In crosses of Salmonella typhimurium FfinP301 lac+ to F- strains of S. typhimurium in broth, recipient strains which were rough mutants affected in the outer core region of the lipopolysaccharide gave an average of 1.4 Lac+ transconjugants per donor cell and over 50% of the donor and recipient cells in mating aggregates, whereas smooth recipient strains gave 0.08 Lac+ transconjugants and few cells in mating aggregates. Strains with mutations affecting the inner core of the lipopolysaccharide were usually poor recipients. When cells were mated on Millipore membrane filters, both smooth and rough strains gave ca. 1.0 Lac+ transconjugants per donor cell. Plasmids in Inc groups FI, FII, M, J, and I beta gave more transconjugants with rough than smooth strains, but there were no difference in crosses with plasmids in Inc groups T, L, P, N, and W. Strains with mutations in the ompA gene (deficient in Omp Ap = 33K = II* = conjugation protein) yielded only 0.02 Lac+ transconjugants per donor cell and few cells in mating aggregates. There was no indication of a deficiency of Omp Ap in smooth strains compared with rough strains. Reduced fertility of smooth recipients may occur because the O side chains of the lipopolysaccharide shield the recipient and reduce the frequency of stabilization of mating aggregates. However, gradient-of-transmission experiments indicated that once these mating aggregates are stabilized, they are equally stable in both smooth and rough recipients. Fertility was high in crosses of S. typhimurium Flac+ to Escherichia coli K-12 F- (0.75 Lac+ transconjugants per donor cell; over 50% of the cells in mating aggregates). In crosses of E. coli K-12 Flac+ to S. typhimurium smooth F-, ca. 10(-5) Lac+ transconjugants per donor cell were obtained; in crosses to rough recipient strains, fertility was increased 14-fold, and when the recipient was defective in the SA and LT host restriction systems, fertility was increased in additional 100-fold. Thus, both the lipopolysaccharide and the protein in the cell envelope of S. typhimurium were shown to be important in the recipient function in F-mediated conjugation.
Isopentenyl adenosine derivatives are always located adjacent to the 3' end of the anticodon in transfer RNA and have been implicated in certain biological functions. In the enteric bacterium, E. coli, the derivative is ms2i6A whereas in some plant associated bacteria the derivative is the hydroxylated form, ms2io6A. Anti-i6A immunoadsorbent chromatography has been employed to detect isopentenyl adenosine compounds. In the present study we show that the transfer RNA of three species of enteric bacteria, S. typhimurium, K. pneumoniae, and S. marcescens contains both ms2io6A and ms2i6A. Under the growth conditions utilized the ms2io6A is predominant. The presence of ms2io6A in Enterobacteriacae is particularly noteworthy since in previous work it has been found only in plant-associated species of bacteria.
From Salmonella typhimurium LT2 hemA (delta-aminolevulinic acid requiring) 15 mutants were isolated which grew on the hydrophobic compound hemin. All had increased sensitivity to antibiotics such as vancomycin, bacitracin, novobiocin, erythromycin, rifampin, and oleandomycin, and were considered to be envelope mutants (Env-). Half the mutants were rough , based on altered bacteriophage sensitivity and deoxycholate sensitivity, whereas the remainder were smooth; three of the smooth mutants were studied in detail. They gave increased uptake of gentian violet but no increase in leakage of a periplasmic protein, RNase I. The total membranes and fractions from sucrose gradient centrifugations representing inner and outer membranes of the wild type and three mutants were examined by sodium dodecyl sulfate - polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and isoelectric focussing - PAGE (IEF-PAGE). The major outer membrane proteins (molecular weights (MW)33 000, 34 000, 35 000, and 36 000) showed no or very little alterations in the Env- mutants. In SA1926 (env-52) one protein spot at MW 48 000, proven to be an outer membrane protein, was missing, whereas a new spot appeared nearby, and other proteins in this area of the gel were reduced. An Env+ transductant selected from this strain had the wild-type protein pattern restored. The two other Env- mutants had similar but not identical changes in protein composition.
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