
doi: 10.1007/bf00283514
pmid: 8052232
The glucose kinase gene (glkA-ORF3) of Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) plays an essential role in glucose utilisation and in glucose repression of a variety of genes involved in the utilisation of alternative carbon sources. These genes include dagA, which encodes an extracellular agarase that permits agar utilisation. Suppressor mutants of glkA-ORF3 deletion strains capable of utilising glucose (Glc+) arise at a frequency of about 10(-5) on prolonged incubation. The Glc+ phenotype of the mutants is reversible (at a frequency of about 10(-3) and reflects either the activation of a normally silent glucose kinase gene or the modification of an existing sugar kinase. Although the level of glucose kinase activity in the Glc+ supressor mutants is similar to that in the glkA+ parental strain, glucose repression of dagA remains defective. Expression of the glucose kinase gene of Zymomonas mobilis in glkA-ORF3 mutants restored glucose utilisation, but not glucose repression of dagA. Over-expression of glkA-ORF3 on a high-copy-number plasmid failed to restore glucose repression of dagA in glkA-ORF3 mutants and led to loss of glucose repression of dagA in a glkA+ strain. These results suggest that glucose phosphorylation itself is not sufficient for glucose repression and that glkA-ORF3 plays a specific regulatory role in triggering glucose repression in S. coelicolor A3(2).
DNA, Bacterial, Zymomonas, Genotype, Recombinant Proteins, Streptomyces, Blotting, Southern, Open Reading Frames, Glucose, Phenotype, Genes, Bacterial, Glucokinase, Enzyme Repression
DNA, Bacterial, Zymomonas, Genotype, Recombinant Proteins, Streptomyces, Blotting, Southern, Open Reading Frames, Glucose, Phenotype, Genes, Bacterial, Glucokinase, Enzyme Repression
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