Identification of cpsD, a gene essential for type III capsule expression in group B streptococci
Article first published online: 27 OCT 2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.1993.tb01631.x
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How to Cite
Rubens, C. E., Heggen, L. M., Haft, R. F. and Wessels, M. R. (1993), Identification of cpsD, a gene essential for type III capsule expression in group B streptococci. Molecular Microbiology, 8: 843–855. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.1993.tb01631.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 27 OCT 2006
- Article first published online: 27 OCT 2006
- Received 2 October, 1992; revised 15 January, 1993; accepted 9 February 1993.
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Summary
We showed previously that a mutant strain of group B Streptococcus (GBS) defective in capsule production was avirulent. This study describes the derivation of an unencapsulated mutant from a highly encapsulated wild-type strain of type III GBS, COH1, by transposon mutagenesis with Tn916ΔE. The mutant, COH1-13, was sensitive to phagocytic killing by human leukocytes in vitro and was relatively avirulent in a neonatal rat sepsis model compared with the wild-type strain. No capsular polysaccharide was evident in the cytoplasm or on the cell surface of the mutant strain. The Tn916ΔE insertion site in COH1-13 was mapped to the same chromosomal location as the Tn916 insertion site in the unencapsulated type III mutant COH31-15 reported previously. Nucleotide sequencing of DNA flanking the insertion site in COH1-13 revealed an open reading frame, designated cpsD, with significant homology to the rfbP gene of Salmonella typhimurium. RfbP encodes a galactosyl transferase enzyme that catalyses the transfer of galactose to undecaprenol phosphate, the initial step in O-polysaccharide synthesis. A particulate fraction of a lysate of wild-type strain GBS COH1 mediated the transfer of galactose from UDP-galactose to an endogenous acceptor. The galactose–acceptor complex partitioned into organic solvents, suggesting it is lipid in nature or membrane-associated. Galactosyl transferase activity was significantly reduced in the unencapsulated mutant strain COH1-13. These results, together with the similarity in deduced amino acid sequence between cpsD and rfbP suggest that cpsD encodes a galactosyl transferase essential for assembly of the GBS type III capsular polysaccharide.

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