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Modification of the protein expression pattern induced in the nitrogen-fixing actinomycete<i>Frankia</i>sp. strain ACN14a-tsr by root exudates of its symbiotic host<i>Alnus glutinosa</i>and cloning of the<i>sodF</i>gene
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Citations
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References
2001
Year
BiologyFe Superoxide DismutaseBiosynthesisEngineeringPlant-microbe InteractionNatural SciencesVirulence FactorBacteriologyNormal Stress ResponseMolecular BiologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyMicrobiologyProtein Expression PatternSymbiosisFrankia SpMolecular MicrobiologyRoot ExudatesProtein Biosynthesis
Two-dimensional (2-D) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was used to detect proteins induced in Frankia sp. strain ACN14a-tsr by root exudates of its symbiotic host, Alnus glutinosa. The 5 most prominent proteins were purified from 2-D gels and characterized by N-terminal sequencing. All of these proteins had a high percentage of similarity with known stress proteins. One protein match was the Fe superoxide dismutase (Fe-SOD), another was a tellurite resistance protein (Ter), the third was a bacterioferritin comigratory protein (Bcp); and two matches, differing only by their isoelectric point, were the same small heat shock protein (Hsp), a major immune reactive protein found in mycobacteria. This suggests that the symbiotic microorganism Frankia, first responds with a normal stress response to toxic root products of its symbiotic host plant. To confirm its identity, the gene corresponding to the Fe-SOD protein, sodF was isolated from a genomic library by a PCR-approach and sequenced. It is the first stress response gene characterized in Frankia.
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