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J Bacteriol. 1974 May; 118(2): 358-368
Copyright © 1974 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Characterization of Bacillus licheniformis 6346 Mutants Which Have Altered Lytic Enzyme Activities

C. W. Forsberg1 and H. J. Rogers

a National Institute for Medical Research, Mill Hill, London NW7 1AA, England

ABSTRACT

Two groups of mutants altered in lytic enzyme activities have been isolated from Bacillus licheniformis 6346 MH-1 by screening clones for halo production in agar plates containing cell wall conjugated with Procion brilliant red. In the first group which produced halos during colony formation, two were shown to contain three- and eightfold more muramyl-L-alanine amidase than the parent. These strains liberated amidase and intracellular {alpha}-glucosidase into the culture medium during exponential growth in liquid medium. Isolated walls had a normal qualitative composition and in autolysing liberated N-terminal amino acids and reducing groups. Wall preparations from the second group of mutants which did not produce halos lysed very poorly at pH 9.5, the optimal pH for amidase activity, and poorly at pH 5.5 even though they had similar endo-N-acetylglucosaminidase activities to the parent. Two of these strains that were also deficient in phosphoglucomutase had only 3 to 5% of the membrane-bound amidase activity compared with that in the parent. Cell walls of the phosphoglucomutase-deficient mutants treated with sodium dodecyl sulfate to inactivate endogenous lytic enzymes were dissolved at 10% of the rate of those from the parent by added amidase, but their sensitivities to lysozyme were similar. Those from one mutant had 10 to 20% of the amidase-binding capacity of parent walls, whereas its isolated mucopeptide was essentially inactive in this respect. The failure of these phosphoglucomutase-deficient mutants to autolyse is likely to be due to the combined effects of both low amidase activity and resistant walls. As a result, daughter cells are unable to separate and long chains are formed during exponential growth.


FOOTNOTES

1 Present address: Microbiology Department, College of Biological Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1, Canada.


J Bacteriol. 1974 May; 118(2): 358-368
Copyright © 1974 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.







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