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1.
Prior work showed that expression of acyl carrier proteins (ACPs) of a diverse set of bacteria replaced the function of Escherichia coli ACP in lipid biosynthesis. However, the AcpAs of Lactococcus lactis and Enterococcus faecalis were inactive. Both failed to support growth of an E. coli acpP mutant strain. This defect seemed likely because of the helix II sequences of the two AcpAs, which differed markedly from those of the proteins that supported growth. To test this premise, chimeric ACPs were constructed in which L. lactis helix II replaced helix II of E. coli AcpP and vice versa. Expression of the AcpP protein L. lactis AcpA helix II allowed weak growth, whereas the L. lactis AcpA-derived protein that contained E. coli AcpP helix II failed to support growth of the E. coli mutant strain. Replacement of the L. lactis AcpA helix II residues in this protein showed that substitution of valine for the phenylalanine residue four residues downstream of the phosphopanthetheine-modified serine gave robust growth and allowed modification by the endogenous AcpS phosphopantetheinyl transferase (rather than the promiscuous Sfp transferase required to modify the L. lactis AcpA and the chimera of L. lactis AcpA helix II in AcpP). Further chimera constructs showed that the lack of function of the L. lactis AcpA-derived protein containing E. coli AcpP helix II was due to incompatibility of L. lactis AcpA helix I with the downstream elements of AcpP. Therefore, the origins of ACP incompatibility can reside in either helix I or in helix II.  相似文献   

2.
Acyl carrier proteins (ACPs) are very small acidic proteins that play a key role in fatty acid and complex lipid synthesis. Moreover, recent data indicate that the acyl carrier protein of Escherichia coli has a large protein interaction network that extends beyond lipid synthesis. Despite extensive efforts over many years, no temperature-sensitive mutants with mutations in the structural gene (acpP) that encodes ACP have been isolated. We report the isolation of three such mutants by a new approach that utilizes error-prone PCR mutagenesis, overlap extension PCR, and phage lambda Red-mediated homologous recombination and that should be generally applicable. These mutants plus other experiments demonstrate that ACP function is essential for the growth of E. coli. Each of the mutants was efficiently modified with the phosphopantetheinyl moiety essential for the function of ACP in lipid synthesis, and thus lack of function at the nonpermissive temperature cannot be attributed to a lack of prosthetic group attachment. All of the mutant proteins were largely stable at the nonpermissive temperature except the A68T/N73D mutant protein. Fatty acid synthesis in strains that carried the D38V or A68T/N73D mutations was inhibited upon a shift to the nonpermissive temperature and in the latter case declined to a small percentage of the rate of the wild-type strain.  相似文献   

3.
The acyl carrier proteins (ACPs) of fatty acid synthesis are functional only when modified by attachment of the prosthetic group, 4'-phosphopantetheine (4'-PP), which is transferred from CoA to the hydroxyl group of a specific serine residue. Almost 40 years ago Vagelos and Larrabee reported an enzyme from Escherichia coli that removed the prosthetic group. We report that this enzyme, called ACP hydrolyase or ACP phosphodiesterase, is encoded by a gene (yajB) of previously unknown function that we have renamed acpH. A mutant E. coli strain having a total deletion of the acpH gene has been constructed that grows normally, showing that phosphodiesterase activity is not essential for growth, although it is required for turnover of the ACP prosthetic group in vivo. ACP phosphodiesterase (AcpH) has been purified to homogeneity for the first time and is a soluble protein that very readily aggregates upon overexpression in vivo or concentration in vitro. The purified enzyme has been shown to cleave acyl-ACP species with acyl chains of 6-16 carbon atoms and is active on some, but not all, non-native ACP species tested. Possible physiological roles for AcpH are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
We have characterized an acyl carrier protein (ACP) presumed to be involved in the synthesis of fatty acids in Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2). This is the third ACP to have been identified in S. coelicolor; the two previously characterized ACPs are involved in the synthesis of two aromatic polyketides: the blue-pigmented antibiotic actinorhodin and a grey pigment associated with the spore walls. The three ACPs are clearly related. The presumed fatty acid synthase (FAS) ACP was partially purified, and the N-terminal amino acid sequence was obtained. The corresponding gene (acpP) was cloned and sequenced and found to lie within 1 kb of a previously characterized gene (fabD) encoding another subunit of the S. coelicolor FAS, malonyl coenzyme A:ACP acyl-transferase. Expression of S. coelicolor acpP in Escherichia coli yielded several different forms, whose masses corresponded to the active (holo) form of the protein carrying various acyl substituents. To test the mechanisms that normally prevent the FAS ACP from substituting for the actinorhodin ACP, acpP was cloned in place of actI-open reading frame 3 (encoding the actinorhodin ACP) to allow coexpression of acpP with the act polyketide synthase (PKS) genes. Pigmented polyketide production was observed, but only at a small fraction of its former level. This suggests that the FAS and PKS ACPs may be biochemically incompatible and that this could prevent functional complementation between the FAS and PKSs that potentially coexist within the same cells.  相似文献   

