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. 1976 Oct 19;448(3):474-91.
doi: 10.1016/0005-2736(76)90301-1.

Mutational change of membrane architecture. Mutants of Escherichia coli K12 missing major proteins of the outer cell envelope membrane

Mutational change of membrane architecture. Mutants of Escherichia coli K12 missing major proteins of the outer cell envelope membrane

M Schweizer et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. .

Abstract

Mutants of Escherichia coli have been analyzed which miss two of the major proteins of the outer cell envelope membrane. The two proteins I and II, normally are present at high concentrations (about 10(5) copies per cell). In such mutants, as compared with wild type, the phospholipid-to-protein ratio in the outer membrane has increased by a factor of 2.3 causing a considerable difference in density between wild type and mutant membranes. The concentrations of two other major components of the outer membrane, lipopolysaccharide and Braun's lipoprotein, did not change. The protein-deficient mutants do not exhibit gross functional defects in vitro. An increased sensitivity to EDTA and a slight such increase to dodecyl sulfate (but not to deoxycholate or Triton X-100) was observed, loss of so-called periplasmic enzymes was not found, and other differences to wild type are marginal. The mutants can grow with normal morphology. It is not possible, however, to prepare "ghosts" (particles of size and shape of the cell without murein, surrounded by a derivative of the outer membrane, and possessing the major proteins of this membrane) from them. This fact confirms our earlier suggestion that the proteins in question are required for the shape maintenance phenomenon in ghosts, and the mutants reject the speculation that these proteins are involved in the expression of the genetic information specifying cellular shape. Freeze-fracturing showed that in mutant cells, and in sharp contrast to wild type, the far predominant fracture plane is within the outer membrane. The concentration of the well known densely packed particles at the outer, concave leaflet of this fracture plane is greatly reduced. It was not possible, however, to clearly establish that one or the other protein is part of these particles because these ultrastructural differences were not apparent in mutants missing either one of the proteins only. The biochemical and ultrastructural data allow the conclusion that the loss of two major proteins and the concomitant increase of phospholipid concentration has changed the architecture of the outer membrane from a highly oriented structure, with a large fraction of protein-protein interaction, to one predominantly exhibiting planar lipid bilayer characteristics. E. coli thus can assemble rather different outer membranes, a fact excluding that outer membrane formation constitutes a highly ordered or strictly sequential assembly-line process.

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