Identification and characterization of a gene product that regulates type 1 piliation in Escherichia coli

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Abstract

The recombinant plasmid pSH2 confers type 1 piliation (Pil+) on a nonpiliated (Pil-) strain of Escherichia coli K-12. At least four plasmid-encoded gene products are involved in pilus biosynthesis and expression. We present evidence which indicates that one gene encodes an inhibitor of piliation. Hyperpiliated (Hyp) mutants were isolated after Tn5 insertion mutagenesis of pSH2 and introduction of the plasmid DNA into a Pil- strain of E. coli as unique small, compact colonies. Also, Hyp mutants clumped during growth in static broth and were piliated under several cultural conditions that normally suppressed piliation. Electron microscopic examination of Hyp mutants associated an observed 40-fold increase in pilin antigen with an increase in the number and length of pili per cell. All Hyp mutants examined failed to produce a 23-kilodalton protein that was encoded by a gene adjacent to the structural (pilin) gene for type 1 pili, and all Tn5 insertion mutations that produced the Hyp phenotype mapped in this region (hyp). Piliation in Hyp mutants could be reduced to near parental levels by introducing a second plasmid containing a parental hyp gene. Thus the 23-kilodalton (hyp) protein appears to act in trans to regulate the level of piliation.

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Orndorff, P. E., & Falkow, S. (1984). Identification and characterization of a gene product that regulates type 1 piliation in Escherichia coli. Journal of Bacteriology, 160(1), 61–66. https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.160.1.61-66.1984

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