Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
J. Bacteriol., 04 1996, 2051-2059, Vol 178, No. 7
MT Pellicer, J Badia, J Aguilar and L Baldoma
The locus glc (min 64.5), associated with the glycolate utilization trait
in Escherichia coli, is known to contain glcB, encoding malate synthase G,
and the gene(s) needed for glycolate oxidase activity. Subcloning,
sequencing, insertion mutagenesis, and expression studies showed five
additional genes: glcC and in the other direction glcD, glcE, glcF, and
glcG followed by glcB. The gene glcC may encode the glc regulator protein.
Consistently a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase insertion mutation
abolished both glycolate oxidase and malate synthase G activities. The
proteins encoded from glcD and glcE displayed similarity to several
flavoenzymes, the one from glcF was found to be similar to iron-sulfur
proteins, and that from glcG had no significant similarity to any group of
proteins. The insertional mutation by a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
cassette in either glcD, glcE, or glcF abolished glycolate oxidase
activity, indicating that presumably these proteins are subunits of this
enzyme. No effect on glycolate metabolism was detected by insertional
mutation in glcG. Northern (RNA) blot experiments showed constitutive
expression of glcC but induced expression for the structural genes and
provided no evidence for a single polycistronic transcript.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
glc locus of Escherichia coli: characterization of genes encoding the subunits of glycolate oxidase and the glc regulator protein
Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Barcelona, Spain.
This article has been cited by other articles:
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»