Characterization and in vivo cloning of prlC, a suppressor of signal sequence mutations in Escherichia coli K12.

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Abstract

The prlC gene of E. coli was originally identified as an allele, prlC1, which suppresses certain signal sequence mutations in the genes for several exported proteins. We have isolated six new alleles of prlC that also confer this phenotype. These mutations can be placed into three classes based on the degree to which they suppress the lamB signal sequence deletion, lamBs78. Genetic mapping reveals that the physical location of the mutations in prlC correlates with the strength of the suppression, suggesting that different regions of the gene can be altered to yield a suppressor phenotype. We also describe an in vivo cloning procedure using lambda placMu9H. The procedure relies on transposition and illegitimate recombination to generate a specialized transducing phage that carries prlC1. This method should be applicable to any gene for which there is a mutant phenotype.

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Trun, N. J., & Silhavy, T. J. (1987). Characterization and in vivo cloning of prlC, a suppressor of signal sequence mutations in Escherichia coli K12. Genetics, 116(4), 513–521. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/116.4.513

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