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Appl Environ Microbiol, May 1998, p. 1780-1785, Vol. 64, No. 5
Institute of Biological Sciences, University
of Wales, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion SY23 3DD, United
Kingdom,1 and
Department of
Microbiology, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston,
Massachusetts 021182
Received 12 December 1997/Accepted 10 March 1998
The wild-type strain of Clostridium beijerinckii NCIMB
8052 tends to degenerate (i.e., lose the ability to form solvents) after prolonged periods of laboratory culture. Several
Tn1545 mutants of this organism showing enhanced long-term
stability of solvent production were isolated. Four of them harbor
identical insertions within the fms (def) gene,
which encodes peptide deformylase (PDF). The C. beijerinckii
fms gene product contains four diagnostic residues
involved in the Zn2+ coordination and catalysis found in
all PDFs, but it is unusually small, because it lacks the dispensable
disordered C-terminal domain. Unlike previously characterized PDFs from
Escherichia coli and Thermus thermophilus, the
C. beijerinckii PDF can apparently tolerate N-terminal
truncation. The Tn1545 insertion in the mutants is at a
site corresponding to residue 15 of the predicted gene product. This probably removes 23 N-terminal residues from PDF, leaving
a 116-residue protein. The mutant PDF retains at least partial
function, and it complements an fms(Ts) strain of E. coli. Northern hybridizations indicate that the mutant gene is
actively transcribed in C. beijerinckii. This can only
occur from a previously unsuspected, outwardly directed promoter
located close to the right end of Tn1545. The
Tn1545 insertion in fms causes a reduction in
the growth rate of C. beijerinckii, and, associated with
this, the bacteria display an enhanced stability of solvent production. The latter phenotype can be mimicked in the wild type by reducing the
growth rate. Therefore, the observed amelioration of degeneration in
the mutants is probably due to their reduced growth rates.
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Truncation of Peptide Deformylase Reduces the Growth Rate and
Stabilizes Solvent Production in Clostridium
beijerinckii NCIMB 8052
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, Boston University School of Medicine, 715 Albany St.
(L504), Boston, MA 02118-2394. Phone: (617) 638-4291. Fax: (617)
638-4286. E-mail: ekashket{at}bu.edu.
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