Isolation and characterization of an aminolevulinate-requiring Rhodobacter capsulatus mutant.

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RESUMO

Using transposon Tn5 mutagenesis, we isolated a mutant strain of Rhodobacter capsulatus that requires aminolevulinate for growth. Southern blot analysis indicated that this strain has a single Tn5 insertion. The addition of 0.1 mM aminolevulinate to the medium allowed the mutant to grow either aerobically or photosynthetically with generation times similar to those of the parental strain. When grown photosynthetically, bacteriochlorophyll accumulation increased with increasing aminolevulinate concentration. The mutant strain had only 10% of the normal aminolevulinate synthase activity, but it had a normal level of porphobilinogen synthase activity. The requirement for aminolevulinate could be satisfied by porphobilinogen, hemin, or protoporphyrin. While the mutant grew well on agar plates containing any of these substrates, growth in liquid media containing hemin or protoporphyrin was poor. Introduction of an R' factor containing all the known R. capsulatus bch genes into the mutant strain did not relieve the requirement for aminolevulinate, suggesting that the Tn5 insertion is not within the bch region.

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