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Appl Environ Microbiol. 1992 March; 58(3): 869-876
Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana 61801.
ABSTRACT
Previously, we isolated two mutants of Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron that were unable to grow on the mucopolysaccharide chondroitin sulfate (CS). One of these mutants (46-1) was outcompeted by the wild type in the intestinal tracts of germfree mice, whereas the other mutant (46-4) competed equally with the wild type. In the present article, we report a detailed characterization of these two mutants. Assays of enzymes in the CS utilization pathway revealed that 46-1 did not express one of these enzymes, chondro-6-sulfatase. The absence of chondro-6-sulfatase activity in extracts from 46-1 allowed us to detect a previously unknown activity of another enzyme in the CS breakdown pathway, beta-glucuronidase. In addition to hydrolyzing its normal substrate (an unsulfated disaccharide), beta-glucuronidase also hydrolyzed the 6-sulfated disaccharide subunit of CS. Two-dimensional gel analysis of polypeptides produced by 46-1 showed that several proteins other than the 6-sulfatase were either missing or expressed aberrantly. Thus, 46-1 could be a regulatory mutant. Mutant 46-4 was unable to grow on CS, hyaluronic acid, or disaccharides of CS. Thus, expression of the CS pathway enzymes could not be induced. Nonetheless, the growth pattern of 46-4 and some other findings indicate that the structural genes for these enzymes were still intact. The most likely target of mutant 46-4 is a regulatory locus that is required for expression of CS utilization genes. A surprising characteristic of 46-1 was its inability to grow on heparin, a mucopolysaccharide which is structurally similar to CS but is utilized by a different pathway.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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