Microbiology 2007-08-01

Mutations in yhiT enable utilization of exogenous pyrimidine intermediates in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium.

Michelle L Zaharik, Sherry S Lamb, Kristian E Baker, Nevan J Krogan, Jan Neuhard, Rod A Kelln

Index: Microbiology 153(Pt 8) , 2472-82, (2007)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Mutants capable of utilizing the pyrimidine biosynthetic intermediates carbamoylaspartate and dihydroorotate for growth were derived from pyrimidine auxotrophs of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2. The gain-of-function phenotypes both resulted from mutations in a single gene, yhiT, the third gene of a putative four-gene operon, yhiVUTS, for which there is no homologous region in Escherichia coli. Notably, when a mutant yhiT allele was transferred to a pyrimidine-requiring E. coli strain, the transformant was then capable of using carbamoylaspartate or dihydrorotate as a pyrimidine source. The operon arrangement of the yhiVUTS genes was supported by genetic analyses and studies employing RT-PCR, coupled to the determination of the transcriptional start site using 5'-random amplification of cDNA ends (RACE). Computer-generated predictions indicated that YhiT is an integral membrane protein with 12 putative transmembrane domains typical of bacterial transport proteins. Competition experiments showed that mutant YhiT interacts with the C4-dicarboxylates succinate and malate, as well as the amino acids aspartate and asparagine. The native function of wild-type YhiT remains undetermined, but the collective results are consistent with a role as a general transporter of C4-dicarboxylates and other compounds with a similar basic structure.

Related Compounds

Structure Name/CAS No. Articles
L-Dihydroorotic acid Structure L-Dihydroorotic acid
CAS:5988-19-2
D-Hydroorotic Acid Structure D-Hydroorotic Acid
CAS:5988-53-4