Affiliation:
1. Department of Food Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Xylose metabolism, a variable phenotype in strains of
Lactococcus lactis
, was studied and evidence was obtained for the accumulation of mutations that inactivate the
xyl
operon. The xylose metabolism operon (
xylRAB
) was sequenced from three strains of lactococci. Fragments of 4.2, 4.2, and 5.4 kb that included the
xyl
locus were sequenced from
L. lactis
subsp.
lactis
B-4449 (formerly
Lactobacillus xylosus
),
L. lactis
subsp.
lactis
IO-1, and
L. lactis
subsp.
lactis
210, respectively. The two environmental isolates,
L. lactis
B-4449 and
L. lactis
IO-1, produce active xylose isomerases and xylulokinases and can metabolize xylose.
L. lactis
210, a dairy starter culture strain, has neither xylose isomerase nor xylulokinase activity and is Xyl
−
. Xylose isomerase and xylulokinase activities are induced by xylose and repressed by glucose in the two Xyl
+
strains. Sequence comparisons revealed a number of point mutations in the
xylA
,
xylB
, and
xylR
genes in
L. lactis
210, IO-1, and B-4449. None of these mutations, with the exception of a premature stop codon in
xylB
, are obviously lethal, since they lie outside of regions recognized as critical for activity. Nevertheless, either cumulatively or because of indirect affects on the structures of catalytic sites, these mutations render some strains of
L. lactis
unable to metabolize xylose.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
40 articles.
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