5.
Acyl carrier protein (ACP) of Escherichia coli is a small acidic protein which functions as carrier of growing acyl chains during their biosynthesis and as donor of acyl chains during transfer to target molecules. This unique ACP of E. coli is expressed constitutively. In more complex bacteria, multiple ACPs are present, indicating a channeling of pools of multi-carbon units into different biosynthetic routes. In rhizobia, for example, besides the constitutive ACP (AcpP) involved in the biosynthesis and transfer of common fatty acids, three specialized ACPs have been reported: (1) the flavonoid-inducible nodulation protein NodF, (2) AcpXL that transfers 27-hydroxyoctacosanoic acid to a sugar backbone during lipid A biosynthesis, and (3) the RkpF protein which is required for the biosynthesis of rhizobial capsular polysaccharides. All three of those specialized rhizobial ACPs are required for the biosynthesis of cell-surface molecules that play a role in establishing the symbiotic relationship between rhizobia and their legume hosts. Surprisingly, the recently sequenced genomes from Mesorhizobium loti and Sinorhizobium meliloti suggest even more candidates for ACPs in rhizobia.  相似文献   

6.
4'-Phosphopantetheine transferases (PPTases) transfer the 4'-phosphopantetheine moiety of coenzyme A onto a conserved serine residue of acyl carrier proteins (ACPs) of fatty acid and polyketide synthases as well as peptidyl carrier proteins (PCPs) of nonribosomal peptide synthetases. This posttranslational modification converts ACPs and PCPs from their inactive apo into the active holo form. We have investigated the 4'-phosphopantetheinylation reaction in Bacillus subtilis, an organism containing in total 43 ACPs and PCPs but only two PPTases, the acyl carrier protein synthase AcpS of primary metabolism and Sfp, a PPTase of secondary metabolism associated with the nonribosomal peptide synthetase for the peptide antibiotic surfactin. We identified and cloned ydcB encoding AcpS from B. subtilis, which complemented an Escherichia coli acps disruption mutant. B. subtilis AcpS and its substrate ACP were biochemically characterized. AcpS also modified the d-alanyl carrier protein but failed to recognize PCP and an acyl carrier protein of secondary metabolism discovered in this study, designated AcpK, that was not identified by the Bacillus genome project. On the other hand, Sfp was able to modify in vitro all acyl carrier proteins tested. We thereby extend the reported broad specificity of this enzyme to the homologous ACP. This in vitro cross-interaction between primary and secondary metabolism was confirmed under physiological in vivo conditions by the construction of a ydcB deletion in a B. subtilis sfp(+) strain. The genes coding for Sfp and its homolog Gsp from Bacillus brevis could also complement the E. coli acps disruption. These results call into question the essential role of AcpS in strains that contain a Sfp-like PPTase and consequently the suitability of AcpS as a microbial target in such strains.  相似文献   

