Previous Article | Next Article 
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4914-4918, Vol. 71, No. 8
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.8.4914-4918.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Development of a Plasmid-Mediated Reporter System for In Vivo Monitoring of Gene Expression in the Archaeon Methanosarcina acetivorans
Ethel E. Apolinario,
Karin M. Jackson, and
Kevin R. Sowers*
Center of Marine Biotechnology, University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute, Baltimore, Maryland 21202
Received 3 September 2004/
Accepted 20 February 2005

ABSTRACT
A plasmid-based gene reporter system has been developed to construct
lacZ gene fusions for monitoring intrinsic promoter expression
in
Methanosarcina acetivorans. Constructs transform with high
efficiency that can be readily screened by color selection on
plates and exhibit a consistent copy number on different substrates
negating the need for gene copy normalization. Expression of
the CO dehydrogenase-acetyl coenzyme A synthase promoter fusion
to
lacZ revealed 18- to 54-fold down-regulation in cells grown
on methylotrophic substrates compared with acetate-grown cells,
which is up to an order of magnitude greater than the range
of regulation previously reported by enzyme activity assays.
This system complements and expands the current techniques for
studying genetics of the methanosarcinal
Archaea by providing
a rapid method for monitoring and quantifying gene expression.

INTRODUCTION
Methanosarcina is the most metabolically diverse genus among
the methanogens (
12). Whereas most methanogenic
Archaea grow
by CO
2 reduction with H
2, these species grow by the dismutation
of acetate, by methylotrophic catabolism of methanol, methylated
amines, and dimethylsulfide, and in some cases also by CO
2 reduction
with H
2. The aceticlastic methanogens exhibit a hierarchy of
substrate preference coinciding with the free-energy yields
of the substrates. Previous reports indicate that acetate catabolism
is regulated at the transcriptional level in
Methanosarcina spp. in response to alternative substrates, but the mechanism
of catabolic gene regulation by these
Archaea is currently unknown
(
3,
11,
15). With the complete sequencing of genomes from two
methanosarcinal species (
4,
5) and partial completion of a third
species (
http://genome.jgi-psf.org), this genus is well poised
for genetic studies on archaeal gene expression and physiological
pathways.
One of the difficulties encountered when studying the Archaea has been the dearth of genetic techniques for transferring DNA into cells and selecting mutants. Although gene transfer and recombination techniques are straightforward in many bacterial and eukaryal systems, application of these techniques in the methanogenic Archaea has been problematic and is only in the developing stages. A genetic system developed for the Methanosarcina spp. is among the most advanced available for the methanogenic Archaea. Clonal colonies of Methanosarcina spp. can be grown on solidified medium by streaking or replica plating (1, 13). Development of an efficient transformation system for transfer of both plasmid and linear DNA into Methanosarcina spp. (9), combined with transposon-mediated random mutagenesis (19) and directed gene disruption (20), provides approaches for constructing and isolating mutants. The recent report of a markerless genetic exchange system for Methanosarcina spp. overcomes the current problem of limited selectable markers by allowing the marker to be removed and reused after gene disruption (10).
A genetic system is required for functional analysis of the available methanosarcinal genomic data to confirm and quantify gene expression. Herein, we describe a plasmid-mediated gene reporter system that utilizes fusions of archaeal promoters to the lacZ gene from Escherichia coli for in vivo expression in Methanosarcina acetivorans. The advantage of this system is that protein fusions can be made in a single cloning step, allowing constructs to be prepared rapidly for transformation and in vivo analysis in M. acetivorans. Differential expression of the gene encoding the catabolic CO dehydrogenase from Methanosarcina thermophila fused to lacZ is described during growth of M. acetivorans with different substrates.

