AI Article Synopsis

  • Isolation of a Streptococcus thermophilus CNRZ368 mutant revealed the cse gene, which is crucial for cellular segregation, and its deletion led to longer cell chains and changed colony appearance.
  • The cse gene's N terminus is similar to Streptococcus agalactiae's SIP, while its C terminus is akin to S. thermophilus PcsB, indicating a potential evolutionary link.
  • Further experiments showed that variability in a central repeat-rich region of the cse gene does not affect its function, suggesting that bacterial gene evolution can occur through mechanisms like module-shuffling.

Article Abstract

The isolation of a Streptococcus thermophilus CNRZ368 mutant displaying a long-chain phenotype allowed us to identify the cse gene (for cellular segregation). The N terminus of Cse exhibits high similarity to Streptococcus agalactiae surface immunogenic protein (SIP), while its C terminus exhibits high similarity to S. thermophilus PcsB. In CNRZ368, deletion of the entire cse open reading frame leads to drastic lengthening of cell chains and altered colony morphology. Complementation of the Deltacse mutation with a wild-type allele restored both wild-type phenotypes. The central part of Cse is a repeat-rich region with low sequence complexity. Comparison of cse from CNRZ368 and LMG18311 strains reveals high variability of this repeat-rich region. To assess the impact of this central region variability, the central region of LMG18311 cse was exchanged with that of CNRZ368 cse. This replacement did not affect chain length, showing that divergence of the central part does not modify cell segregation activity of Cse. The structure of the cse locus suggests that the chimeric organization of cse results from insertion of a duplicated sequence deriving from the pcsB 3' end into an ancestral sip gene. Thus, the cse locus illustrates the module-shuffling mechanism of bacterial gene evolution.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1070363PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JB.187.8.2737-2746.2005DOI Listing

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