7.
The acyl carrier protein (ACP), an essential protein cofactor for fatty acid synthesis, has been isolated from two cyanobacteria: the filamentous, heterocystous, Anabaena variabilis (ATCC 29211) and the unicellular Synechocystis 6803 (ATCC 27184). Both ACPs have been purified to homogeneity utilizing a three-column procedure. Synechocystis 6803 ACP was purified 1800-fold with 67% yield, while A. variabilis ACP was purified 1040-fold with 50% yield. Yields of 13.0 micrograms ACP/g Synechocystis 6803 and 9.0 micrograms ACP/g A. variabilis were achieved. Amino acid analysis indicated that these ACPs were highly charged acidic proteins similar to other known ACPs. Sequence analysis revealed that both cyanobacterial ACPs were highly conserved with both spinach and Escherichia coli ACP at the phosphopantetheine prosthetic group region. Examining the probability of alpha-helix and beta-turn regions in various ACPs, showed that cyanobacterial ACPs were more closely related to E. coli ACP than spinach ACP I. Immunoblot analysis and a competitive binding assay for ACP illustrated that both ACPs bound poorly to spinach ACP I antibody. SDS/PAGE and native PAGE of Synechocystis 6803 ACP and A. variabilis ACP showed that cyanobacteria ACPs co-migrated with E. coli ACP and had relative molecular masses of 18,100 and 17,900 respectively. Both native and urea gel analysis of acyl-ACP products from fatty acid synthase reactions demonstrated that bacterial ACPs and plant ACP gave essentially the same metabolic products when assayed using either bacterial or plant fatty acid synthase. A. variabilis and Synechocystis 6803 ACP could be acylated using E. coli acyl ACP synthetase.  相似文献   

8.
Rhizobium species produce an inducible acyl carrier protein (ACP), encoded by the nodF gene, that somehow functions in an exchange of cell signals between bacteria and specific plant hosts, leading to nodulation of plant roots and symbiotic nitrogen fixation, as well as a constitutive ACP needed for the synthesis of essential cell lipids. The periplasmic cyclic glucans of Rhizobium spp. are also involved in specific rhizobium-plant interaction. These glucans are strongly similar to the periplasmic membrane-derived oligosaccharides (MDO) of Escherichia coli. E. coli ACP is an essential component of a membrane-bound transglucosylase needed for the biosynthesis of MDO, raising the possibility that either or both of the rhizobial ACPs might have a similar function. We have now isolated the constitutive ACP of R. meliloti and determined its primary structure. We have also examined its function, together with those of ACPs from E. coli, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and spinach, in the MDO transglucosylase system and as substrate for the E. coli ACP acylase enzyme. All four ACPs act as acceptors of acyl residues, but only the E. coli ACP functions in the transglucosylase system.  相似文献   

9.
Wang H  Cronan JE 《Biochemistry》2004,43(37):11782-11789
The small genome of the Gram-positive bacterium Lactococcus lactis ssp. lactis IL1403 contains two genes that encode proteins annotated as homologues of Escherichia coli beta-hydroxyacyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) reductase. E. coli fabG encodes beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) reductase, the enzyme responsible for the first reductive step of the fatty acid synthetic cycle. Both of the L. lactis genes are adjacent to (and predicted to be cotranscribed with) other genes that encode proteins having homology to known fatty acid synthetic enzymes. Such relationships have often been used to strengthen annotations based on sequence alignments. Annotation in the case of beta-ketoacyl-ACP reductase is particularly problematic because the protein is a member of a vast protein family, the short-chain alcohol dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) family. The recent isolation of an E. coli fabG mutant strain encoding a conditionally active beta-ketoacyl-ACP reductase allowed physiological and biochemical testing of the putative L. lactishomologues. We report that expression of only one of the two L. lactis proteins (that annotated as FabG1) allows growth of the E. coli fabG strain under nonpermissive conditions and restores in vitro fatty acid synthetic ability to extracts of the mutant strain. Therefore, like E. coli, L. lactis has a single beta-ketoacyl-ACP reductase active with substrates of all fatty acid chain lengths. The second protein (annotated as FabG2), although inactive in fatty acid synthesis both in vivo and in vitro, was highly active in reduction of the model substrate, beta-ketobutyryl-CoA. As expected from work on the E. coli enzyme, the FabG1 beta-ketobutyryl-CoA reductase activity was inhibited by ACP (which blocks access to the active site) whereas the activity of FabG2 was unaffected by the presence of ACP. These results seem to be an example of a gene duplication event followed by divergence of one copy of the gene to encode a protein having a new function.  相似文献   

10.
Acyl carrier proteins (ACPs) from Escherichia coli and Euglena were analyzed on Western blots using rabbit antibodies raised against E. coli ACP. Euglena ACP, unlike that from E. coli, behaves upon electrophoresis under denaturing conditions as its size would predict. Oligomeric forms of both ACPs were evident on Western blots, but the bacterial ACP had more tendency to aggregate. That the oligomeric forms were not due to impurities was shown by their regeneration from low-Mr protein, reaction with antibodies isolated from low-Mr protein, and by molecular weight determination of the ACP by low-angle laser light scattering.  相似文献   