Development of a plasmid-mediated cdh promoter-lacZ gene fusion for monitoring cdh expression.
To develop a gene reporter assay for
Methanosarcina spp., the
DNA sequence upstream of the
M. thermophila TM-1
cdhABCDE operon
(GenBank accession no.
U66032), which had been shown previously
to express the catabolic CO dehydrogenase-acetyl coenzyme A
synthase (
8,
15), was cloned upstream of the reporter gene ß-galactosidase
(
lacZ). A 1,153-bp fragment containing the
cdhA promoter from
M. thermophila TM-1 was PCR amplified from pCDH1 (
15) forward
primer 5'-CACGGTACCTTCTGCAGCACG-3' and reverse primer 5'-AGTTTGCCCATGGGAGCTTTAC-3',
which introduced flanking NsiI/NcoI restriction sites and directly
ligated into pCR2.1 (Invitrogen). Conditions for PCR amplification
were as follows: initial denaturation at 94°C for 5 min
followed by 30 amplification cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 48°C
for 30 s, and 72°C for 1.5 min. A 1,170-bp NsiI/NcoI restriction
fragment was cloned into NsiI and NcoI sites in pBAD-TOPOlacZ
(Invitrogen) upstream of the
lacZ gene with the ATG of the
cdh operon fused in-frame with the ATG of
lacZ. This translational
fusion, which was designated
pcdhP-
lacZ, conserved the 371 untranslated
leader sequence of the wild-type
cdh operon with only the substitution
of a cytosine for adenine two bases upstream of the translational
start site. The 4,306-bp
cdh promoter-
lacZ fusion was digested
with KpnI and PmeI and cloned into the KpnI and EcoRV sites
of the
E. coli/M. acetivorans shuttle plasmid pWM315 (
9). This
construct, designated pKJ104, was transformed into
E. coli strain
DH5

/

pir. To create a
cdh-lacZ fusion in the opposite orientation
pKJ104 was digested with StuI/NaeI. These two restriction ends
of the 4,343-bp fragment containing the
cdh promoter-
lacZ fusion
were filled-in with Vent Polymerase (NEB). The DNA fragment
was ligated into the AscI site of pWM307 to create pEA103, which
was transformed into
E. coli strain DH5

/

pir (Fig.
1). The sequences
of all constructs were confirmed by dye terminator cycle sequencing
on an ABI 377 automated sequencer (PE Applied Biosystems). The
reporter plasmids were identical except pEA103 lacked a partial
lac promoter,
lac repressor binding site, and the CAP (catabolite
gene activator protein) binding site that were present in pKJ104
from the parent pWM315 vector and the second B repeat of the
putative origin of replication in the pC2A cassette was inadvertently
deleted. Promoterless
lacZ vectors were constructed by PCR using
pEA64 as template, which contained the
cdh promoter fused to
cat (chloramphenicol acetyltransferase) (unpublished data).
Reverse primer (5'-GCCATTGGGATATATCAACGG-3') was combined with
forward primer (5'-TTAT
ATCGATTTGGTACATTT-3') to generate a PCR
product with a ClaI restriction site (underlined) 29 bp upstream
of the transcriptional start site. The fragment was cloned into
pCR2.1 (Invitrogen), then digested with NsiI/SalI and ligated
into
pcdhP-
lacZ, in place of the wild-type
cdh promoter sequence
to create a
cdh::
lacZ deletion fusion. An XhoI/BamHI-digested
fragment, which included the
cdh deletion and 5' flanking end
of
lacZ, was cloned into pEA103 and pKJ104 in place of the wild-type
cdh::
lacZ fusion sequence, creating the promoterless vectors
pEA110 and pCDH

64, respectively.
M. acetivorans C2A (DSM 2834) was transformed with pKJ104, pEA103,
pCDH

