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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 1998, p. 5016-5019, Vol. 64, No. 12
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular and
Cellular Biology of Plants, Estación Experimental del
Zaidín
Received 22 June 1998/Accepted 2 October 1998
Klebsiella oxytoca CECT 4460 removes high nitrate loads
from industrial wastewaters without accumulation of nitrite under optimal culture conditions; however, under nonoptimal conditions nitrite accumulates. This situation reflects an in vivo-limited functioning of nitrite reductase in this strain. As a way to overcome this limitation, an increase in the nitrite reductase gene dose in
K. oxytoca CECT 4460 was considered. To achieve this,
we cloned and transferred into this strain the Klebsiella
pneumoniae nasB gene, which encodes assimilatory nitrite
reductase (Lin et al., J. Bacteriol. 176:2551-2559, 1994). The
delivery vector was either the wide-host-range plasmid pUPE2, in
which the nasB gene is expressed from the Escherichia
coli Plac promoter, or a
mini-Tn5-Km vector, which upon random insertion
in the host chromosome allowed expression of the nasB gene
from an unidentified chromosomal host promoter. The effect of the
increase in the dose of the nasB gene in K. oxytoca CECT 4460 on the accumulation of nitrite in the culture medium was tested in two recombinant strains. The results obtained showed that K. oxytoca CECT 4460 bearing pUPE2
accumulated 88% less nitrite than the wild-type strain, while the
recombinant strain bearing the K. pneumoniae nasB gene
in the host chromosome showed a 25% lower level of nitrite
accumulation in the culture medium than that of the wild type.
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Recombinant Klebsiella oxytoca Strains
with Improved Efficiency in Removal of High Nitrate Loads
and
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas,
18008 Granada, Spain
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: EEZ-CSIC,
Apdo. Correos 419, E-18008 Granada, Spain. Phone: 349-58-121011. Fax:
349-58-129600. E-mail: jlramos{at}eez.csic.es.
Present address: Department of Microbiology, University of
Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
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