Cloning and Nucleotide Sequence of the ispA Gene Responsible for Farnesyl Diphosphate Synthase Activity in Escherichia coli1

S Fujisaki, H Hara, Y Nishimura… - The Journal of …, 1990 - academic.oup.com
S Fujisaki, H Hara, Y Nishimura, K Horiuchi, T Nishino
The Journal of Biochemistry, 1990academic.oup.com
The molecular cloning and the determination of the nucleotide sequence of the ispA gene
responsible for farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) synthase [EC 2.5. 1.1] activity in Escherichia coli
are described. E. coli ispA strains have temperature-sensitive FPP synthase, and the
defective gene is located at about min 10 on the chromosome. The wild-type ispA gene was
subcloned from a λ phage clone containing the chromosomal fragment around min 10,
picked up from the aligned genomic library of Kohara et al.[Kohara, Y., Akiyama, K., & Isono …
Abstract
The molecular cloning and the determination of the nucleotide sequence of the ispA gene responsible for farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) synthase [EC 2.5.1.1] activity in Escherichia coli are described. E. coli ispA strains have temperature-sensitive FPP synthase, and the defective gene is located at about min 10 on the chromosome. The wild-type ispA gene was subcloned from a λ phage clone containing the chromosomal fragment around min 10, picked up from the aligned genomic library of Kohara et al. [Kohara, Y., Akiyama, K., & Isono, K. (1987) Cell 60, 495-508]. The cloned gene was identified as the ispA gene by the recovery and amplification of FPP synthase activity in an ispA strain. A 1,452-nucleotide sequence of the cloned fragment was determined. This sequence specifies two open reading frames, ORF-1 and ORF-2, encoding proteins with the expected molecular weights of 8,951 and 32,158, respectively. A part of the deduced amino acid sequence of ORF-2 showed similarity to the sequences of eucaryotic FPP synthases and of crtE product of a photosynthetic bacterium. The plasmid carrying ORF-2 downstream of the lac promoter complemented the defect of FPP synthase activity of the ispA mutant, showing that the product encoded by ORF-2 is the ispA product. The maxicell analysis indicated that a protein of molecular weight 36,000, approximately consistent with the molecular weight of the deduced ORF-2-encoded protein, is the gene product
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