11.
Thymidylate kinase (dTMP kinase; EC 2.7.4.9) catalyzes the phosphorylation of dTMP to form dTDP in both de novo and salvage pathways of dTTP synthesis. The nucleotide sequence of the tmk gene encoding this essential Escherichia coli enzyme is the last one among all the E. coli nucleoside and nucleotide kinase genes which has not yet been reported. By subcloning the 24.0-min region where the tmk gene has been previously mapped from the lambda phage 236 (E9G1) of the Kohara E. coli genomic library (Y. Kohara, K. Akiyama, and K. Isono, Cell 50:495-508, 1987), we precisely located tmk between acpP and holB genes. Here we report the nucleotide sequence of tmk, including the end portion of an upstream open reading frame (ORF 340) of unknown function that may be cotranscribed with the pabC gene. The tmk gene was located clockwise of and just upstream of the holB gene. Our sequencing data allowed the filling in of the unsequenced gap between the acpP and holB genes within the 24-min region of the E. coli chromosome. Identification of this region as the E. coli tmk gene was confirmed by functional complementation of a yeast dTMP kinase temperature-sensitive mutant and by in vitro enzyme assay of the thymidylate kinase activity in cell extracts of E. coli by use of tmk-overproducing plasmids. The deduced amino acid sequence of the E. coli tmk gene showed significant similarity to the sequences of the thymidylate kinases of vertebrates, yeasts, and viruses as well as two uncharacterized proteins of bacteria belonging to Bacillus and Haemophilus species.  相似文献   

12.
Acyl carrier proteins (ACPs) are a group of highly conserved and abundant proteins in bacteria. ACPs play a central role as the acyl group carriers in bacterial fatty acid biosynthesis, providing building blocks for membrane biogenesis and the production of secondary metabolites. In the versatile human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, three ACP homologs have been identified. One homolog, AcpP, exhibits the strongest sequence homology to the canonical Escherichia coli ACP. Here we report the 1H, 13C and 15N assignments of the holo-AcpP of P. aeruginosa.  相似文献   

13.
3-酮基脂酰ACP还原酶催化3-酮基脂酰ACP还原为3-羟基脂酰ACP,是细菌脂肪酸合成反应的关键酶之一.为了明确该酶中110位的保守天冬酰胺残基在酶催化活性和酶结构中的作用,本研究采用基因定点突变和蛋白质表达纯化技术,获得了大肠杆菌3-酮基脂酰ACP还原酶FabG的两个突变蛋白:FabG N110Q和FabG N110L.圆二色谱结果显示,天冬酰胺残基的突变改变了FabG的空间结构,使突变蛋白的α螺旋结构明显增加.以3-酮脂酰ACP为底物的酶活性测定表明,突变蛋白的酶活性均有下降,但残存的酶活性达到了FabG的75%以上.突变蛋白FabG N110Q和FabG N110L具有3-酮基脂酰ACP还原酶的活性,能在体外重建细菌脂肪酸合成反应.对fabG温度敏感突变株的遗传互补分析表明,FabG蛋白110位天冬酰胺突变为谷氨酰胺或亮氨酸后,在一定的条件下仍能互补大肠杆菌的生长.本研究结果提示,FabG 110位的天冬酰胺残基不是参与3-酮基脂酰ACP还原酶催化反应的必需氨基酸,它只是作为结构氨基酸,在维持FabG的空间结构的稳定性方面起作用.  相似文献   

14.
Human cDNAs encoding fragments of DNA ligase I, the major replicative DNA ligase in mammalian cells, have been expressed as lacZ fusion proteins in Escherichia coli. A cDNA encoding the carboxyl-terminal catalytic domain of human DNA ligase I was able to complement a conditional-lethal DNA ligase mutation in E. coli as measured by growth of the mutant strain at the non-permissive temperature. Targeted deletions of the amino and carboxyl termini of the catalytic domain identified a minimum size necessary for catalytic function and a maximum size for optimal complementing activity in E. coli. The human cDNA was subjected to systematic site-directed mutagenesis in vitro and mutant polypeptides assayed for functional expression in the E. coli DNA ligase mutant. Such functional analysis of the active site of DNA ligase I identified specific residues required for the formation of an enzyme-adenylate reaction intermediate.  相似文献   

