|
type |
Journal Article |
authors |
Rossbach, S.; Kulpa, D. A.; Rossbach, U.; de Bruijn, F. J. |
title |
Molecular and genetic characterization of the rhizopine catabolism (mocABRC) genes of Rhizobium meliloti L5-30 |
journal |
Mol Gen Genet |
Activity |
mocr |
sel |
selected |
ui |
7845353 |
year |
(1994) |
volume |
245 |
number |
1 |
pages |
11-24 |
| |
keywords |
Amino Acid Sequence |
abstract |
Rhizopine (L-3-O-methyl-scyllo-inosamine, 3-O-MSI) is a symbiosis- specific compound, which is synthesized in nitrogen-fixing nodules of Medicago sativa induced by Rhizobium meliloti strain L5-30. 3-O-MSI is thought to function as an unusual growth substrate for R. meliloti L5- 30, which carries a locus (mos) responsible for its synthesis closely linked to a locus (moc) responsible for its degradation. Here, the essential moc genes were delimited by Tn5 mutagenesis and shown to be organized into two regions, separated by 3 kb of DNA. The DNA sequence of a 9-kb fragment spanning the two moc regions was determined, and four genes were identified that play an essential role in rhizopine catabolism (mocABC and mocR). The analysis of the DNA sequence and the amino acid sequence of the deduced protein products revealed that MocA resembles NADH-dependent dehydrogenases. MocB exhibits characteristic features of periplasmic-binding proteins that are components of high- affinity transport systems. MocC does not share significant homology with any protein in the database. MocR shows homology with the GntR class of bacterial regulator proteins. These results suggest that the mocABC genes are involved in the uptake and subsequent degradation of rhizopine, whereas mocR is likely to play a regulatory role. |
last changed |
2009/07/09 15:28 |
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