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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 1999, p. 3433-3440, Vol. 65, No. 8
Department of Microbiology, Swiss Federal
Institute for Environmental Science and Technology (EAWAG), CH-8600
Dübendorf, Switzerland
Received 13 October 1998/Accepted 2 June 1999
Differences in expression of the Escherichia coli
stress protein HtpG were found following exposure of exponentially
growing cells to heat or chemical shock when cells were grown under
different environmental conditions. With an
htpG::lacZ reporter system, htpG
expression increased in cells grown in a complex medium (Luria-Bertani [LB] broth) following a temperature shock at 45°C. In contrast, no
HtpG overexpression was detected in cells grown in a glucose minimal
medium, despite a decrease in the growth rate. Similarly, in
pyruvate-grown cells there was no heat shock induction of HtpG expression, eliminating the possibility that repression of HtpG in
glucose-grown E. coli was due to catabolite repression.
When 5 mM phenol was used as a chemical stress agent for cells growing in LB broth, expression of HtpG increased. However, when LB-grown cells
were subjected to stress with 10 mM phenol and when both 5 and 10 mM
phenol were added to glucose-grown cultures, repression of
htpG expression was observed. 2-Chlorophenol stress
resulted in overexpression of HtpG when cells were grown in complex
medium but repression of HtpG synthesis when cells were grown in
glucose. No induction of htpG expression was seen with
2,4-dichlorophenol in cells grown with either complex medium or
glucose. The results suggest that, when a large pool of amino acids and
proteins is available, as in complex medium, a much stronger stress
response is observed. In contrast, when cells are grown in a simple
glucose mineral medium, htpG expression either is
unaffected or is even repressed by imposition of a stress condition.
The results demonstrate the importance of considering differences in
growth environment in order to better understand the nature of the
response to an imposed stress condition.
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Heat-Induced Expression and Chemically Induced
Expression of the Escherichia coli Stress Protein HtpG Are
Affected by the Growth Environment

and
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Corresponding author. Present address: Migal Galilee
Technology Center, P.O. Box 90000, 12100 Rosh Pina, Israel. Phone:
(972) 6 6953577. Fax: (972) 6 6944980. E-mail:
tonym{at}migal.co.il.
Present address: PFC Pharma Consultants AG, CH-8604 Volketswil, Switzerland.
Present address: Roche Diagnostics (Schweiz) AG, CH-6343 Rotkreuz, Switzerland.
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