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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 11 1996, 4155-4161, Vol 62, No. 11
P Weisser, R Kramer and GA Sprenger
Wild-type Zymomonas mobilis can utilize only three substrates (sucrose,
glucose, and fructose) as sole carbon sources, which are largely converted
into ethanol and carbon dioxide. Here, we show that although D-mannose is
not used as a growth substrate, it is taken up via the glucose uniport
system (glucose facilitator protein) with a Vmax similar to that of
glucose. Moreover, D-mannose was phosphorylated by a side activity of the
resident fructokinase to mannose-6-phosphate. Fructokinase was purified to
homogeneity from an frk-recombinant Z. mobilis strain showing a specific
activity of 205 +/- 25 U of protein mg-1 with fructose (K(m), 0.75 +/- 0.06
mM) and 17 +/- 2 U mg-1 (relative activity, 8.5%) with mannose (K(m), 0.65
+/- 0.08 mM). However, no phosphomannoseisomerase activity could be
detected for Z. mobilis, and this appeared to be the reason for the lack of
growth on mannose. Therefore, we introduced the Escherichia coli gene pmi
(manA) in Z. mobilis under the control of a lacIq-Ptac system on a
broad-host- range plasmid (pZY507; Cmr). Subsequently, in pmi-recombinant
cells of Z. mobilis, phosphomannoseisomerase was expressed in a range of
from 3 U (without isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside [IPTG]) to 20 U
mg-1 of protein in crude extracts (after IPTG induction). Recombinant cells
of different Z. mobilis strains utilized mannose (4%) as the sole carbon
source with a growth rate of 0.07 h-1, provided that they contained
fructokinase activity. When the frk gene was additionally expressed from
the same vector, fructokinase activities of as much as 9.7 U mg-1 and
growth rates of as much as 0.25 h-1 were detected, compared with 0.34 h-1
on fructose for wild-type Z. mobilis. Selection for growth on mannose was
used to monitor plasmid transfer of pZY507pmi from E. coli to Z. mobilis
strains and could replace the previous selection for antibiotic resistance.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Expression of the Escherichia coli pmi gene, encoding phosphomannose- isomerase in Zymomonas mobilis, leads to utilization of mannose as a novel growth substrate, which can be used as a selective marker
Institut fur Biotechnologie 1, Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH, Germany.
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