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Infect Immun. 1993 January; 61(1): 13-22

Major stable peptides of Yersinia pestis synthesized during the low-calcium response.

R J Mehigh and R R Braubaker

Department of Microbiology, Michigan State University, East Lansing 48824-1101.

ABSTRACT

It is established that the medically significant yersiniae require the presence of physiological levels of Ca2+ (ca. 2.5 mM) for sustained growth at 37 degrees C and that this nutritional requirement is mediated by a shared ca. 70-kb Lcr plasmid. The latter also encodes virulence factors (Yersinia outer membrane proteins [Yops] and V antigen) known to be selectively synthesized in vitro at 37 degrees C in Ca(2+)-deficient medium. In this study, cells of Yersinia pestis KIM were first starved for Ca2+ at 37 degrees C to prevent synthesis of bulk vegetative protein and then, after cell division had ceased, pulsed with [35S]methionine. After sufficient chase to ensure plasminogen activator-mediated degradation of Yops, the remaining major radioactive peptides were separated by conventional chromatographic methods and identified as Lcr plasmid-encoded V antigen and LcrH (and possibly LcrG), ca. 10-kb Pst plasmid-encoded pesticin and plasminogen activator, ca. 100-kb Tox plasmid-encoded fraction 1 (capsular) antigen and murine exotoxin, and chromosomally encoded antigen 4 (pH 6 antigen) and antigen 5 (a novel hemin-rich peptide possessing modest catalase activity but not superoxide dismutase activity). Also produced at high concentration was a chromosome-encoded GroEL-like chaperone protein. Accordingly, the transcriptional block preventing synthesis of bulk vegetative protein at 37 degrees C in Ca(2+)-deficient medium may not apply to genes encoding virulence factors or to highly conserved GroEL (known in other species to utilize a secondary stress-induced sigma factor).


Infect Immun. 1993 January; 61(1): 13-22




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