Identification and cloning of the genes required for production of the adhesive holdfast organelle of the marine Caulobacter MCS6
Caulobacters produce an organelle called a holdfast which allows the bacterium to firmly attach to surfaces. Tn5 insertion mutagenesis was used to identify genes affecting holdfast production or function in the marine strain MCS6. 12,000 Tn5- insertion mutants were produced and screened for adhe...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-32242018-01-05T17:31:20Z Identification and cloning of the genes required for production of the adhesive holdfast organelle of the marine Caulobacter MCS6 Yun, Chanyoung Caulobacters produce an organelle called a holdfast which allows the bacterium to firmly attach to surfaces. Tn5 insertion mutagenesis was used to identify genes affecting holdfast production or function in the marine strain MCS6. 12,000 Tn5- insertion mutants were produced and screened for adhesion defects by a newly developed assay involving the growth of cultures in polystyrene microtitre dish wells and detection of attached cells by staining with crystal violet. Among adhesion-defective mutants, those with multiple polar (pleiotropic) defects were excluded and the remainder were examined for the ability of Wheat Germ agglutinin to label the holdfast region, a feature of the wild-type holdfast. 41 mutants were isolated that produced no detectable or synthesized a reduced amount of holdfast. Southern blot and pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) analyses of these mutants indicated 11 unique sites of Tn5 insertion, clustered in three regions of the genome. In addition, 71 mutants were found that did not adhere to polystyrene or adhered poorly yet still produced a holdfast organelle as judged by Wheat Germ agglutinin binding. Southern blot and PFGE analyses of 15 of these mutants showed eight Tn5 insertion sites clustered in two regions of the genome. Glass slides treated with silane chemicals (producing surfaces with varying degrees of hydrophobicity and/or hydrophilicity) were used to attempt characterization of this phenotype; unexpectedly no generic pattern of differences in binding was found between the mutants and wild-type Caulobacters. In particular, no reduction in the ability of the mutants to bind to hydrophobic surfaces was noted; this might have been expected considering the inability to bind polystyrene. As a means of confirming their unique location and character of each genomic region, representatives of all 5 clusters were chosen and the Tn5-interrupted regions were cloned. The gene segments obtained were in turn used as probes to identify corresponding holdfast-related chromosome regions in a cosmid library of wild-type MCS6 DNA. Positive cosmid clones were transferred into the Tn5 -derived holdfast-defective mutants by conjugation. Among 6 groups tested, 4 of them showed almost full complementation, one showed poor complementation; for one group no complementation was obtained. In sum, several genetic regions responsible for holdfast mediated attachment in marine Caulobacter MCS6 were identified by Tn5 insertion mutagenesis. They were located at several discrete locations on the genome and, via the cloned segments obtained, are now accessible for further genetic analysis. Science, Faculty of Microbiology and Immunology, Department of Graduate 2008-12-19T21:10:09Z 2008-12-19T21:10:09Z 1992 1992-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3224 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 2068953 bytes application/pdf |
collection |
NDLTD |
language |
English |
format |
Others
|
sources |
NDLTD |
description |
Caulobacters produce an organelle called a holdfast which
allows the bacterium to firmly attach to surfaces. Tn5 insertion
mutagenesis was used to identify genes affecting holdfast
production or function in the marine strain MCS6. 12,000 Tn5-
insertion mutants were produced and screened for adhesion defects
by a newly developed assay involving the growth of cultures in
polystyrene microtitre dish wells and detection of attached cells by
staining with crystal violet. Among adhesion-defective mutants,
those with multiple polar (pleiotropic) defects were excluded and
the remainder were examined for the ability of Wheat Germ
agglutinin to label the holdfast region, a feature of the wild-type
holdfast. 41 mutants were isolated that produced no detectable or
synthesized a reduced amount of holdfast. Southern blot and pulsed
field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) analyses of these mutants indicated
11 unique sites of Tn5 insertion, clustered in three regions of the
genome. In addition, 71 mutants were found that did not adhere to
polystyrene or adhered poorly yet still produced a holdfast
organelle as judged by Wheat Germ agglutinin binding. Southern
blot and PFGE analyses of 15 of these mutants showed eight Tn5
insertion sites clustered in two regions of the genome. Glass slides
treated with silane chemicals (producing surfaces with varying
degrees of hydrophobicity and/or hydrophilicity) were used to
attempt characterization of this phenotype; unexpectedly no generic
pattern of differences in binding was found between the mutants
and wild-type Caulobacters. In particular, no reduction in the ability of the mutants to bind to hydrophobic surfaces was noted;
this might have been expected considering the inability to bind
polystyrene. As a means of confirming their unique location and
character of each genomic region, representatives of all 5 clusters
were chosen and the Tn5-interrupted regions were cloned. The
gene segments obtained were in turn used as probes to identify
corresponding holdfast-related chromosome regions in a cosmid
library of wild-type MCS6 DNA. Positive cosmid clones were
transferred into the Tn5 -derived holdfast-defective mutants by
conjugation. Among 6 groups tested, 4 of them showed almost full
complementation, one showed poor complementation; for one group
no complementation was obtained. In sum, several genetic regions
responsible for holdfast mediated attachment in marine Caulobacter
MCS6 were identified by Tn5 insertion mutagenesis. They were
located at several discrete locations on the genome and, via the
cloned segments obtained, are now accessible for further genetic
analysis. === Science, Faculty of === Microbiology and Immunology, Department of === Graduate |
author |
Yun, Chanyoung |
spellingShingle |
Yun, Chanyoung Identification and cloning of the genes required for production of the adhesive holdfast organelle of the marine Caulobacter MCS6 |
author_facet |
Yun, Chanyoung |
author_sort |
Yun, Chanyoung |
title |
Identification and cloning of the genes required for production of the adhesive holdfast organelle of the marine Caulobacter MCS6 |
title_short |
Identification and cloning of the genes required for production of the adhesive holdfast organelle of the marine Caulobacter MCS6 |
title_full |
Identification and cloning of the genes required for production of the adhesive holdfast organelle of the marine Caulobacter MCS6 |
title_fullStr |
Identification and cloning of the genes required for production of the adhesive holdfast organelle of the marine Caulobacter MCS6 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Identification and cloning of the genes required for production of the adhesive holdfast organelle of the marine Caulobacter MCS6 |
title_sort |
identification and cloning of the genes required for production of the adhesive holdfast organelle of the marine caulobacter mcs6 |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3224 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT yunchanyoung identificationandcloningofthegenesrequiredforproductionoftheadhesiveholdfastorganelleofthemarinecaulobactermcs6 |
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