Abstract
A gene (gshI) responsible for gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase (GSH-I) activity was cloned to construct an Escherichia coli B strain having high glutathione synthesizing activity. For this purpose, two E. coli B mutants (strains C912 and RC912) were used. C912 was deficient in GSH-I activity. RC912, a revertant of C912, had a GSH-I activity that was desensitized to feedback inhibition of reduced glutathione. To clone gshI, chromosomal DNAs of RC912 and plasmid vector pBR322 were digested with various restriction endonucleases and then ligated with T4 DNA ligase. The whole ligation mixture was used to transform C912, and the transformants were selected as tetramethylthiuramdisulfide-resistant colonies. Of about 20 resistant colonies, 2 or 3 became red when treated with nitroprusside and showed appreciably high GSH-I activities. The chimeric plasmid DNA, designated pBR322-gshI, was isolated from the strain having the highest GSH-I activity and transformed into RC912. The structure and molecular size of pBR322-gshI in RC912 were determined. The molecular size of this plasmid was 6.2 megadaltons, and the plasmid contained a 3.4-megadalton segment derived from RC912 chromosomal DNA, which included gshI gene. The GSH-I activity of RC912 cells containing pBR322-gshI was fourfold higher than that of RC912 cells without pBR322-gshI.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
44 articles.
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