Cloning and characterization of tek, the gene encoding the major extracellular protein of Pseudomonas solanacearum

被引:9
作者
Denny, TP [1 ]
GanovaRaeva, LM [1 ]
Huang, JZ [1 ]
Schell, MA [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV GEORGIA, DEPT MICROBIOL, ATHENS, GA 30602 USA
关键词
gene regulation; protein export; protein processing;
D O I
10.1094/MPMI-9-0272
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Susceptible plants infected by Pseudomonas solanacearum usually wilt, largely due to extracellular proteins (EXPs) and the high-molecular-mass extracellular polysaccharide (EPS I) this pathogen produces. Circumstantial evidence suggested that a 28-kDa protein, the single most abundant EXP made by II solanacearum in culture, is associated with production of EPS I, and thus might have a role in pathogenesis. The 28-kDa EXP was purified and, based on its N-terminal amino acid sequence, an oligonucleotide mixture was made and used as a hybridization probe to done the gene encoding it. DNA sequence analysis suggested that the coding sequence for the 28-kDa EXP is within a gene, designated tek, that encodes a 58-kDa membrane-associated precursor protein that is processed by signal peptidase II during export. Analysis of radiolabeled polypeptides expressed from tek confirmed that it encodes a 58-kDa precursor protein, which is exported out of the cells as a 55-kDa preprotein and processed extracellularly to release the very basic 28-kDa EXP from its C terminus. The position, transcriptional direction, and regulated expression of tek suggest that it is cotranscribed with xpsR, a gene essential for regulating biosynthesis of EPS I, and reinforces the association of the 28-kDa EXP with virulence, However, since EI solanacearum mutants lacking only the 28-kDa EXP produced wild-type amounts of EPS I and were fully virulent, the function of this protein remains unclear.
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页码:272 / 281
页数:10
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