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1.
Phosphoglycerol transferase I, an enzyme of the inner, cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli, catalyzes the in vitro transfer of phosphoglycerol residues from phosphatidylglycerol to membrane-derived oligosaccharides or to the model substrate arbutin (p-hydroxyphenyl-beta-D-glucoside). The products are a phosphoglycerol diester derivative of membrane-derived oligosaccharides or arbutin, respectively, and sn-1,2-diglyceride (B. J. Jackson and E. P. Kennedy, J. Biol. Chem. 258:2394-2398, 1983). Because this enzyme has its active site on the outer aspect of the inner membrane, it also catalyzes the transfer of phosphoglycerol residues to arbutin added to the medium (J.-P. Bohin and E. P. Kennedy, J. Biol. Chem. 259:8388-8393, 1984). When strains bearing the dgk mutation, which are defective in the enzyme diglyceride kinase, are grown in medium containing arbutin, they accumulate large amounts of sn-1,2-diglyceride, a product of the phosphoglycerol transferase I reaction. Growth is inhibited under these conditions. A further mutation in such a dgk strain, leading to the loss of phosphoglycerol transferase I activity, should result in the phenotype of arbutin resistance. We have exploited this fact to obtain strains with such mutations, designated mdoB, that map near min 99. Such mutants lack detectable phosphoglycerol transferase I activity, cannot transfer phosphoglycerol residues to arbutin in vivo, and synthesize membrane-derived oligosaccharides devoid of phosphoglycerol residues. These findings offer strong genetic support for the function of phosphoglycerol transferase I in membrane-derived oligosaccharide biosynthesis.  相似文献   

2.
Membrane-derived oligosaccharides, found in the Escherichia coli periplasmic space (Schulman, H., and Kennedy, E. P. (1979) J. Bacteriol. 137, 686-688), are composed of 8-10 units of glucose, the sole sugar, in beta 1 leads to 2 and beta 1 leads to 6 linkages (Schneider, J. E., Reinhold, V., Rumley, M. K., and Kennedy, E. P. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 10135-10138). Oligosaccharides in this family are variously substituted with succinyl ester residues, as well as with sn-1-phosphoglycerol and phosphoethanolamine, both derived from membrane phospholipids. These negatively charged oligosaccharides may function in cellular osmoregulation since their synthesis is under osmotic control (Kennedy, E. P. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 1092-1095). We now report initial characterization of an enzyme catalyzing transfer of phosphoglycerol residues from phosphatidylglycerol to membrane-derived oligosaccharides or to synthetic beta-glucoside acceptors. The products are sn-1,2-diglyceride and beta-glucoside-6-phosphoglycerol. Localized in the inner membrane, the transferase has a requirement for divalent cations, of which manganese is most effective, and a pH optimum of 8.9 in vitro.  相似文献   

3.
The membrane-derived oligosaccharides (MDO) of Escherichia coli are periplasmic constituents composed of glucose residues linked by beta-1,2 and beta-1,6 glycosidic bonds. MDO are substituted with phosphoglycerol, phosphoethanolamine, and succinic acid moieties. The phosphoglycerol residues present on MDO are derived from phosphatidylglycerol (B. J. Jackson and E. P. Kennedy, J. Biol. Chem. 258:2394-2398, 1983), but evidence as to the source of the phosphoethanolamine residues has been lacking. We now report that phosphatidylethanolamine, exogenously added to intact cells of E. coli, provides a source of phosphoethanolamine residues that are transferred to MDO. The biosynthesis of phosphoethanolamine-labeled MDO is osmotically regulated, with maximum synthesis occurring during growth in medium of low osmolarity.  相似文献   

4.
Osmoregulated periplasmic glucans (OPGs) of Escherichia coli are anionic oligosaccharides that accumulate in the periplasmic space in response to low osmolarity of the medium. Their anionic character is provided by the substitution of the glucosidic backbone by phosphoglycerol originating from the membrane phospholipids and by succinyl residues from unknown origin. A phosphoglycerol-transferase-deficient mdoB mutant was subjected to Tn5 transposon mutagenesis, and putative mutant clones were screened for changes in the anionic character of OPGs by thin-layer chromatography. One mutant deficient in succinylation of OPGs was obtained, and the gene inactivated in this mutant was characterized and named mdoC. mdoC, which encodes a membrane-bound protein, is closely linked to the mdoGH operon necessary for the synthesis of the OPG backbone.  相似文献   