64, and pEA110 as described previously (
9), and transformants
were selected for puromycin resistance. All clones were reisolated
by streaking on agar-solidified medium. Transformants were further
screened for ß-galactosidase activity by transferring
colonies to a nitrocellulose filter (NitroPure, catalog no.
WP4H5; GE Osmonics, Inc., Minnetonka, MN) in an anaerobic glove
box and then treating the filter with 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-
D-galactopyranoside
(X-Gal) outside of the glove box to expose it to air.
To measure the effects of substrates on cdh promoter expression, M. acetivorans transformed with pKJ104, pEA103, pCDH
64, and pEA110 was inoculated into marine disaggregating medium prepared anaerobically under a N2-CO2 (4:1) atmosphere as described previously (14). M. acetivorans transformants containing the reporter plasmids were inoculated (5% vol/vol) into 10 ml of liquid medium containing 2 µg ml1 puromycin and 0.1 M of either sodium acetate, trimethylamine, or methanol. Cultures were sampled (1.0 ml) with a syringe at mid-exponential growth, and aliquots were held on ice until assayed. The optical densities at 550 nm for mid-exponential growth on each substrate were as follows: acetate, 0.135 to 0.145; methanol, 0.18 to 0.25; trimethylamine, 0.35 to 0.40. Cells were pelleted by centrifugation at 14,900 x g for 5 min at 4°C and the supernatant was decanted. Cell pellets were resuspended in 1 ml chilled Z buffer (60 mM Na2HPO4 · 7H2O, 40 mM NaH2PO4 · 2H2O, 10 mM KCl, 1 mM MgSO4 · 7H2O, pH 7.0) and lysed completely by sonication for 20 s with 2-s on/off pulses at an output setting of 3 (Fisher 550 Sonic Dismembrator). Lysed cells were centrifuged at 14,900 x g for 15 min at 4°C. The supernatant was transferred to new microcentrifuge tubes and maintained on ice. Triplicate samples of 50 to 100 µl were dispensed into 750 to 700 µl Z buffer with 50 mM ß-mercaptoethanol and prewarmed 5 min at 30°C. ONPG solution (160 µl Z buffer with 4 mg/ml o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside) was added to start the reaction, and 400 µl 1 M Na2CO3 was added to stop the reaction. Absorbance was measured at 420 nm and 550 nm, and activity was calculated by using an extinction coefficient of 0.0035 M1 cm1. Protein concentration was measured using 100 µl cell extract in a Branford assay with bovine serum albumin as the standard (2). One unit of ß-galactosidase activity is given as 1 nmol of o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside hydrolyzed per min per mg of protein (Table 1).
Plasmids pKJ104 and pEA103 (
cdh promoter-
lacZ) were transformed
into
M. acetivorans, as this species exhibits greater than 100-fold
greater transformation efficiency than
M. thermophila (
9). Both
species have nearly identical physiological responses to the
substrate and the upstream regulatory sequences of the catabolic
CO dehydrogenase-acetyl coenzyme A synthase homologs from
M. thermophila and
M. acetivorans (MA3860) are nearly identical
(>99% similarity). Colonies of pKJ104 or pEA103 transformants
transferred to nitrocellulose filters developed a blue color
when the filters were treated with X-Gal and exposed to air.
Quantitative assays with
o-nitrophenyl-ß-
D-galactosidase
showed at least 50-fold greater levels of activity in acetate-grown
transformants than with methanol-grown transformants (Table
2). Negligible activity was detected in wild-type cells and
in transformants that contained either reporter vector with
a deleted archaeal promoter sequence (pEA110 and pCDH

64). Although
gene fusions in both plasmid orientations yielded similar results,
pEA103 exhibited up to 100-fold greater transformation efficiencies
in
E. coli than pKJ104, possibly due to absence of sequence
containing the residual
E. coli lac operator and/or the pC2A
direct repeat present in the latter construct.

