Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Adhesion to both abiotic and biotic surfaces by the gram-negative prothescate bacterium
Caulobacter crescentus
is mediated by a polar organelle called the “holdfast,” which enables the bacterium to form stable monolayer biofilms. The holdfast, a complex polysaccharide composed in part of
N
-acetylglucosamine, localizes to the tip of the stalk (a thin cylindrical extension of the cell wall and membranes). We report here the isolation of adhesion mutants with transposon insertions in an uncharacterized gene cluster involved in holdfast biogenesis (
hfs
) as well as in previously identified polar development genes (
podJ
and
pleC
), and the holdfast attachment genes (
hfa
). Clean deletions of three of the four genes in the
hfs
gene cluster (
hfsDAB
) resulted in a severe holdfast biogenesis phenotype. These mutants do not bind to surfaces or to a fluorescently labeled lectin, specific for
N
-acetylglucosamine. Transmission electron microscopy indicated that the
hfsDAB
mutants fail to synthesize a holdfast at the stalk tip. The predicted
hfs
gene products have significant sequence similarity to proteins necessary for exopolysaccharide export in gram-negative bacteria. HfsA has sequence similarity to GumC from
Xanthomonas campestris
, which is involved in exopolysaccharide export in the periplasm. HfsD has sequence similarity to Wza from
Escherichia coli
, an outer membrane protein involved in secretion of polysaccharide through the outer membrane. HfsB is a novel protein involved in holdfast biogenesis. These data suggest that the
hfs
genes play an important role in holdfast export.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
75 articles.
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