5.
In a previous study (Miller, K.J., Kennedy, E.P. and Reinhold, V.N. (1986) Science 231, 48-51) it was reported that the biosynthesis of periplasmic cyclic beta-1,2-glucans by Agrobacterium tumefaciens is strictly osmoregulated in a pattern closely similar to that found for the membrane-derived oligosaccharides of Escherichia coli (Kennedy, E.P. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 79, 1092-1095). In addition to the well-characterized neutral cyclic glucan, the periplasmic glucans were found to contain an anionic component not previously reported. Biosynthesis of the anionic component is osmotically regulated in a manner indistinguishable from that of the neutral cyclic beta-1,2-glucan. We now find that the anionic component consists of cyclic beta-1,2-glucans substituted with one or more sn-1-phosphoglycerol residues. The presence of sn-1-phosphoglycerol residues represents an additional, striking similarity to the membrane-derived oligosaccharides of E. coli.  相似文献   

6.
A procedure for the isolation of mutants affected in components containing glycerol derived from phospholipids yielded two mutant strains that contain membrane-derived oligosaccharides (MDO) devoid of glycerol (Rotering, H., Fiedler, W., Rollinger, W., and Braun, V. (1984) FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 22, 61-68). MDO are found in the periplasmic space of Escherichia coli and other Gram-negative bacteria, and they may comprise up to 7% of the cells dry weight. The biosynthesis of MDO is osmoregulated (Kennedy, E. P. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 79, 1092-1095) and linked to the metabolism of phospholipids (van Golde, L. M. G., Schulman, H., and Kennedy, E. P. (1973) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 70, 1368-1372). This leads to substitution of MDO with sn-1-phosphoglycerol and phosphoethanolamine (Kennedy, E. P., Rumley, M. K., Schulman, P., and van Golde, L. M. G. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 4208-4213). MDO also contain succinate in O-ester linkage. We now report that one mutant strain lacks phosphoglycerol transferase I activity and thus is unable to transfer sn-1-phosphoglycerol residues from phosphatidylglycerol to MDO. The mdoB gene affected in this mutant has been located at 99.2 min on the E. coli chromosome. The ethanolamine content of MDO isolated from the mutant strain is elevated, whereas the number of succinate residues is not affected. The only phenotype of mdoB mutants we found is a dramatic reduction of the diglyceride content observed in dgk mdoB double mutants when the beta-glucoside arbutin is present in the growth medium.  相似文献   

7.
The membrane-derived oligosaccharides of Escherichia coli constitute a closely related family of oligosaccharides containing approximately 9 glucose units variously substituted with sn-glycero-1-phosphate and phosphoethanolamine residues derived from the head groups of membrane phospholipids, and also with succinate in O-ester linkage (Kennedy, E.P., Rumley, M.K., Schulman, H., and van Golder, L.M.G. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 4208-4213). Studies with mutant strains defective in the synthesis of various nucleoside diphosphate sugars have now revealed that UDP-glucose is an essential intermediate in the biosynthesis of these oligosaccharides. Mutants unable to synthesize UDP-glucose do not contain significant amounts of the membrane-derived oligosaccharides. In contrast, a strain unable to synthesize ADP-glucose, the glucosyl donor for glycogen synthesis in E. coli, contained normal amounts of the membrane-derived oligosaccharides, although with a somewhat different pattern of distribution of the various subspecies. In confirmation of these genetic studies, pulse-label isotope tracer studies have been carried out with glucose of high specific activity, under conditions in which UDP-glucose comprises a large fraction of the total radioactivity in the low molecular weight pool. Subsequent "chase" experiments clearly revealed the conversion of UDP-glucose to the higher molecular weight membrane-derived oligosaccharides.  相似文献   