Effect of plasmid copy number on cdh promoter-lacZ gene fusion expression.
Reporter plasmids transformed into
M. acetivorans were quantified
throughout growth in media containing puromycin to normalize
for the effect of gene copy numbers on ß-galactosidase
activity. Since growth rates with methylotrophic substrates
are up to 4.5 times greater than with acetate, plasmid copies
per cell were also determined in cells grown on both acetate
and methanol.
M. acetivorans transformed with pKJ104 or pEA103
was inoculated into five tubes of liquid medium containing 2
µg/ml puromycin and 0.1 M sodium acetate or methanol.
To determine plasmid copy numbers per cell, total DNA was extracted
from pooled cultures by using a modified hexadecyltrimethylammonium
bromide DNA extraction protocol (
18). RNase-treated total DNA
was resuspended in 50 µl Tris-EDTA and stored at 20°C.
Total DNA in amounts of 5 µg, 1 µg, 0.5 µg,
and 0.1 µg was digested with HindIII/XbaI (NEB). Plasmid
DNA standards (pEA103) of 100 pg, 500 pg, 1 ng, 2.5 ng, and
12.5 ng were digested with HindIII (NEB). Duplicate restriction
digests of the DNA samples and standards were separated by electrophoresis
in a 1.2% Tris-borate-EDTA agarose gel and transferred to two
Biotrans nylon membranes (ICN) by capillary blotting using standard
protocols. A 1,022-bp fragment of a deoxyhypusine synthetase-orotidine
5'-monophosphate decarboxylase gene was generated by PCR from
M. acetivorans genomic DNA as a hybridization probe for genome
copies with forward primer 5'-GAG ACT GAA AGT GCA GGC GC-3'
and reverse primer 5'-GTG CCT CAG AAC TCA TAG GGC TC-3'. A 1,136-bp
fragment of
lacZ was isolated from a BamHI/EcoRV digest of pEA103
as a hybridization probe for plasmid copies. Both the genomic
and plasmid probes were digoxigenin (DIG) labeled by using DIG
High-Prime (Roche Molecular Biochemicals) following the manufacturers
directions and hybridized to the membranes at 68°C overnight.
DIG-labeled probes, hybridized to target DNA, were detected
by Nitro Blue Tetrazolium/BCIP (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate)
colorimetric reaction using a DIG nucleic acid detection kit
(Roche Molecular Biochemicals) and quantified with a Gel-Doc
2000 digital imaging system (Bio-Rad). Both pKJ104 and pEA103
copy numbers (mean ± standard deviation) remained constant
at 15 ± 3 copies per genomic
pyrF gene copy during exponential
growth with either acetate or methanol. The results indicate
that the level of gene expression using pKJ104 or pEA103 does
not have to be normalized for variation in the gene copy number
when comparing gene expression in cells grown with different
substrates. The long-term stability of pKJ104 in
M. acetivorans was determined by monitoring ß-galactosidase activity
for over 42 generations in the presence and absence of puromycin.
A decrease in activity was detected after 22 generations in
the absence of antibiotic selection, but no significant changes
in activity were detected after 42 generations if the cells
were maintained with puromycin (Fig.
2). These results indicate
that the recombinant vector is stable in
M. acetivorans maintained
with antibiotic. In addition, the observed stability of the
reporter vector in the absence of antibiotic for at least 20
generations negates the requirement for expensive antibiotic
selection during high-volume mass culturing, which requires
only 5 to 10 generations (
16).

Stability of recombinant ß-galactosidase in M. acetivorans.
In order to determine the intrinsic promoter strength from a
lacZ fusion under different growth conditions, ß-galactosidase
is assayed during steady-state exponential growth. During this
phase of growth, the synthesis rate and dilution rate resulting
from cell doubling have achieved equilibrium (
6). However, when
comparing cultures that exhibit different growth rates, such
as
M. acetivorans strains grown aceticlastically versus strains
grown methylotrophically, rapid breakdown of ß-galactosidase
may not yield accurate relative levels of gene expression if
the growth rate in the more rapidly growing culture exceeds
the rate of ß-galactosidase degradation. The stability
of the recombinant
lacZ in
M. acetivorans was therefore determined
in the presence of sparsomycin (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), which
inhibits protein synthesis (
6). Triplicate cultures of
M. acetivorans transformed with pEA103 and pKJ104 fusions were grown in 0.1
M sodium acetate. At mid-exponential growth, filter-sterilized
sparsomycin was added to a final concentration of 25 µg
ml
1 in each culture. ß-Galactosidase activity
was assayed immediately after sparsomycin addition and 1 h,
1 day, 2 days, 4 days, and 8 days after sparsomycin addition
as described above. Levels of ß-galactosidase remained
constant over 2 days and decreased by 11% on day 4 and 22% on
day 8, which indicates that the protein has a low turnover rate
in
M. acetivorans. Results indicate that ß-galactosidase
stability is not a factor when comparing the intrinsic promoter
strength of
lacZ fusions in
M. acetivorans strains grown aceticlastically
or methylotrophically.

