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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 2000, p. 1622-1628, Vol. 66, No. 4
Department of Biological Sciences, University
of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201,1
and Department of Genetics, Eotvos Lorand University,
Budapest, Hungary2
Received 19 October 1999/Accepted 24 January 2000
Xenorhabdus nematophilus is an insect pathogen that
lives in a symbiotic association with a specific entomopathogenic
nematode. During prolonged culturing, variant cells arise that are
deficient in numerous properties. To understand the genetic mechanism
underlying variant cell formation, a transposon mutagenesis
approach was taken. Three phenotypically similar variant strains of
X. nematophilus, each of which contained a single
transposon insertion, were isolated. The insertions occurred at
different locations in the chromosome. The variant strain, ANV2, was
further characterized. It was deficient in several properties,
including the ability to produce antibiotics and the
stationary-phase-induced outer membrane protein, OpnB. Unlike wild-type
cells, ANV2 produced lecithinase. The emergence of ANV2 from the
nematode host was delayed relative to the emergence of the parental
strain. The transposon in ANV2 had inserted in a gene designated
var1, which encodes a novel protein composed of 121 amino acid residues. Complementation analysis confirmed that
the pleiotropic phenotype of the ANV2 strain was produced by
inactivation of var1. Other variant strains were not
complemented by var1. These results indicate that
inactivation of a single gene was sufficient to promote variant
cell formation in X. nematophilus and that disruption of
genetic loci other than var1 can result in the same
pleiotropic phenotype.
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Inactivation of a Novel Gene Produces a Phenotypic Variant Cell
and Affects the Symbiotic Behavior of Xenorhabdus
nematophilus
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biological Sciences, University of Wisconsin, P.O. Box 413, Lapham Hall 458, Milwaukee, WI 53201. Phone: (414) 229-6373. Fax: (414) 229-3926. E-mail: sforst{at}csd.uwm.edu.
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