15.
The gene encoding Escherichia coli acyl carrier protein (ACP) has been isolated and sequenced. The ACP gene (called acpP) was located on the genetic map between fabF and fabD which encode two fatty acid biosynthetic enzymes, 3-ketoacyl-ACP synthase II and malonyl CoA-ACP transacylase, respectively. An open reading frame between acpP and fabD encodes a 26.5-kDa protein that has significant sequence identity (greater than 40%) with two acetoacetyl-CoA reductases and thus is believed to encode a 3-ketoacyl-ACP reductase. This gene (called fabG) is cotranscribed with acpP. Thus, the gene encoding ACP, the key carrier protein of fatty acid synthesis, is located within a cluster of fatty acid biosynthetic genes.  相似文献   

16.
Conformational flexibility of acyl carrier protein (ACP) is important for its ability to interact with multiple enzymes in bacterial fatty acid metabolism. We have recently shown that, unlike the prototypical ACP from Escherichia coli, the more acidic Vibrio harveyi ACP is largely unfolded at physiological pH. Mutations D18K, A75H and A75H/D18K were made in recombinant V. harveyi ACP (rACP) to determine the importance of basic residues Lys-18 and His-75 in maintaining the native conformation of E. coli ACP. Both D18K and A75H ACPs were fatty acylated by acyl-ACP synthetase, showing that neither mutation grossly alters tertiary structure. Circular dichroism (CD) indicated that rACP refolded upon addition of MgCl(2) at 100-fold lower concentrations (<1 mM) than KCl, suggesting that divalent cations stabilize rACP by interaction at specific sites. Surprisingly, mutants A75H and A75H/D18K exhibited native-like conformation in the absence of MgCl(2), while the D18K mutant was comparable to rACP. Moreover, the alpha-helical content of A75H, A75H/D18K and E. coli ACPs was more sensitive than that of rACP or D18K ACP to modification by the histidine-selective reagent diethylpyrocarbonate. Together, these results suggest that the partial positive charge of His-75 may be important in maintaining the conformational stability of E. coli ACP at a neutral pH.  相似文献   

17.
A cluster of Bacillus subtilis fatty acid synthetic genes was isolated by complementation of an Escherichia coli fabD mutant encoding a thermosensitive malonyl coenzyme A-acyl carrier protein transacylase. The B. subtilis genomic segment contains genes that encode three fatty acid synthetic proteins, malonyl coenzyme A-acyl carrier protein transacylase (fabD), 3-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein reductase (fabG), and the N-terminal 14 amino acid residues of acyl carrier protein (acpP). Also present is a sequence that encodes a homolog of E. coli plsX, a gene that plays a poorly understood role in phospholipid synthesis. The B. subtilis plsX gene weakly complemented an E. coli plsX mutant. The order of genes in the cluster is plsX fabD fabG acpP, the same order found in E. coli, except that in E. coli the fabH gene lies between plsX and fabD. The absence of fabH in the B. subtilis cluster is consistent with the different fatty acid compositions of the two organisms. The amino acid sequence of B. subtilis acyl carrier protein was obtained by sequencing the purified protein, and the sequence obtained strongly resembled that of E. coli acyl carrier protein, except that most of the protein retained the initiating methionine residue. The B. subtilis fab cluster was mapped to the 135 to 145 degrees region of the chromosome.  相似文献   

