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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2000, p. 3816-3825, Vol. 182, No. 13
Universität Regensburg,
NWFIII-Mikrobiologie, D-93053 Regensburg, Germany
Received 3 February 2000/Accepted 13 April 2000
Conjugative transfer of Enterococcus faecalis-specific
sex pheromone plasmids relies on an adhesin, called aggregation
substance, to confer a tight cell-to-cell contact between the mating
partners. To analyze the dependence of pAD1-encoded aggregation
substance, Asa1, on pheromone induction, a variety of upstream
fragments were fused to an
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Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Pheromone-Regulated Expression of Sex Pheromone
Plasmid pAD1-Encoded Aggregation Substance Depends on at Least Six
Upstream Genes and a cis-Acting, Orientation-Dependent
Factor
-amylase reporter gene, amyL,
by use of a novel promoter probe vector, pAMY-em1. For
pheromone-regulated
-amylase activity, a total of at least six
genes, traB, traC, traA,
traE1, orfY, and orf1, are
required: TraB efficiently represses asa1 (by a mechanism
unrelated to its presumptive function in pheromone shutdown, since a
complete shutdown is observed exclusively in the presence of
traC); only traC can relieve
traB-mediated repression in a pheromone-dependent manner.
In addition to traB, traA is required but not
sufficient for negative control. Mutational inactivation of
traE1, orfY, or orf1, respectively,
results in a total loss of
-amylase activity for constructs normally
mediating constitutive expression. Inversion of a fragment covering
traA, P0, and traE1 without
disrupting any gene or control element switches off amyL or
asa1 expression, indicating the involvement of a
cis-acting, orientation-dependent factor (as had been shown
for plasmid pCF10). Unexpectedly, pAD1 represses all pAMY-em1
derivatives in trans, while its own pheromone-dependent
functions are unaffected. The discrepancy between the new data and
those of former studies defining TraE1 as a trans-acting
positive regulator is discussed.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address:
Universität Regensburg, NWFIII-Mikrobiologie,
Universitätsstraße 31, D-93053 Regensburg, Germany. Phone:
49-(0)941 943 1828. Fax: 49-(0)941 943 1824. E-mail: albrecht.muscholl{at}biologie.uni-regensburg.de.
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