8.
Diglyceride kinase mutants of Escherichia coli contain about 50- to 100-fold more 1,2-diglyceride than wild type cells. We now report that monoglyceride and triglyceride also accumulate in these strains. In mutant RZ60 (dgk-6) these compounds represent about 1 and 0.2%, respectively, of the total lipid fraction, while diglyceride represents 5-8% under most conditions. Monoglyceride accumulates predominantly in the outer membrane, while triglyceride builds up together with diglyceride in the cytoplasmic membrane. Under typical growth conditions about two-thirds of the diglyceride in E. coli arises in conjunction with synthesis of the membrane-derived oligosaccharides (Raetz, C.R.H., and Newman, K.F. (1979) J. Bacteriol. 137, 860-868). Inhibition of membrane-derived oligosaccharides (MDO) synthesis also curtails the accumulation of monoglyceride and triglyceride. However, there appears to be at least one other MDO-independent source of diglyceride and related metabolites. Since MDO synthesis is suppressed by high osmolarity (Kennedy, E.P. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S. A. 79, 1092-1095), we have examined the effects of osmolarity on diglyceride accumulation in RZ60 (dgk-6). As expected, if MDO synthesis and diglyceride formation are coupled, the diglyceride level in RZ60 is higher at low osmolarity, while at high osmolarity the level of diglyceride is reduced to that observed in double mutants defective both in MDO synthesis and diglyceride kinase. Since dgk mutants do not grow at very low osmolarity, we have isolated several spontaneous phenotypic revertants that do. One class regains diglyceride kinase and has low diglyceride levels under all conditions. The other class remains defective in diglyceride kinase but tolerates higher diglyceride levels which amount to 13% of the total lipid during maximal induction of MDO synthesis at low osmolarity.  相似文献   

9.
The osmotic regulation of the biosynthesis of membrane-derived oligosaccharides (MDO) in strains UB1005 and DC2 of Escherichia coli K-12 was examined; this regulation was previously reported by Clark (J. Bacteriol. 161:1049-1053, 1985) to be different from that observed by Kennedy for other strains of E. coli (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 79:1092-1095, 1982). Osmotic regulation of the synthesis of MDO in UB1005 and DC2 is in fact indistinguishable from that previously reported for other strains of E. coli, with maximum production of MDO occurring in the medium of lowest osmolarity. The report of Clark to the contrary was apparently based on the inadequate methods for the measurement of MDO employed in that study. MDO are localized in the periplasm of wild-type E. coli cells. However, strain DC2, selected for hypersensitivity to a range of antibiotics, released most of its MDO into the medium, apparently as a result of greater outer membrane permeability.  相似文献   

10.
Periplasmic glucans of Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae.   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
P Talaga  B Fournet    J P Bohin 《Journal of bacteriology》1994,176(21):6538-6544
We report the initial characterization of glucans present in the periplasmic space of Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae (strain R32). These compounds were found to be neutral, unsubstituted, and composed solely of glucose. Their size ranges from 6 to 13 glucose units/mol. Linkage studies and nuclear magnetic resonance analyses demonstrated that the glucans are linked by beta-1,2 and beta-1,6 glycosidic bonds. In contrast to the periplasmic glucans found in other plant pathogenic bacteria, the glucans of P. syringae pv. syringae are not cyclic but are highly branched structures. Acetolysis studies demonstrated that the backbone consists of beta-1,2-linked glucose units to which the branches are attached by beta-1,6 linkages. These periplasmic glucans were more abundant when the osmolarity of the growth medium was lower. Thus, P. syringae pv. syringae appears to synthesize periplasmic glucans in response to the osmolarity of the medium. The structural characteristics of these glucans are very similar to the membrane-derived oligosaccharides of Escherichia coli, apart from the neutral character, which contrasts with the highly anionic E. coli membrane-derived oligosaccharides.  相似文献   

