The genes responsible for bacteriocin production and immunity in Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis biovar diacetylactis VVM4 were localized and characterized by DNA restriction fragment deletion, subcloning, and nucleotide sequence analysis. The nucleotide sequence of a 5.6-kb Avall restriction fragment revealed a cluster with five complete open reading frames (ORFs) in the same orientation. DNA and protein homology analyses, combined with deletion and TnS insertion mutagenesis, implicated four of the ORFs in the production of and immunity to lactococcin A. The last two ORFs in the cluster were the lactococcin A structural and immunity genes, IcnA and Ici4. The two ORFs immediately upstream of IcnA and IciA were designated IcnC and IcnD, and the proteins that they encoded showed similarities to proteins of signal sequence-independent secretion systems. IcnC encodes a protein of 716 amino acids that could belong to the HlyB family of ATP-dependent membrane translocators. LcnC contains an ATP binding domain in a conserved C-terminal stretch of approximately 200 amino acids and three putative hydrophobic segments in the N terminus. The lcnD product, LcnD, of 474 amino acids, is essential for lactococcin A expression and shows structural similarities to HlyD and its homologs. On the basis of these results, a secretion apparatus that is essential for the full expression of active lactococcin A is postulated. * Corresponding author. t This paper is dedicated to George E. Stoddard, without whose inspiration and support this research would not have been completed. Published as paper 19,272 of the contribution series of the Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station and based on research conducted under Project 18-62.
Lactococcin A production in lactococci has recently been linked to a signal-sequence-independent secretory system consisting of a four-gene cluster. Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis LLM23L-A1 has been obtained after Tn5 mutagenesis of pLLM23, a plasmid containing the gene cluster responsible for lactococcin A production. In contrast to other Tn5-generated mutants, strain LLM23L-Al exhibited a 12-fold increase in lactococcin A production. Overproduction of lactococcin A was not linked to an increased pLLM23 copy number. Restriction-enzyme analysis indicated the site of Tn5 insertion to be at the 3' end of lcnD, and upstream of the lcnA structural gene. From DNA sequencing, the Tn5 insertion was located -79 bp upstream of the transcription start site of the lcnA and lciA genes, eliminating eight amino acids from the C-terminal end of lactococcin D. Northern blots revealed overproduction of a 500-base transcript in strain LLM23L-A1, which corresponded to that predicted from the positions of the lactococcin A operon transcriptional start site and the termination structures. This result suggests that the overproduction of lactococcin A in strain LLM23L-A1 is at the transcriptional level and provides further impetus for elucidating the complete regulatory mechanism for lactococcin A expression.
Lactococcin A production in lactococci has recently been linked to a signal-sequence-independent secretory system consisting of a four-gene cluster. Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis LLM23L-A1 has been obtained after Tn5 mutagenesis of pLLM23, a plasmid containing the gene cluster responsible for lactococcin A production. In contrast to other Tn5-generated mutants, strain LLM23L-Al exhibited a 12-fold increase in lactococcin A production. Overproduction of lactococcin A was not linked to an increased pLLM23 copy number. Restriction-enzyme analysis indicated the site of Tn5 insertion to be at the 3' end of lcnD, and upstream of the lcnA structural gene. From DNA sequencing, the Tn5 insertion was located -79 bp upstream of the transcription start site of the lcnA and lciA genes, eliminating eight amino acids from the C-terminal end of lactococcin D. Northern blots revealed overproduction of a 500-base transcript in strain LLM23L-A1, which corresponded to that predicted from the positions of the lactococcin A operon transcriptional start site and the termination structures. This result suggests that the overproduction of lactococcin A in strain LLM23L-A1 is at the transcriptional level and provides further impetus for elucidating the complete regulatory mechanism for lactococcin A expression.
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