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J. Bacteriol., Aug 1995, 4289-4296, Vol 177, No. 15
BL Reuhs, MN Williams, JS Kim, RW Carlson and F Cote
The rhizobial production of extracellular polysaccharide (EPS) is generally
required for the symbiotic infection of host plants that form nodules with
an apical meristem (indeterminate nodules). One exception is Rhizobium
meliloti AK631, an exoB mutant of Rm41, which is deficient in EPS
production yet infects and fixes nitrogen (i.e., is Fix+) on alfalfa, an
indeterminate nodule-forming plant. A mutation of lpsZ in AK631 results in
a Fix- strain with altered phage sensitivity, suggesting that a cell
surface factor may substitute for EPS in the alfalfa-AK631 symbiosis.
Biochemical analyses of the cell-associated polysaccharides of AK631 and
Rm5830 (AK631 lpsZ) demonstrated that the lpsZ mutation affected the
expression of a surface polysaccharide that is analogous to the group II K
polysaccharides of Escherichia coli; the polysaccharide contains
3-deoxy-D-manno-2-octulosonic acid or a derivative thereof in each
repeating unit. Rm5830 produced a polysaccharide with altered
chromatographic and electrophoretic properties, indicating a difference in
the molecular weight range. Similar results were obtained in a study of
Rm1021, a wild-type isolate that lacks the lpsZ gene: the introduction of
lpsZ into Rm1021 exoB (Rm6903) both suppresses the Fix- phenotype and
results in a modified expression of the K polysaccharide. Chromatography
and electrophoresis analysis showed that the polysaccharide extracted from
Rm6903 lpsZ+ differed from that of Rm6903 in molecular weight range.
Importantly, the effect of LpsZ is not structurally specific, as the
introduction lpsZ+ into Rhizobium fredii USDA257 also resulted in a
molecular weight range change in the structurally distinct K polysaccharide
produced by that strain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Suppression of the Fix- phenotype of Rhizobium meliloti exoB mutants by lpsZ is correlated to a modified expression of the K polysaccharide
Complex Carbohydrate Research Center, University of Georgia, Athens 30602, USA.
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