Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Many bacterial species contain multiple copies of the genes that encode the chaperone GroEL and its cochaperone, GroES, including all of the fully sequenced root-nodulating bacteria that interact symbiotically with legumes to generate fixed nitrogen. In particular, in
Sinorhizobium meliloti
there are four
groESL
operons and one
groEL
gene. To uncover functional redundancies of these genes during growth and symbiosis, we attempted to construct strains containing all combinations of
groEL
mutations. Although a double
groEL1 groEL2
mutant cannot be constructed, we demonstrate that the quadruple
groEL1 groESL3 groEL4 groESL5
and
groEL2 groESL3 groEL4 groESL5
mutants are viable. Therefore, like
E. coli
and other species,
S. meliloti
requires only one
groEL
gene for viability, and either
groEL1
or
groEL2
will suffice. The
groEL1 groESL5
double mutant is more severely affected for growth at both 30°C and 40°C than the single mutants, suggesting overlapping functions in stress response. During symbiosis the quadruple
groEL2 groESL3 groEL4 groESL5
mutant acts like the wild type, but the quadruple
groEL1 groESL3 groEL4 groESL5
mutant acts like the
groEL1
single mutant, which cannot fully induce
nod
gene expression and forms ineffective nodules. Therefore, the only
groEL
gene required for symbiosis is
groEL1
. However, we show that the other
groE
genes are expressed in the nodule at lower levels, suggesting minor roles during symbiosis. Combining our data with other data, we conclude that
groESL1
encodes the housekeeping GroEL/GroES chaperone and that
groESL5
is specialized for stress response.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
56 articles.
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