Affiliation:
1. Departments of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine1 and
2. Veterans Affairs Maryland Health Care System,2 Baltimore, Maryland 21201
3. Pathology,3 University of Maryland School of Medicine, and
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Vibrio cholerae
can switch from a smooth to a wrinkled or rugose colony phenotype characterized by the secretion of a polysaccharide that enables the bacteria to survive harsh environmental conditions. In order to understand the genetic basis of rugosity, we isolated Tn
phoA
-induced stable, smooth mutants of two O1 El Tor rugose strains and mapped the insertion sites in several of the mutants using a modified Y-adapter PCR technique. One of the Tn
phoA
insertions was mapped to the first gene of the
vps
region that was previously shown to encode the rugose polysaccharide biosynthesis cluster. Three insertions were mapped to a previously unknown
hlyA
-like gene, also in the
vps
region. Five other insertions were found in loci unlinked to the
vps
region: (i) in the
epsD
gene (encodes the “secretin” of the extracellular protein secretion apparatus), (ii) in a
hydG
-like gene (encodes a ς
54
-dependent transcriptional activator similar to HydG involved in labile hydrogenase production in
Escherichia coli
, (iii) in a gene encoding malic acid transport protein upstream of a gene similar to
yeiE
of
E. coli
(encodes a protein with similarities to LysR-type transcriptional activators), (iv) in
dxr
(encodes 1-deoxy-
d
-xylulose 5-phosphate reductoisomerase), and (v) in the intergenic region of
lpd
and
odp
(encode enzymes involved in the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex formation). These data suggest the involvement of a complex regulatory network in rugose polysaccharide production and highlight the general utility of the Y-adapter PCR technique described here for rapid mapping of transposon insertion sites.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
22 articles.
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