ABSTRACT
Several strains of the genus Sphingomonas produce sphingans, extracellular polysaccharides used as thickeners, emulsifiers and gelling agents. The pgmG gene from Sphingomonas sanxanigenens, which encodes a bifunctional protein with phosphoglucomutase and phosphomannomutase activities, was cloned and sequenced. The predicted amino acid sequence of the PgmG protein possessed 460 amino acids and a calculated molecular mass of 49.8 kDa, and it was 80 % identical to PGM/PMM from S. elodea. We overexpressed pgmG in Escherichia coli, and the purified protein displayed a K m of 0.2 mM and a V max of 1.3 µmol min(-1) mg(-1) with glucose 1-phosphate as substrate. The catalytic efficiency (K cat/K m) of PgmG was about 15-fold higher for glucose 1-phosphate than for mannose 1-phosphate. Overexpression of pgmG in S. sanxanigenens resulted in a 17 ± 0.3 % increase in sphingan production to ~12.5 g l(-1).