Molecular characterization of the genes involved in the secretion and immunity of lactococcin Q, a two-peptide bacteriocin produced by Lactococcus lactis QU 4
Author(s) -
Naoki Ishibashi,
Yasushi Shigeri,
Kenji Sonomoto,
Takeshi Zendo,
Shoko Koga
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.352
H-Index - 35
eISSN - 1465-2080
pISSN - 1350-0872
DOI - 10.1099/mic.0.000157
Subject(s) - lactococcus lactis , bacteriocin , biology , secretion , lactococcus , gene cluster , gene , heterologous expression , mutant , peptide sequence , genetics , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , bacteria , recombinant dna , lactic acid
Lactococcin Q is a two-peptide (Qα and Qβ) bacteriocin produced by Lactococcus lactis QU 4, which exhibits specific antimicrobial activity against L. lactis strains. The lactococcin Q gene cluster (approximately 4.5 kb) was sequenced and found to include genes encoding lactococcin Q immunity (laqC), an ATP-binding cassette transporter (laqD) and a transport accessory protein (laqE), downstream of the lactococcin Q structural genes (laqA and laqB). In addition, the gene cluster showed high sequence identity with that of a lactococcin Q homologue bacteriocin, lactococcin G. Heterologous expression studies showed that LaqD was responsible for lactococcin Q secretion in a manner dependent on LaqE expression, and that LaqC conferred self-immunity to lactococcin Q and cross-immunity to lactococcin G. Amino acid alignment of both lactococcin transporters revealed that LaqD contains an insertion (160-168 residues) that is essential for lactococcin Q secretion, as L. lactis cells that expressed LaqDΔ160-168 were devoid of this function. Additional experiments demonstrated that the LaqDΔ160-168 mutant was, however, able to secrete lactococcin G, suggesting that the insertion is necessary only for the lactococcin Q secretion by LaqD. This report demonstrates the biosynthetic mechanism of lactococcin Q/G-type bacteriocins and the complementarity of the genes responsible for the secretion of lactococcins Q and G.
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