The effects of substrates on cdh expression.
The effects of substrates on
cdh expression were determined
for pKJ104, pEA103, pCDH

64, and pEA110 transformants grown with
acetate and methylotrophic substrates (Table
2). Down-regulated
expression of ß-galactosidase ranged from an 18-fold
decrease in activity for monomethylamine to a 31-fold-decreased
activity for trimethylamine and 54-fold-decreased activity for
methanol. No ß-galactosidase was detected in cells
transformed with pEA110 that lacked
cdh promoter sequence. The
results are consistent with earlier reports on enzyme activity
assays and Northern analyses showing that CO dehydrogenase-acetyl
coenzyme A synthase is up-regulated in the cells grown with
acetate and down-regulated in the presence of alternative substrates
(
3,
11,
15,
17). Although the range of promoter expression is
similar to that reported for other genes encoding catabolic
enzymes, this range is significantly greater than the five-
to sixfold difference in CO dehydrogenase activity detected
in acetate-grown
M. thermophila and
Methanosarcina barkeri compared
to methanol-grown
M. thermophila and
M. barkeri (
7,
17). Similarly,
Western analysis cell extracts with antibody to methanosarcinal
CO dehydrogenases (
13) also revealed a difference in expression
(mean ± standard deviation) of only (10.6 ± 0.6)-fold
between methanol- and acetate-grown cells (data not shown).
The results suggest that the full range of gene expression by
the regulated catabolic
cdh in this study may have been masked
in the previous CO dehydrogenase activity assays by the coexpression
of multiple regulated or constitutively expressed
cdh genes.
Likewise, cross-reactivity of
cdh antiserum with multiple CO
dehydrogenases would have also masked the full range of
cdh regulation by Western analysis. Annotated genome sequences of
M. acetivorans,
Methanosarcina mazei, and
M. barkeri reveal
the existence of two CO dehydrogenase genes associated with
acetyl coenzyme A decarbonylase-synthase operons and at least
two other putative CO dehydrogenases genes (
4,
5) (
http://genome.jgi-psf.org).
The role of these other CO dehydrogenases has not yet been determined.

Summary.
This report describes a plasmid-mediated gene reporter system
for assaying in vivo gene expression in
Methanosarcina spp.
The
cdhA promoter was fused to
lacZ at the NcoI restriction
site, and the translational fusion cassette was ligated into
the archaeal shuttle vector pWM315 to construct pEA103 and pJK104.
Subsequent translational fusions can be directly constructed
in pEA103 and pJK104 by substituting alternative archaeal promoters
for the
cdhA promoter by using multiple upstream restriction
sites and the BamHI site within the N terminus of ß-galactosidase.
The autonomously replicating vector does not require integration
into the genome enabling greater recovery efficiency of recombinants
that can be screened by color on colony blots. Recombinant plasmids
are stable in
M. acetivorans, and numbers are consistent on
different substrates throughout exponential growth negating
the need for normalization due to fluctuations in gene copy
numbers. Finally, there is negligible ß-galactosidase
background activity in
M. acetivorans and the assay is simple
and sensitive. This system complements and expands the current
genetic techniques for studying genetics of the methanosarcinal
Archaea by providing a rapid method for monitoring and quantifying
gene expression.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The first two authors contributed equally to the manuscript
and are listed in alphabetical order.
We thank S. MacAuley for assisting with ß-galactosidase assays and W. Metcalf for the gift of pWM307 and pWM315.
This work was supported by a grant to K.S. from the Department of Energy, Energy Biosciences Program (DE-FG02-93ER20106), and by an NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship in Microbial Biology to K.J.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Center of Marine Biotechnology, University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute, 701 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD 21202. Phone: (410) 234-8878. Fax: (410) 234-8896. E-mail:
sowers{at}umbi.umd.edu.