11.
Mutants of Escherichia coli defective in diglyceride kinase contain 10 to 20 times more sn-1,2-diglyceride than normal cells. This material constitutes about 8% of the total lipid in such strains. We now report that this excess diglyceride is recovered in the particulate fraction, primarily in association with the inner, cytoplasmic membrane. The diglyceride kinase of wild-type cells was recovered in the same inner membrane fractions. The conditions employed for the preparation of the membranes did not appear to cause significant redistribution of lipids and proteins. The biochemical reactions leading to the formation of diglyceride in E. coli are not known. To determine whether diglyceride formation requires concurrent synthesis of the membrane-derived oligosaccharides (H. Schulman and E. P. Kennedy, J. Biol. Chem. 252:4250-4255, 1977), we have constructed a double mutant defective in both the kinase (dgk) and phosphoglucose isomerase (pgi). When oligosaccharide synthesis was inhibited in this organism by growing the cells on amino acids as the sole carbon source, the diglyceride was no longer present in large amounts. When glucose was also added to the medium, the pgi mutation was bypassed, oligosaccharide synthesis resumed, and diglyceride again accumulated. These findings suggest that diglyceride may arise during the transfer of the sn-glycero-1-P moiety from phosphatidylglycerol (and possibly cardiolipin) to the oligosaccharides. In wild-type cells the kinase permits the cyclical reutilization of diglyceride molecules for phospholipid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

12.
The MdoH protein is essential for synthesis of the osmoregulated periplasmic glucans, known as membrane-derived oligosaccharides (MDOs), in Escherichia coli. Mutants lacking MdoH are deficient in a glucosyltransferase activity assayed in vitro. The MdoH protein is the product of the second gene of an operon, and it has been shown to span the cytoplasmic membrane. The MdoH protein comprises 847 amino acids and is poorly expressed as observed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. We have experimentally measured the topological organization of MdoH within the membrane by construction of fusions to beta-lactamase as a reporter. Analysis of 51 different MdoH-beta-lactamase fusions suggested that the MdoH protein crosses the cytoplasmic membrane eight times, with the N and C termini in the cytoplasm. Moreover, a 310-amino-acid domain is present in the cytoplasm between the second and third transmembrane segments. It was deduced from the measurement of the MDO biosynthetic activity of truncated or fused MdoH proteins that almost all the C-terminal residues are necessary for this activity. The model of the MdoH protein in the membrane suggests that this protein could be directly involved in the translocation of nascent polyglucose chains to the periplasmic space.  相似文献   

13.
Mutants of Escherichia coli defective in the newly discovered mdoA locus are blocked at an early stage in the biosynthesis of membrane-derived oligosaccharides. The mutation has now been mapped and found to be located near 23 min on the E. coli chromosome between putA and pyrC. The mdoA mutants are defective in the membrane-localized component of the glucosyl transferase system described by Weissborn and Kennedy (A. C. Weissborn and E. P. Kennedy, Fed. Proc. 42:2122, 1983).  相似文献   

14.
Membrane-derived oligosaccharides are a novel class of glucose-containing oligosaccharides found in the cell envelope of Escherichia coli and other Gram-negative organisms (Schulman, H., AND Kennedy, E.P. (1979) J. Bacteriol. 137, 686-688). Previous work has shown that these oligosaccharides contain sn-1-glycero-P and smaller amounts of phosphoethanolamine, derived from membrane phospholipids, attached to position 6 of certain of the glucose residues. The structure of the parent oligosaccharides (obtained by reduction with borohydride followed by alkaline hydrolysis) has now been studied. The oligosaccharide was permethylated, followed by hydrolysis and conversion of the products to methylated glucitol acetates, which were then analyzed and identified by gas-liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. The membrane oligosaccharides contain 10 to 12 D-glucopyranoside residues/mol, linked solely by 1 yields 2 and 1 yields 6 bonds. They are highly branched structures, with four nonreducing termini per mol. Glucose units at the branch points are doubly substituted at positions 2 and 6. The low specific rotation of the oligosaccharide (+8.3 degrees) indicates that the glycosidic bonds are predominantly or entirely beta.  相似文献   

