Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-3204
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Myxococcus xanthus
is a gram-negative bacterium which has a complex life cycle that includes multicellular fruiting body formation. Frizzy mutants are characterized by the formation of tangled filaments instead of hemispherical fruiting bodies on fruiting agar. Mutations in the
frz
genes have been shown to cause defects in directed motility, which is essential for both vegetative swarming and fruiting body formation. In this paper, we report the discovery of a new gene, called
frgA
(for
frz
-related gene), which confers a subset of the frizzy phenotype when mutated. The
frgA
null mutant showed reduced swarming and the formation of frizzy aggregates on fruiting agar. However, this mutant still displayed directed motility in a spatial chemotaxis assay, whereas the majority of
frz
mutants fail to show directed movements in this assay. Furthermore, the frizzy phenotype of the
frgA
mutant could be complemented extracellularly by wild-type cells or strains carrying non-
frz
mutations. The phenotype of the
frgA
mutant is similar to that of the
abcA
mutant and suggests that both of these mutants could be defective in the production or export of extracellular signals required for fruiting body formation rather than in the sensing of such extracellular signals. The
frgA
gene encodes a large protein of 883 amino acids which lacks homologues in the databases. The
frgA
gene is part of an operon which includes two additional genes,
frgB
and
frgC
. The
frgB
gene encodes a putative histidine protein kinase, and the
frgC
gene encodes a putative response regulator. The
frgB
and
frgC
null mutants, however, formed wild-type fruiting bodies.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
16 articles.
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