A flower-specific cDNA encoding a novel thionin in tobacco |
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Authors: | Qing Gu Evelynn E. Kawata M. -J. Morse Hen-Ming Wu Alice Y. Cheung |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Microbial Genetics, Institute for Microbiology and Experimental Therapy, PSF 73, Beutenbergstrasse 11, 0-6900 Jena, Germany;(2) Department of Genetics, Center of Biological Sciences, Kerklaan 30, NL-9751 NN Haren, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | Summary A gene library of Bacillus subtilis chromosomal DNA was screened for genes capable of reverting the growth defects of the Escherichia coli secA51(Ts) mutant at 42° C. A B. subtilis gene, designated csaA, was found to phenotypically suppress not only the growth defects of the E. coli mutant, but also to relieve the detrimental accumulation of precursors of exported proteins. The csaA gene encoded a protein of 15 kDa (137 amino acids) and was likely to be the distalmost member of an operon. No similarity to csaA was found among DNA or protein sequences deposited in databases. In contrast to other homologous or heterologous suppressors of the E. coli secA51(Ts) mutation, the csaA gene did not exert pleiotropic effects on either the E. coli sec Y24(Ts) or lep9(Ts) mutations. However, it restored the ability of a SecB-deficient mutant to grow on complex medium. It is proposed that CsaA serves as a molecular chaperone for exported proteins or alternatively acts by stabilizing the SecA protein. |
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Keywords: | Protein secretion Suppressor gene SecA (Ts) mutation E. coli B. subtilis |
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