Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Loyola University Chicago, Maywood, Illinois 60153
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Vibrio fischeri
, a luminescent marine bacterium, specifically colonizes the light organ of its symbiotic partner, the Hawaiian squid
Euprymna scolopes.
In a screen for
V. fischeri
colonization mutants, we identified a strain that exhibited on average a 10-fold decrease in colonization levels relative to that achieved by wild-type
V. fischeri
. Further characterization revealed that this defect did not result from reduced luminescence or motility, two processes required for normal colonization. We determined that the transposon in this mutant disrupted a gene with high sequence identity to the
pgm
(phosphoglucomutase) gene of
Escherichia coli
, which encodes an enzyme that functions in both galactose metabolism and the synthesis of UDP-glucose. The
V. fischeri
mutant grew poorly with galactose as a sole carbon source and was defective for phosphoglucomutase activity, suggesting functional identity between
E. coli
Pgm and the product of the
V. fischeri
gene, which was therefore designated
pgm
. In addition, lipopolysaccharide profiles of the mutant were distinct from that of the parent strain and the mutant exhibited increased sensitivity to various cationic agents and detergents. Chromosomal complementation with the wild-type
pgm
allele restored the colonization ability to the mutant and also complemented the other noted defects. Unlike the
pgm
mutant, a galactose-utilization mutant (
galK
) of
V. fischeri
colonized juvenile squid to wild-type levels, indicating that the symbiotic defect of the
pgm
mutant is not due to an inability to catabolize galactose. Thus,
pgm
represents a new gene required for promoting colonization of
E. scolopes
by
V. fischeri
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
40 articles.
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