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Infect. Immun., Jul 1997, 2593-2598, Vol 65, No. 7
ND Fedorova and SK Highlander
An efficient method for targeted gene inactivation and generation of
chromosomal gene fusions in Pasteurella haemolytica has been devised and
used to create an lktC::cat operon fusion by allelic exchange at the
leukotoxin gene cluster (lktCABD). A copy of the lktC gene was
insertionally inactivated by using a nonpolar, promoterless cat cassette
and then delivered into P. haemolytica on a shuttle vector. Plasmid
incompatibility was used to detect clones where double recombination events
had occurred at the chromosomal locus. The insertion in lktC did not affect
expression of the downstream genes, and the mutant strain secreted an
antigenic proleukotoxin that was neither leukotoxic nor hemolytic.
Expression of the lktC gene in trans restored the wild-type phenotype,
confirming that LktC is required for activation of the proleukotoxin to the
mature leukotoxin. Construction of the lktC::cat operon fusion allowed us
to quantitate leukotoxin promoter activity in P. haemolytica and to
demonstrate that transcription was maximal during early logarithmic growth
phase but was reduced following entry into late logarithmic phase. This
allelic exchange system should be useful for future genetic studies in P.
haemolytica and could potentially be applied to other members of
Haemophilus-Actinobacillus-Pasteurella family, where genetic manipulation
is limited.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Generation of targeted nonpolar gene insertions and operon fusions in Pasteurella haemolytica and creation of a strain that produces and secretes inactive leukotoxin
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
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