PubMed:12433483 JSONTXT 23 Projects

Characterization of cyanobacterial glycogen isolated from the wild type and from a mutant lacking of branching enzyme. Cyanobacteria produce glycogen as their primary form of carbohydrate storage. The genomic DNA sequence of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 indicates that this strain encodes one glycogen-branching enzyme (GBE) and two isoforms of glycogen synthase (GS). To confirm the putative GBE and to demonstrate the presence of only one GBE gene, we generated a mutant lacking the putative GBE gene, sll0158, by replacing it with a kanamycin resistance gene through homologous recombination. GBE in sll0158(-) mutant was eliminated; the mutant strain produced less glucan, equivalent to 48% of that produced by the wild type. In contrast to the wild-type strain that had 74% of the glucan being water-soluble, the mutant had only 14% of the glucan water-soluble. Molecular structures of glucans produced by the mutant and the wild type were characterized by using high-performance size-exclusion and anion-exchange chromatography. The glycogen produced by the wild type displayed a molecular mass of 6.6 x 10(7) daltons (degree of polymerization (DP) 40700) and 10% branch linkages, and the alpha-D-glucan produced by the mutant displayed a molecular mass of 4.7-5.6 x 10(3) daltons (DP 29-35) with slight branch linkages. The results indicated that sll0158 was the major functional GBE gene in Synechocystis sp. PCC6803.

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