Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
proteins HMW1-HMW3 collectively are essential for cytadherence, but the function or requirement for each has not been defined. Cytadherence mutant M6 lacks HMW1 because of a frameshift in
hmw1
and produces a truncated adherence-associated protein P30 because of a deletion at the 3′ end of
p30
. Genetic manipulation of this mutant was used to evaluate the role of HMW1 in cytadherence. Mutant M6 was transformed with a recombinant transposon containing a wild-type
p30
allele. Transformants synthesized both truncated and full-length P30, from the resident and recombinant alleles, respectively. However, these transformants remained hemadsorption negative, suggesting that HMW1 is required for cytadherence. Wild-type
M. pneumoniae
cells are generally elongated, tapering to form the attachment organelle at one end of the cell. The cytadhesin protein P1 is normally densely clustered on the mycoplasma surface at this differentiated terminal structure. However, both mutant M6 and M6 transformed with recombinant
p30
had a striking ovoid morphology with no tapering at the tip structure, making the attachment organelle indistinguishable. Furthermore, protein P1 was randomly distributed on the mycoplasma surface rather than clustered at a polar location. In contrast, mutant M6 transformed with a recombinant transposon expressing the wild-type
hmw1
allele exhibited a near-normal morphology and localized P1 to the attachment organelle. Significantly, M6 transformed with an
hmw1
gene truncated slightly at the 3′ end failed to restore proper morphology or P1 localization to the attachment organelle, suggesting a functional importance to the C-terminal domain of HMW1.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
55 articles.
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