Identification of a gene, closely linked to dnaK, which is required for high-temperature growth of Escherichia coli. |
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Authors: | D O Dean R James |
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Affiliation: | Molecular/Microbiology Sector, School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK. |
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Abstract: | We have constructed four deletion derivatives of the cloned dnaK gene. Plasmid pDD1, in which the last 10 amino acids of the DnaK protein have been replaced by three different amino acids derived from the pBR322 vector, was as effective as plasmid pKP31, from which it was derived, in restoring the ability of a dnaK null mutant, Escherichia coli BB1553, to plate lambda phage and to grow at high temperatures. The other three mutations, involving much larger deletions of the dnaK gene, did not restore the ability to plate lambda phage or the ability to grow at high temperatures. Plasmid pKUC2, which contains the whole dnaK gene and its promoters, was capable of restoring the ability of E. coli BB1553 to plate lambda phage but, surprisingly, it did not restore the ability to grow at high temperatures, even though it was shown that the DnaK protein was efficiently expressed in these cultures. By transposon mutagenesis and sub-cloning, we have shown the presence of a second gene in plasmid pKP31 which is required for high-temperature growth of E. coli BB1553. This gene, which we call htg A, is presumably also defective in the dnaK null mutant E. coli BB1553. We have also demonstrated that the inability of E. coli K756 to grow above 43.5 degrees C is complemented by sub-clones which contain the htg A gene, but not by plasmid pKUC2. |
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