REFERENCES
1 - Apolinario, E. A., and K. R. Sowers. 1996. Plate colonization of Methanococcus maripaludis and Methanosarcina thermophila in a modified canning jar. FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 145:131-137.[CrossRef]
2 - Bradford, M. M. 1976. A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. Anal. Biochem. 72:248-254.[CrossRef][Medline]
3 - Clements, A. P., and J. G. Ferry. 1992. Cloning, nucleotide sequence, and transcriptional analyses of the gene encoding a ferredoxin from Methanosarcina thermophila. J. Bacteriol. 174:5244-5250.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
4 - Deppenmeier, U., A. Johann, T. Hartsch, R. Merkl, R. A. Schmitz, R. Martinez-Arias, A. Henne, A. Wiezer, S. Bäumer, C. Jacobi, H. Brüggemann, T. Lienard, A. Christmann, M. Bömeke, S. Steckel, A. Bhattacharyya, A. Lykidis, R. Overbeek, H.-P. Klenk, R. P. Gunsalus, H. J. Fritz, and G. Gottschalk. 2002. The genome of Methanosarcina mazei: evidence for lateral gene transfer between Bacteria and Archaea. J. Mol. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 4:453-461.[Medline]
5 - Galagan, J. E., C. Nusbaum, A. Roy, M. G. Endrizzi, P. Macdonald, W. FitzHugh, S. Calvo, R. Engels, S. Smirnov, D. Atnoor, A. Brown, N. Allen, J. Naylor, N. Stange-Thomann, K. DeArellano, R. Johnson, L. Linton, P. McEwan, K. McKernan, J. Talamas, A. Tirrell, W. J. Ye, A. Zimmer, R. D. Barber, I. Cann, D. E. Graham, D. A. Grahame, A. M. Guss, R. Hedderich, C. Ingram-Smith, H. C. Kuettner, J. A. Krzycki, J. A. Leigh, W. X. Li, J. F. Liu, B. Mukhopadhyay, J. N. Reeve, K. Smith, T. A. Springer, L. A. Umayam, O. White, R. H. White, E. C. de Macario, J. G. Ferry, K. F. Jarrell, H. Jing, A. J. L. Macario, I. Paulsen, M. Pritchett, K. R. Sowers, R. V. Swanson, S. H. Zinder, E. Lander, W. W. Metcalf, and B. Birren. 2002. The genome of Methanosarcina acetivorans reveals extensive metabolic and physiological diversity. Genome Res. 12:532-542.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
6 - Guss, A. M., B. Mukhopadbyay, J. K. Zhang, and W. W. Metcalf. 2005. Genetic analysis of mch mutants in two Methanosarcina species demonstrates multiple roles for the methanopterin-dependent C-1 oxidation/reduction pathway and differences in H2 metabolism between closely related species. Mol. Microbiol. 55:1671-1680.[CrossRef][Medline]
7 - Krzycki, J. A., R. H. Wolkin, and J. G. Zeikus. 1982. Comparison of unitrophic and mixotrophic substrate metabolism by an acetate-adapted strain of Methanosarcina barkeri. J. Bacteriol. 149:247-254.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
8 - Maupin-Furlow, J. A., and J. G. Ferry. 1996. Analysis of the CO dehydrogenase/acetyl-coenzyme A synthase operon of Methanosarcina thermophila. J. Bacteriol. 178:6849-6856.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
9 - Metcalf, W. W., J. K. Zhang, E. Apolinario, K. R. Sowers, and R. S. Wolfe. 1997. A genetic system for Archaea of the genus Methanosarcina: liposome-mediated transformation and construction of shuttle vectors. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94:2626-2631.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
