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J Bacteriol. 1992 January; 174(1): 205-213
The pgpA and pgpB genes of Escherichia coli are not essential: evidence for a third phosphatidylglycerophosphate phosphatase.
C R Funk,
L Zimniak and
W Dowhan
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Texas Medical School, Houston.
ABSTRACT
To further define the genes and gene products responsible for the in vivo conversion of phosphatidylglycerophosphate to phosphatidylglycerol in Escherichia coli, we disrupted two genes (pgpA and pgpB) which had previously been shown to encode gene products which carried out this reaction in vitro (T. Icho and C. R. H. Raetz, J. Bacteriol. 153:722-730, 1983). Strains with either gene or both genes disrupted had the same properties as the original mutants isolated with mutations in these genes, i.e., reduced in vitro phospholipid phosphatase activities, normal growth properties, and an increase in the level of phosphatidylglycerophosphate (1.6% versus less than 0.1% in wild-type strains). These results demonstrate that these genes are not required for either normal cell growth or the biosynthesis of phosphatidylglycerol in vivo. In addition, the total phosphatidylglycerophosphate phosphatase activity in the doubly disrupted mutant was reduced by only 50%, which indicates that there is at least one other gene that encodes such an activity and thus accounts for the lack of a dramatic effect on the biosynthesis of anionic phospholipids in these mutant strains. The phosphatidic acid and lysophosphatidic acid phosphatase activities of the pgpB gene product were also significantly reduced in gene-interrupted mutants, but the detection of residual phosphatase activities in these mutants indicated that additional genes encoding such phosphatases exist. The lack of a significant phenotype resulting from disruption of the pgpA and pgpB genes indicates that these genes may be required only for nonessential cell function and leaves the biosynthesis of phosphatidylglycerophosphate as the only step in E. coli phospholipid biosynthesis for which a gene locus has not been identified.
J Bacteriol. 1992 January; 174(1): 205-213
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Copyright © 1992 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.