A cloned cyanobacterial gene for glutamine synthetase functions in Escherichia coli, but the enzyme is not adenylylated.
Author(s) -
Rory A. Fisher,
R. Tuli,
Robert Haselkorn
Publication year - 1981
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.78.6.3393
Subject(s) - biology , glutamine synthetase , escherichia coli , anabaena , microbiology and biotechnology , complementation , biochemistry , gene , plasmid , mutant , glutamine , genetics , amino acid , cyanobacteria , bacteria
The coding sequence for Anabaena 7120 glutamine synthetase [L-glutamate:ammonia ligase (ADP-forming), EC 6.3.1.1] are shown to be contained within a 7.5-kilobase-pair (kbp) HindIII fragment that has been cloned by plaque hybridization. The hybridization probe for the cyanobacterial gene was a recombinant plasmid containing the glnA gene from Escherichia coli K-12. Evidence that the cloned Anabaena fragment contains the glnA gene includes complementation of a glnA deletion mutant of E. coli and immunological identity of the enzyme produced by the cloned Anabaena fragment in E. coli with glutamine synthetase purified from Anabaena 7120. Heteroduplex analysis reveals 0.65 kbp of homology between the 7.5-kbp Anabaena 7120 fragment and an 11-kbp E. coli fragment that codes for E. coli glutamine synthetase. Studies of Anabaena glnA gene activity in E. coli suggest that the cyanobacterial gene is not repressible and that the Anabaena 7120 glutamine synthetase is not adenylylated in E. coli.
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