18.
Acyl carrier protein (ACP) interacts with many different enzymes during the synthesis of fatty acids, phospholipids, and other specialized products in bacteria. To examine the structural and functional roles of amino acids previously implicated in interactions between the ACP polypeptide and fatty acids attached to the phosphopantetheine prosthetic group, recombinant Vibrio harveyi ACP and mutant derivatives of conserved residues Phe-50, Ile-54, Ala-59, and Tyr-71 were prepared from glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins. Circular dichroism revealed that, unlike Escherichia coli ACP, V. harveyi-derived ACPs are unfolded at neutral pH in the absence of divalent cations; all except F50A and I54A recovered native conformation upon addition of MgCl(2). Mutant I54A was not processed to the holo form by ACP synthase. Some mutations significantly decreased catalytic efficiency of ACP fatty acylation by V. harveyi acyl-ACP synthetase relative to recombinant ACP, e.g. F50A (4%), I54L (20%), and I54V (31%), whereas others (V12G, Y71A, and A59G) had less effect. By contrast, all myristoylated ACPs examined were effective substrates for the luminescence-specific V. harveyi myristoyl-ACP thioesterase. Conformationally sensitive gel electrophoresis at pH 9 indicated that fatty acid attachment stabilizes mutant ACPs in a chain length-dependent manner, although stabilization was decreased for mutants F50A and A59G. Our results indicate that (i) residues Ile-54 and Phe-50 are important in maintaining native ACP conformation, (ii) residue Ala-59 may be directly involved in stabilization of ACP structure by acyl chain binding, and (iii) acyl-ACP synthetase requires native ACP conformation and involves interaction with fatty acid binding pocket residues, whereas myristoyl-ACP thioesterase is insensitive to acyl donor structure.  相似文献   

19.
Site-directed mutagenesis was used to change the phosphopantetheine attachment site (Ser38) of spinach acyl carrier protein I (ACP-I) from a serine to a threonine or cysteine residue. 1. Although the native ACP-I is fully phosphopantethenylated when expressed in Escherichia coli, the TH-ACP-I and CY-ACP-I mutants were found to be completely devoid of the phosphopantetheine group. Therefore, the E. coli holoACP synthase requires serine for in vivo phosphopantetheine addition to spinach ACP-I. 2. Spinach holoACP synthase was completely inactive in vitro with either the TH-ACP-I or CY-ACP-I mutants. In addition, TH-ACP-I and CY-ACP-I were strong inhibitors of spinach holoACP synthase. 3. The mutant ACPs were weak or ineffective as inhibitors of spinach fatty acid synthesis and spinach oleoyl-ACP hydrolase. 4. Compared to holoACP-I, the mutant apoACP-I analogs had: (a) altered mobility in SDS and native gel electrophoresis, (b) altered binding to anti-(spinach ACP-I) antibodies and (c) altered isoelectric points. The combined physical, immunological and enzyme inhibition data indicate that attachment of the phosphopantheine prosthetic group alters ACP conformation.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphopantetheinyl transferases (PPTases) are enzymes that catalyse the transfer of a 4'-phosphopantetheine moiety from CoA to a conserved serine residue of a carrier protein. These carrier proteins use the 4'-phosphopantetheine thiol to shuttle intermediates between the active sites of biosynthetic enzymes involved in fatty acid, non-ribosomal peptide and polyketide synthesis. Three PPTases have been previously been identified in Escherichia coli K-12 and other E. coli strains by homology searches and are encoded by the genes acpS, entD and acpT. Both AcpS and EntD have been well studied whereas the function of AcpT has been an enigma because no carrier protein substrate could be found. We report genetic and biochemical evidence that AcpT modifies two carrier proteins encoded in O-island 138, a cluster of fatty acid biosynthesis-like genes located adjacent to acpT in the genome of the pathogenic E. coli strain O157:H7 (E. coli K-12 and several other sequenced E. coli and Shigella strains lack O-island 138). The two carrier proteins of O-island 138 of strain O157:H7 are not modified (or only very poorly modified) by AcpS, the PPTase responsible for 4'-phosphopantetheine attachment to the acyl carrier protein (AcpP) of fatty acid synthesis. We demonstrate that AcpT cannot functionally replace AcpS in E. coli K-12 either in its native chromosomal location or upon insertion of acpT into the acpS chromosomal location. However, in the absence of AcpS activity AcpT does allow very slow growth thus providing a rationale for its retention in the absence of its cognate substrates. These results together with phylogenetic analyses and comparisons of the E. coli and Shigella strains of known genome sequence strongly argue that AcpT has been orphaned from its cognate substrates by a deletion event that occurred in a common ancestor of these organisms. This seems one of the few cases where a chromosomal rearrangement has been functionally demonstrated to be a deletion event rather than an insertion event in the reference organism. We also show that the previously reported suppression of an acpS mutation by the deletion of Lon protease is an artifact of the increased capsular polysaccharide production of lon strains.  相似文献   

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