Department of Applied Biology, Faculty of Textile Science and Technology, Shinshu University Sericultural Key Laboratory of the Agricultural Ministry, Southwest University
Kazuaki SATO
Department of Applied Biology, Faculty of Textile Science and Technology, Shinshu University
Goro TAGUCHI
Department of Applied Biology, Faculty of Textile Science and Technology, Shinshu University
Zeyang ZHOU
Sericultural Key Laboratory of the Agricultural Ministry, Southwest University
Makoto SHIMOSAKA
Department of Applied Biology, Faculty of Textile Science and Technology, Shinshu University
Published: July 23, 2008Received: March 14, 2008Available on J-STAGE: July 23, 2008Accepted: April 06, 2008
Advance online publication: July 07, 2008
Revised: -
A gene (cob) conferring red fluorescence on Escherichia coli cells was isolated from an environmental DNA library constructed from soil bacteria. The nucleotide sequence showed a single open reading frame (ORF) encoding a polypeptide of 257 amino acid residues responsible for the red fluorescence. The deduced amino acid sequence of the ORF showed significant similarity (less than 75% identity) to uroporphyrinogen III methyltransferases from various bacteria. Cell extracts from the E. coli transformant had a spectrum pattern of fluorescence corresponding to trimethylpyrrocorphin or sirohydrochlorin that was absent in the control cells harboring the vector alone. Expression of the cob gene in the fungus Fusarium oxysporum conferred red fluorescence on the host cells, indicating that it is a promising transcriptional reporter in fungi as well as bacteria.
References (29)
Related articles (0)
Figures (0)
Content from these authors
Supplementary material (0)
Result List ()
Cited by
This article cannot obtain the latest cited-by information.