercellular material, required for formation of thicker three-dimensional biofilms. The results also demonstrate the importance of alginate O acetylation in P. aeruginosa biofilm architecture.  相似文献   

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