Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
exhibits a novel form of gliding motility that is mediated by the terminal organelle, a differentiated polar structure. Given that genes known to be involved in gliding in other organisms are absent in
M. pneumoniae
, random transposon mutagenesis was employed to generate mutants with gliding-deficient phenotypes. Transposon insertions in the only annotated Ser/Thr protein kinase gene (
prkC
; MPN248) and its cognate phosphatase gene (
prpC
; MPN247) in
M. pneumoniae
resulted in significant and contrasting effects on gliding frequencies.
prkC
mutant cells glided at approximately half the frequency of wild-type cells, while
prpC
mutant cells glided more than twice as frequently as wild-type cells. Phosphoprotein staining confirmed the association between phosphorylation of the cytoskeletal proteins HMW1 and HMW2 and membrane protein P1 and the gliding phenotype. When the
prpC
mutant was complemented by transposon delivery of a wild-type copy of the
prpC
allele, gliding frequencies and phosphorylation levels returned to the wild-type standard. Surprisingly, delivery of the recombinant wild-type
prkC
allele dramatically increased gliding frequency to a level approximately 3-fold greater than that of wild-type in the
prkC
mutant. Collectively, these data suggest that PrkC and PrpC work in opposition in
M. pneumoniae
to influence gliding frequency.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
16 articles.
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