Affiliation:
1. School of Molecular Biosciences, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164
2. Franceschi Microscopy and Imaging Center, College of Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Mycobacterial species are characterized by the presence of lipid-rich, hydrophobic cell envelopes. These cell envelopes contribute to properties such as roughness of colonies, aggregation of cells in liquid culture without detergent, and biofilm formation. We describe here a mutant strain of
Mycobacterium smegmatis
, called DL1215, which demonstrates marked deviations from the above-mentioned phenotypes. DL1215 arose spontaneously from a strain deficient for the stringent response (
M. smegmatis
Δ
rel
Msm
strain) and is not a reversion to a wild-type phenotype. The nature of the spontaneous mutation was a single base-pair deletion in the
lsr2
gene, leading to the formation of a truncated protein product. The DL1215 strain was complicated by having both inactivated
rel
Msm
and
lsr2
genes, and so a single
lsr2
mutant was created to analyze the gene's function. The
lsr2
gene was inactivated in the wild-type
M. smegmatis
mc
2
155 strain by allelic replacement to create strain DL2008. Strain DL2008 shows characteristics unique from those of both the wild-type and Δ
rel
Msm
strains, some of which include a greatly enhanced ability to slide over agar surfaces (referred to here as “hypermotility”), greater resistance to phage infection and to the antibiotic kanamycin, and an inability to form biofilms. Complementation of the DL2008 mutant with a plasmid containing
lsr2
(pLSR2) reverts the strain to the mc
2
155 phenotype. Although these phenotypic differences allude to changes in cell surface lipids, no difference is observed in glycopeptidolipids, polar lipids, apolar lipids, or mycolic acids of the cell wall.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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Mycobacterium abscessus
Mutant in Human and Murine Models of Infection
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