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Characterization of a glucosylglycerol-phosphate-accumulating, salt-sensitive mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803.

Authors :
Hagemann, M.
Richter, Stefan
Zuther, Ellen
Schoor, Arne
Source :
Archives of Microbiology; Aug1996, Vol. 166 Issue 2, p83-91, 9p
Publication Year :
1996

Abstract

Salt-sensitive mutants of Synechocystis were obtained by random cartridge mutagenesis, and one mutant (mutant 4) was characterized in detail. The salt tolerance of mutant 4 was reduced to about 20% of that of the wild-type. This was caused by a defect in the biosynthetic pathway of the osmoprotective compound glucosylglycerol (GG). Salt-treated cells of mutant 4 accumulated the intermediate glucosylglycerol-phosphate (GG-P). Only low levels of phosphate-free GG were detected. The phosphorylated form of GG was not osmoprotective and seemed to be toxic. In vitro enzyme assays revealed that GG-P-phosphatase activity was completely absent in mutant 4, while GG-P-synthase remained unchanged. The integration site of the aphII cartridge in mutant 4 and the corresponding wild-type region was cloned and sequenced. Mutant 4 was complemented to salt resistance after transformation by the cloned wild-type region. The integration of the cartridge led to a deletion of about 1.1 kb of the chromosomal DNA. This affected two of the identified putative protein coding regions, orfII and stpA. The ORFII protein shows a high degree of similarity to the receiver domain of response regulator proteins. Related sequences were not found for StpA. We assume that in mutant 4, regulatory genes necessary for the process of salt adaptation in Synechocystis are impaired. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03028933
Volume :
166
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Archives of Microbiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
72942907
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s002030050360