Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Science, Saitama University, Urawa, Saitama 338,1
2. National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Shizuoka 411,2 and
3. Mitsubishi Kasei Institute of Life Sciences, Machida, Tokyo 194,3 Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The
psd
gene of
Bacillus subtilis
Marburg, encoding phosphatidylserine decarboxylase, has been cloned and sequenced. It encodes a polypeptide of 263 amino acid residues (deduced molecular weight of 29,689) and is located just downstream of
pss
, the structural gene for phosphatidylserine synthase that catalyzes the preceding reaction in phosphatidylethanolamine synthesis (M. Okada, H. Matsuzaki, I. Shibuya, and K. Matsumoto, J. Bacteriol. 176:7456–7461, 1994). Introduction of a plasmid containing the
psd
gene into temperature-sensitive
Escherichia coli psd-2
mutant cells allowed growth at otherwise restrictive temperature. Phosphatidylserine was not detected in the
psd-2
mutant cells harboring the plasmid; it accumulated in the mutant up to 29% of the total phospholipids without the plasmid. An enzyme activity that catalyzes decarboxylation of
14
C-labeled phosphatidylserine to form phosphatidylethanolamine was detected in
E. coli psd-2
cells harboring a
Bacillus psd
plasmid.
E. coli
cells harboring the
psd
plasmid, the expression of which was under the control of the T7φ10 promoter, produced proteins of 32 and 29 kDa upon induction. A pulse-labeling experiment suggested that the 32-kDa protein is the primary translation product and is processed into the 29-kDa protein. The
psd
gene, together with
pss
, was located by Southern hybridization to the 238- to 306-kb
Sfi
I-
Not
I fragment of the chromosome. A
B. subtilis
strain harboring an interrupted
psd
allele,
psd1
::
neo
, was constructed. The null
psd
mutant contained no phosphatidylethanolamine and accumulated phosphatidylserine. It grew well without supplementation of divalent cations which are essential for the
E. coli pssA
null mutant lacking phosphatidylethanolamine. In both the
B. subtilis
null
pss
and
psd
mutants, glucosyldiacylglycerol content increased two- to fourfold. The results suggest that the lack of phosphatidylethanolamine in the
B. subtilis
membrane may be compensated for by the increases in the contents of glucosyldiacylglycerols by an unknown mechanism.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
53 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