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1.
J Bacteriol ; 187(24): 8375-84, 2005 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16321942

ABSTRACT

Alginate is an industrially widely used polysaccharide produced by brown seaweeds and as an exopolysaccharide by bacteria belonging to the genera Pseudomonas and Azotobacter. The polymer is composed of the two sugar monomers mannuronic acid and guluronic acid (G), and in all these bacteria the genes encoding 12 of the proteins essential for synthesis of the polymer are clustered in the genome. Interestingly, 1 of the 12 proteins is an alginate lyase (AlgL), which is able to degrade the polymer down to short oligouronides. The reason why this lyase is associated with the biosynthetic complex is not clear, but in this paper we show that the complete lack of AlgL activity in Pseudomonas fluorescens in the presence of high levels of alginate synthesis is toxic to the cells. This toxicity increased with the level of alginate synthesis. Furthermore, alginate synthesis became reduced in the absence of AlgL, and the polymers contained much less G residues than in the wild-type polymer. To explain these results and other data previously reported in the literature, we propose that the main biological function of AlgL is to degrade alginates that fail to become exported out of the cell and thereby become stranded in the periplasmic space. At high levels of alginate synthesis in the absence of AlgL, such stranded polymers may accumulate in the periplasm to such an extent that the integrity of the cell is lost, leading to the observed toxic effects.


Subject(s)
Alginates/metabolism , Periplasm/metabolism , Polysaccharide-Lyases/physiology , Pseudomonas fluorescens/enzymology , Pseudomonas fluorescens/metabolism , Alginates/analysis , Alginates/chemistry , Alginates/toxicity , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Colony Count, Microbial , Gene Deletion , Glucuronic Acid/analysis , Glucuronic Acid/chemistry , Glucuronic Acid/metabolism , Glucuronic Acid/toxicity , Hexuronic Acids/analysis , Hexuronic Acids/chemistry , Hexuronic Acids/metabolism , Hexuronic Acids/toxicity , Models, Biological , Mutagenesis, Insertional , Polysaccharide-Lyases/genetics
2.
J Bacteriol ; 185(12): 3515-23, 2003 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12775688

ABSTRACT

Bacterial alginates are produced as 1-4-linked beta-D-mannuronan, followed by epimerization of some of the mannuronic acid residues to alpha-L-guluronic acid. Here we report the isolation of four different epimerization-defective point mutants of the periplasmic Pseudomonas fluorescens mannuronan C-5-epimerase AlgG. All mutations affected amino acids conserved among AlgG-epimerases and were clustered in a part of the enzyme also sharing some sequence similarity to a group of secreted epimerases previously reported in Azotobacter vinelandii. An algG-deletion mutant was constructed and found to produce predominantly a dimer containing a 4-deoxy-L-erythro-hex-4-enepyranosyluronate residue at the nonreducing end and a mannuronic acid residue at the reducing end. The production of this dimer is the result of the activity of an alginate lyase, AlgL, whose in vivo activity is much more limited in the presence of AlgG. A strain expressing both an epimerase-defective (point mutation) and a wild-type epimerase was constructed and shown to produce two types of alginate molecules: one class being pure mannuronan and the other having the wild-type content of guluronic acid residues. This formation of two distinct classes of polymers in a genetically pure cell line can be explained by assuming that AlgG is part of a periplasmic protein complex.


Subject(s)
Alginates/metabolism , Carbohydrate Epimerases/metabolism , Polymers/metabolism , Pseudomonas fluorescens/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Carbohydrate Epimerases/genetics , Gene Deletion , Glucuronic Acid , Hexuronic Acids , Molecular Sequence Data , Point Mutation , Pseudomonas fluorescens/chemistry , Sequence Alignment
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