## Abstract Two types of proteins are discussed in their role of facilitating the transport of maltose and __sn__βglycerolβ3βphosphate in __E. coli__. The first protein is the receptor for phage Ξ΄, known to be an outer membrane protein. By facilitating the diffusion of maltose and the higher maltod
Murein-lipoprotein ofEscherichia coli: A protein involved in the stabilization of bacterial cell envelope
β Scribed by Hideho Suzuki; Yukinobu Nishimura; Seiichi Yasuda; Akiko Nishimura; Masao Yamada; Yukinori Hirota
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1978
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 853 KB
- Volume
- 167
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1617-4615
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β¦ Synopsis
Two independent mutants of Escherichia coli lacking murein-lipoprotein have been found. One mutant whose mutation was named lpo was subjected to detailed analyses. The absence of both bound and unbound lipoproteins was shown by electrophoretic analysis of 14C-arginine labelled membrane proteins of the mutant. Nor was serologically cross-reacting material detected in the mutant by the Ouchterlony-method. Sequestering magnesium from mutant cell suspensions by ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid caused cell lysis, which was prevented in the presence of 0.5 M sucrose. Incubation in culture media at a very low level of magnesium resulted in the formation of blebs in the mutant. Examination of mutant cells by electron microscopy showed that the outer membrane of the mutant was uneven with small irregular protuberances, some of which pinched off forming vesicles of various sizes. Phosphotungstate used for negative-staining penetrated into the periplasmic space of the mutant cells. The mutants leaked a considerable fraction of their periplasmic enzymes. These physiological and morphological alterations in the lipoproteinless mutant suggest that murein-lipoprotein helps to maintain the outer envelope structure by connecting the outer membrane with murein so that the outer membrane may fulfil its physiological functions as a barrier to the environment.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
A strain of Escherichia coli lacking the entire ponB gene and a strain lacking the proximal part of the ponA gene were constructed by substitution with a drug resistance gene. These strains lost either penicillin-binding protein(PBP)-I b or -la totally and their growth was apparently normal at 30 Β°