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J. Bacteriol., 06 1997, 3404-3409, Vol 179, No. 11
A Das, LB Anderson and YH Xie
The Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirB proteins are postulated to form a
transport pore for the transfer of T-DNA. Formation of the transport pore
will involve interactions among the VirB proteins. A powerful genetic
method to study protein-protein interaction is the yeast two- hybrid assay.
To test whether this method can be used to study interactions among the
VirB membrane proteins, we studied the interaction of VirB7 and VirB9 in
yeast. We recently demonstrated that VirB7 and VirB9 form a protein complex
linked by a disulfide bond between cysteine 24 of VirB7 and cysteine 262 of
VirB9 (L. Anderson, A. Hertzel, and A. Das, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
93:8889-8894, 1996). We now demonstrate that VirB7 and VirB9 interact in
yeast, and this interaction does not require the cysteine residues
essential for the disulfide linkage. By using defined segments in fusion
constructions, we mapped the VirB7 interaction domain of VirB9 to residues
173 to 275. In tumor formation assays, both virB7C24S and virB9C262S
expressed from a multicopy plasmid complemented the respective deletion
mutation, indicating that the cysteine residues may not be essential for
DNA transfer.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Delineation of the interaction domains of Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirB7 and VirB9 by use of the yeast two-hybrid assay
Department of Biochemistry, University of Minnesota, St. Paul 55108, USA. anath@biosci.cbs.umn.edu
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