Affiliation:
1. Max-Planck-Institut für Zellbiologie, Rosenhof, D-68526 Ladenburg, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Sucrose is an important storage and transport sugar of plants and an energy source for many phytopathogenic bacteria. To analyze regulation and biochemistry of sucrose metabolism of the fire blight pathogen
Erwinia amylovora
, a chromosomal fragment which enabled
Escherichia coli
to utilize sucrose as sole carbon source was cloned. By transposon mutagenesis, the
scr
regulon of
E. amylovora
was tagged, and its nucleotide sequence was determined. Five open reading frames, with the genes
scrK
,
scrY
,
scrA
,
scrB
, and
scrR
, had high homology to genes of the
scr
regulons from
Klebsiella pneumoniae
and plasmid pUR400.
scrB
and
scrR
of
E. amylovora
were fused to a histidine tag and to the maltose-binding protein (MalE) of
E. coli
, respectively. ScrB (53 kDa) catalyzed the hydrolysis of sucrose with a
K
m
of 125 mM. Binding of a MalE-ScrR fusion protein to an
scrYAB
promoter fragment was shown by gel mobility shifts. This complex dissociated in the presence of fructose but not after addition of sucrose. Expression of the
scr
regulon was studied with an
scrYAB
promoter-green fluorescent protein gene fusion and measured by flow cytometry and spectrofluorometry. The operon was affected by catabolite repression and induced by sucrose or fructose. The level of gene induction correlated to the sucrose concentration in plant tissue, as shown by flow cytometry. Sucrose mutants created by site-directed mutagenesis did not produce significant fire blight symptoms on apple seedlings, indicating the importance of sucrose metabolism for colonization of host plants by
E. amylovora
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
56 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献