Constitutive and regulated expression vectors to construct polyphosphate deficient bacteria
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2009-03-26Metadata
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Chávez, Francisco P.
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Constitutive and regulated expression vectors to construct polyphosphate deficient bacteria
Abstract
Background: Inorganic polyphosphate (polyP), a polymer of tens or hundreds of phosphate
residues linked by ATP-like bonds, is found in all organisms and performs a wide variety of
functions. PolyP is synthesized in bacterial cells by the actions of polyphosphate kinases (PPK1 and
PPK2) and degraded by an exopolyphosphatase (PPX). Bacterial cells with polyP deficiencies are
impaired in many structural and important cellular functions such as motility, quorum sensing,
biofilm formation and virulence. Knockout mutants of the ppk1 gene have been the most frequent
strategy employed to generate polyP deficient cells.
Results: As an alternative method to construct polyP-deficient bacteria we developed constitutive
and regulated broad-host-range vectors for depleting the cellular polyP content. This was achieved
by the overexpression of yeast exopolyphosphatase (PPX1). Using this approach in a
polyphosphate accumulating bacteria (Pseudomonas sp. B4), we were able to eliminate most of the
cellular polyP (>95%). Furthermore, the effect of overexpression of PPX1 resembled the functional
defects found in motility and biofilm formation in a ppk1 mutant from Pseudomonas aeruginosa
PAO1. The plasmids constructed were also successfully replicated in other bacteria such as
Escherichia coli, Burkholderia and Salmonella.
Conclusion: To deplete polyP contents in bacteria broad-host-range expression vectors can be
used as an alternative and more efficient method compared with the deletion of ppk genes. It is of
great importance to understand why polyP deficiency affects vital cellular processes in bacteria. The
construction reported in this work will be of great relevance to study the role of polyP in
microorganisms with non-sequenced genomes or those in which orthologs to ppk genes have not
been identified.
Patrocinador
This research was supported by Grants 1070986 and 11070180 from Fondecyt
and ICM P05-001-F from Mideplan.
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BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:50
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