Arnau J, Sørensen K I
Department of Dairy and Food Science, The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Frederiksberg C, Denmark.
Gene. 1997 Apr 1;188(2):229-34. doi: 10.1016/s0378-1119(96)00812-8.
Lactococcus lactis is subjected to heat shock (hs) during cheese manufacturing. A number of conserved hs genes have been cloned and studied in this organism, although no regulatory gene, e.g. alternative sigma factor, has been identified. RNA subtractive hybridization was used to identify genes expressed very early when L. lactis MG1363 was shifted from 30 to 43 degrees C. 32P-labeled cDNA synthesized from RNA isolated from hs cells at 43 degrees C was mixed with an excess vegetative RNA and the mixture was directly used as a probe after a short hybridization step. Northern analysis revealed a moderate induction for the probes used, and low expression was also detected in non-hs cells, demonstrating the applicability of this technique for the detection of differentially expressed genes. The probes were used to identify genomic library clones containing the corresponding genes. Among the five clones studied, a cell division operon including a putative ftsZ homolog (pJAK2) was identified. Additionally, a putative hsp86 homolog (pJAK3), three different transposase encoding genes (pJAK1 and pJAK3), a gene coding for a deoR-like transcriptional repressor (pJAK4) and a putative regulatory gene that showed homology to an alkaline shock protein (pJAK5) were characterized.