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Identification and characterization of genes conferring salt tolerance to Escherichia coli from pond water metagenome

journal contribution
posted on 2010-06-01, 00:00 authored by R Kapardar, R Ranjan, A Grover, Munish Puri, R Sharma
Metagenomics provides culture-independent access to gene pool of the whole microbial communities. To identify genes responsible for salt tolerance in unculturable bacteria, <i>Escherichia coli</i> clones were enriched with an ability to grow at inhibitory NaCl concentrations (750 mM) from a pond water metagenomic library. From two unique clones, genes encoding for proteins with similarity to a putative general stress protein (GspM) harbouring GsiB domain and a putative enoyl-CoA hydratase (EchM) were identified to be responsible for salt tolerance. The <i>gspM</i> was expressed by its native promoter whereas the echM was expressed from the <i>lacZ</i> promoter of the plasmid. EchM was overexpressed with a hexahistidyl tag. Purified EchM showed crotonyl-CoA hydratase activity. These genes have potential application in generating salt tolerant recombinant bacteria or transgenic plants.<br>

History

Related Materials

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2010, Elsevier Ltd.

Journal

Bioresource technology

Volume

101

Pagination

3917 - 3924

ISSN

0960-8524

eISSN

1873-2976