10 - Pritchett, M. A., J. K. Zhang, and W. W. Metcalf. 2004. Development of a markerless genetic exchange method for Methanosarcina acetivorans C2A and its use in construction of new genetic tools for methanogenic archaea. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 70:1425-1433.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
11 - Singhwissmann, K., and J. G. Ferry. 1995. Transcriptional regulation of the phosphotransacetylase-encoding and acetate kinase-encoding genes (pta and ack) from methanosarcina thermophila. J. Bacteriol. 177:1699-1702.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
12 - Sowers, K. R. 2000. Methanogenesis, p. 204-226. In J. Lederberg, M. Alexander, B. Bloom, D. Hopwood, R. Hull, B. Iglewski, A. Laskin, S. Oliver, M. Schaechter, and W. Summers (ed.), Encyclopedia of microbiology, 2nd ed. Academic Press, Inc., New York, N.Y.
13 - Sowers, K. R., J. E. Boone, and R. P. Gunsalus. 1993. Disaggregation of Methanosarcina spp. and growth as single cells at elevated osmolarity. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 59:3832-3839.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
14 - Sowers, K. R., and R. P. Gunsalus. 1988. Adaptation for growth at various saline concentrations by the archaebacterium Methanosarcina thermophila. J. Bacteriol. 170:998-1002.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
15 - Sowers, K. R., and R. P. Gunsalus. 1993. Transcriptional regulation of the carbon monoxide dehydrogenase gene (cdhA) in. Methanosarcina thermophila. J. Biol. Chem. 268:23172-23178.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
16 - Sowers, K. R., M. J. K. Nelson, and J. G. Ferry. 1984. Growth of acetotrophic, methane-producing bacteria in a pH auxostat. Curr. Microbiol. 11:227-230.[CrossRef]
17 - Terlesky, K. C., M. J. K. Nelson, and J. G. Ferry. 1986. Isolation of an enzyme complex with carbon monoxide dehydrogenase activity containing a corrinoid and nickel from acetate-grown Methanosarcina thermophila. J. Bacteriol. 168:1053-1058.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
18 - Wilson, K. 1994. Preparation of genomic DNA from bacteria, p. 2.4.1-2.4.5. In F. M. Ausubel, R. E. Brent, E. Kingston, D. D. Moore, J. G. Seidman, J. G. Smith, J. A. Smith, and K. Struhl (ed.), Current protocols in molecular biology, vol. 1. John Wiley & Sons, New York, N.Y.
19 - Zhang, J. K., M. A. Pritchett, D. J. Lampe, H. M. Robertson, and W. W. Metcalf. 2000. In vivo transposon mutagenesis of the methanogenic archaeon Methanosarcina acetivorans C2A using a modified version of the insect mariner-family transposable element Himar1. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 97:9665-9670.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
20 - Zhang, J. K., A. K. White, H. C. Kuettner, P. Boccazzi, and W. W. Metcalf. 2002. Directed mutagenesis and plasmid-based complementation in the methanogenic archaeon Methanosarcina acetivorans C2A demonstrated by genetic analysis of proline biosynthesis. J. Bacteriol. 184:1449-1454.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4914-4918, Vol. 71, No. 8
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.8.4914-4918.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Anderson, K. L., Apolinario, E. E., MacAuley, S. R., Sowers, K. R.
(2009). A 5' Leader Sequence Regulates Expression of Methanosarcinal CO Dehydrogenase/Acetyl Coenzyme A Synthase. J. Bacteriol.
191: 7123-7128
[Abstract]
[Full Text]