15.
The glucose-containing, membrane-derived oligosaccharides of Escherichia coli are localized in the external envelope of that organism, most probably in the periplasmic space. The membrane-derived oligosaccharides appear to be generally occurring cell constituents of gram-negative (but not gram-positive) bacteria.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Expression of the cloned lysis protein of phage MS2, which is sufficient to lyse wild type Escherichia coli, does not cause lysis of mutants lacking the osmoregulatory membrane-derived oligosaccharides (MDO). The lysis gene product normally found in the membrane fraction was not stably inserted into the membranes of a mdoA mutant; rather degradation and release from the membrane occurred. Gentle plasmolysis of the MDO-lacking mutant clearly showed an increased periplasmic space as compared to wild type cells. It is concluded that the MDOs play an important role in maintaining a proper arrangement of inner and outer membrane, a prerequisite for a functional insertion of the MS2 lysis protein.  相似文献   

18.
Gram-negative bacteria grown under conditions of low osmolarity accumulate significant amounts of periplasmic glucans, membrane-derived oligosaccharides (MDO) in Escherichia coli and cyclic glucans in members of the family Rhizobiaceae. It was reported previously (W. Fiedlder and H. Rotering, J. Biol. Chem. 263:14684-14689, 1988) that mdoA mutants unable to synthesize MDO show a number of altered phenotypes, among them a decreased expression of OmpF and an increased expression of OmpC, when grown in a Bacto Peptone medium of low osmolarity and low ionic strength. Although we confirm the findings of Fiedler and Rotering, we find that the regulation of OmpF and OmpC expression in mdoA mutants is normal in cells grown on other low-osmolarity media, eliminating the possibility that MDO itself might control porin expression. Our data suggest that a certain minimal ionic strength in the periplasm is needed for normal porin regulation. In media containing very low levels of salt, this may be contributed by anionic MDO.  相似文献   

19.
The periplasmic glucans of Gram-negative bacteria, including the membrane-derived oligosaccharides (MDO) of Escherichia coli and the cyclic glucans of the Rhizobiaceae, are now recognized to be a family of closely related substances with important functions in osmotic adaptation and cell signaling. The synthesis of the beta-1,2-glucan backbone of MDO is catalyzed by a membrane-bound glucosyltransferase system previously shown to require UDP-glucose and (surprisingly) acyl carrier protein (Therisod, H., Weissborn, A. C., and Kennedy, E. P. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 83, 7236-7240). In the present study, no glucan intermediates bound to acyl carrier protein or to UDP could detected. The enzyme system, however, was found to be strongly inhibited by bacitracin and by amphomycin. Because the two antibiotics function by forming specific complexes with polyprenyl phosphates, their inhibitory effect suggests a prenol requirement for MDO biosynthesis. Furthermore, the activity of the glucosyltransferase was greatly stimulated by the addition of polyprenyl phosphates such as decaprenyl-P and dihydroheptaprenyl-P, but not by farnesyl-P. The same membrane preparations carry out the synthesis of polyprenyl-P-glucose, which is also stimulated by added polyprenyl-P, including farnesyl-P, the most active of those tested. Pulse chase experiments, however, indicate that the endogenous pool of polyprenyl-P-glucose cannot be an obligate intermediate in the MDO glucosyltransferase system.  相似文献   

20.
Osmoregulated periplasmic glucans (OPGs) of Escherichia coli are anionic and highly branched oligosaccharides that accumulate in the periplasmic space in response to low osmolarity of the medium. The glucan length, ranging from 5 to 12 glucose residues, is under strict control. Two genes that form an operon, mdoGH, govern glucose backbone synthesis. The new gene mdoD, which appears to be a paralog of mdoG, was characterized in this study. Cassette inactivation of mdoD resulted in production of OPGs with a higher degree of polymerization, indicating that OpgD, the mdoD product (according to the new nomenclature), controls the glucose backbone structures. OpgD secretion depends on the Tat secretory pathway. Orthologs of the mdoG and mdoD genes are found in various proteobacteria. Most of the OpgD orthologs exhibit a Tat-dependent secretion signal, while most of the OpgG orthologs are Sec dependent.  相似文献   

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