Affiliation:
1. Lilly Research Laboratories, Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, Indiana
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In pioneering studies, Avery et al. identified DNA as the hereditary material (A. T. Avery, C. M. MacLeod, and M. McCarty, J. Exp. Med.
79
:137-158, 1944). They demonstrated, by means of variation in colony morphology, that this substance could transform their rough type 2
Streptococcus pneumoniae
strain R36A into a smooth type 3 strain. It has become accepted as fact, from modern textbook accounts of these experiments, that smooth pneumococci make capsule, while rough strains do not. We found that rough-to-smooth morphology conversion did not occur in rough strains R36A and R6 when the ability to synthesize native type 2 capsule was restored. The continued rough morphology of these encapsulated strains was attributed to a second, since-forgotten, morphology-affecting mutation that was sustained by R36A during strain development. We used a new genome-PCR-based approach to identify
spxB
, the gene encoding pyruvate oxidase, as the mutated locus in R36A and R6 that, with unencapsulation, gives rise to rough colony morphology, as we know it. The variant
spxB
allele of R36A and R6 is associated with increased cellular pyruvate oxidase activity relative to the ancestral strain D39. Increased pyruvate oxidase activity alters colony shape by mediating cell death. R36A requires a wild-type
spxB
allele for the expression of smooth type 2 morphology but not for the expression of smooth type 3 morphology, the phenotype monitored by Avery et al. Thus, the mutated
spxB
allele did not impact their use of smooth morphology to identify the transforming principle.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
20 articles.
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