Clark D, Lightner V, Edgar R, Modrich P, Cronan J E, Bell R M
J Biol Chem. 1980 Jan 25;255(2):714-7.
The structural gene for the Escherichia coli biosynthetic sn-glycerol-3-phosphate (glycerol-P) dehydrogenase gpsA, was transferred from a defective transducing phage (lambda dcysE, gpsA) into the Eco RI site of plasmid pMB9 by recombinant DNA techniques. The recombinant plasmids suppressed the glycerol-P requirement of gpsA- mutants and strains bearing one such plasmid, pDC2, overproduced the glycerol-P dehydrogenase about 60-fold. The glycerol-P dehydrogenase from a strain bearing the pDC2 was purified 200-fold to homogeneity. This is contrasted to the 12,000-fold purification required to purify the enzyme from a wild type strain (Edgar, J. R., and Bell, R. M. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 6348-6353). The homogeneous enzyme purified from a strain bearing the pDC2 plasmide was strongly inhibited by glycerol-P (Ki of 2.5 microM). The introduction of the pDC2 plasmid into glycerol-P auxotrophs containing a Km-defective glycerol-P acyltranferase, defined by the plsB locus, caused a 60-fold overproduction of the glycerol-P requirement. This strongly suggests that the intracellular level of glycerol-P is stringently regulated in vivo by a mechanism involving feedback inhibition of the glycerol-P dehydrogenase by glycerol-P.