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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Restoration of hydrogenase activity in hydrogenase-negative strains of Escherichia coli by cloned DNA fragments from Chromatium vinosum and Proteus vulgaris.

DNA fragments from Proteus vulgaris and Chromatium vinosum were isolated which restored hydrogenase activities in both hydA and hydB mutant strains of Escherichia coli. The hydA and hydB genes, which map near minute 59 of the genome map, 17 kb distant from each other, are not structural hydrogenase genes, but mutation in either of these genes leads to failure to synthesize any of the hydrogenase isoenzymes. The smallest DNA fragments which restored hydrogenase activity to both E. coli mutant strains were 4.7 kb from C. vinosum and 2.3 kb from P. vulgaris. These fragments were cleaved into smaller fragments which did not complement either of the E. coli mutations. The cloned heterologous genes also restored formate hydrogenlyase activity but they did not restore activity in hydE, hupA or hupB mutant strains of E. coli. The cloned genes, on plasmids, did not lead to the synthesis of proteins of sufficient size to be the hydrogenase catalytic subunit. The hydrogenase proteins synthesized by hydA and hydB mutant strains of E. coli transformed by cloned genes from P. vulgaris and C. vinosum were shown by isoelectric and immunological methods to be E. coli hydrogenase. Thus, these genes are not hydrogenase structural genes.[1]

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