We have recently reported the secretion of a 107K polypeptide by an E. coli strain containing the haemolytic plasmid pHly167 (Mackman and Holland 1984). In this paper we show that a large number of haemolytic E. coli strains, apparently including both plasmid and chromosomally located haemolysin gen
Secretion of a 107 K dalton polypeptide into the medium from a haemolytic E. coli K12 strain
โ Scribed by Mackman, Nigel ;Holland, I. Barry
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1984
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 410 KB
- Volume
- 193
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0026-8925
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โฆ Synopsis
Certain E. coli K12 strains are able to secrete a plasmid encoded 107 K protein into the culture medium. During exponential growth of the cells this protein represents approximately 1% of total cell protein. The presence of the 107 K polypeptide was demonstrated through the fortuitous use of strain MC4100. This gave a largely protein-free culture supernatant, presumably due to minimal lysis of whole cells. Pulse-labelling experiments showed that the secretion of the 107 K polypeptide reached a maximum during the stationary phase of growth, where it represented substantially more than 1% of total cell protein. The 107 K polypeptide is coded by the haemolytic plasmid pHly167, and appears to be related to a previously reported intracellular "precursor" form of the alpha-haemolysin (Goebel and Hedgpeth 1982). However, additional extracellular factors appear to be required for alpha-haemolysin activity since several nonhaemolytic mutants still secrete this protein.
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