4.4 Article

Influence of KfoG on capsular polysaccharide structure in Escherichia coli K4 strain

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 2, Pages 129-134

Publisher

HUMANA PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1385/MB:30:2:129

Keywords

fructose; KfoG; fructosyltransferase; glycosyltransferase; chondroitin; capsule

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An enzyme KfoG with unknown function is coded by the gene kfoG. Gene kfoG belongs to genes from region 2, which are responsible for structure of capsular polysaccharide. Only two enzymes, KfoG and KfoC, coded by genes from region 2, have a glycosyltransferase motif. KfoC is the bifunctional enzyme, which is able to add both GalNAc and GlcUA on nascent polysaccharide, termed chondroitin polymerase. KfoG was predicted to be a fructosyltransferase. The gene that codes the KfoG enzyme was disrupted using homological recombination and absence of this gene was confirmed on both DNA and RNA levels. After disruption no structural changes have been observed, what indicates that fructose branching of the chondroitin backbone is not caused by enzymes, which are coded by genes from region 2 of the K4 capsular gene cluster.

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