Affiliation:
1. Center for Microbial Pathogenesis and Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York 14214
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The
chiA
gene of
Vibrio cholerae
encodes a polypeptide which degrades chitin, a homopolymer of
N
-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) found in cell walls of fungi and in the integuments of insects and crustaceans.
chiA
has a coding capacity corresponding to a polypeptide of 846 amino acids having a predicted molecular mass of 88.7 kDa. A 52-bp region with promoter activity was found immediately upstream of the
chiA
open reading frame. Insertional inactivation of the chromosomal copy of the gene confirmed that expression of chitinase activity by
V. cholerae
required
chiA
. Fluorescent analogues were used to demonstrate that the enzymatic activity of ChiA was specific for β,1-4 glycosidic bonds located between GlcNAc monomers in chitin. Antibodies against ChiA were obtained by immunization of a rabbit with a MalE-ChiA hybrid protein. Polypeptides with antigenic similarity to ChiA were expressed by classical and El Tor biotypes of
V. cholerae
and by the closely related bacterium
Aeromonas hydrophila
. Immunoblotting experiments using the wild-type strain 569B and the secretion mutant M14 confirmed that ChiA is an extracellular protein which is secreted by the
eps
system. The
eps
system is also responsible for secreting cholera toxin, an oligomeric protein with no amino acid homology to ChiA. These results indicate that ChiA and cholera toxin have functionally similar extracellular transport signals that are essential for
eps
-dependent secretion.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
68 articles.
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