The ldh gene encoding the fructose-1,6-diphosphate-dependent L-(+) lactate dehydrogenase from the ruminal bacterium Streptococcus bovis was cloned and sequenced. A genomic library of S. bovis JB1 DNA was constructed in lambda ZAP II and screened by use of a heterologous probe derived from the cloned Streptococcus mutans ldh gene. Several clones were isolated that contained a common 2.9-kb fragment as determined by restriction analysis. Nucleotide sequence analysis revealed a 987-bp open reading frame with extensive homology to Streptococcus thermophilus and S. mutans ldh nucleic acid and amino acid sequences. Expression of the cloned S. bovis ldh gene in Escherichia coli was confirmed by the ability to complement the ldh mutation of E. coli FMJ39, by using an in-gel activity screen and by enzymatic assay. Increased LDH activity was observed in S. bovis JB1 containing the cloned ldh genes on a multicopy plasmid.
A small cryptic plasmid, pMBB1, isolated from Enterococcus faecium 226 was characterized. The plasmid contained an extremely stable replicon which has limited homology to the lactococcal plasmid pCI305. Sequence analysis of the replicon detected one open reading frame of 822 bp capable of encoding a 32-kDa protein. No detectable single-stranded intermediates were found for the replicon, suggesting that pMBB1 may be included in the same family as pCI305, although pCI305 exhibits a more narrow host range. A small stably maintained vector able to replicate in a variety of lactic acid bacteria, containing a large multiple cloning region, was constructed by using the pMBB1 replicon.
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