Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Bacteroides fragilis
, a human gastrointestinal commensal and an opportunistic pathogen, utilizes simple and complex sugars and polysaccharides for growth in the large intestine and at sites of infection. Because
B. fragilis
lacks transport-linked sugar phosphorylation systems, cytoplasmic kinase(s) was expected to be required for the phosphorylation of hexoses and hexosamines. We have now identified two hexose kinases that are important for growth of
B. fragilis
on glucose, mannose, and other sugars. One kinase (RokA), a member of the ROK family of proteins, was found to be the sole kinase for activation of
N
-acetyl-
d
-glucosamine (NAG). The other kinase (HexA) is responsible for the majority of the glucose kinase activity in the cell, although a
hexA
deletion mutant strain was not defective for growth on any substrate tested. Deletion of both the
rokA
and
hexA
kinase genes resulted in inability of the cell to use glucose, mannose, NAG, and many other sugars. We purified RokA and determined its approximate molecular mass to be 36.5 kDa. The purified RokA protein was shown to phosphorylate several substrates, including glucose, NAG, and mannose, but not
N
-acetylmannosamine or
N
-acetylneuraminic acid. Phylogenetic analysis of RokA showed that it is most similar to kinases from the
Cytophaga-Flavibacterium-Bacteroides
group, while HexA was most similar to other bacterial hexokinases and eukaryotic hexokinases.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
37 articles.
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