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J. Bacteriol., Feb 1995, 517-523, Vol 177, No. 3
J Fricke, J Neuhard, RA Kelln and S Pedersen
A gene encoding a polypeptide of 25 kDa is located immediately upstream of
the gene for ribosomal protein S1, rpsA. In high gene copy number, this
gene, mssA, was previously found to suppress defects in smbA, which is now
known to be identical to pyrH, encoding UMP kinase. We show here that the
25-kDa polypeptide comprises CMP kinase and propose that the gene be
designated cmk. In a strain deleted for cmk, the pools of CMP and dCMP were
elevated approximately 30-fold. We constructed a plasmid from which
synthesis of CMP kinase was regulated by the lac promoter-operator and
measured the synthesis rates for RNA and DNA after induction in the delta
cmk/lacPO-cmk+ strain. A specific increase in the rate of DNA synthesis was
observed. Further analyses showed that the replication elongation rate was
halved in the delta cmk strain, most likely caused by the reductions of the
dCTP and dTTP pools to 30 and 70%, respectively, of the levels in the
parental strain, but that this was compensated for by a doubling in the
frequency of initiation. The delta cmk strain is viable at 37 degrees C but
cold sensitive. The cold sensitivity may be related to defects in the
synthesis of phospholipids or lipopolysaccharides. In addition to the
physiological studies, the region upstream of cmk was sequenced, and 120
codons with strong homology to an uncharacterized protein of the speB
operon were identified.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
The cmk gene encoding cytidine monophosphate kinase is located in the rpsA operon and is required for normal replication rate in Escherichia coli
Department of Molecular Cell Biology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
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