1985 Volume 49 Issue 6 Pages 1845-1850
OmpC and OmpF, outer membrane porin proteins, are important in the maintenance of the cell surface structure of Escherichia coli cells [T. Nogami and S. Mizushima, J. Bacterial., 156, 402 (1983)]. Mutants lacking both proteins are unstable and frequently revert or mutate to strains which either have regained one or both of the proteins or constitutively produce PhoE, another porin protein. In the present work, the structural importance of PhoE was studied in relation to OmpC. and OmpF. The strain devoid of both OmpC and OmpF was highly susceptible to Tris-HCl buffer at a concentration of 120mM in terms of viability and cell structure. This strain was also susceptible to osmotic shock. In contrast, the strain possessing PhoE in place of OmpC/OmpF was as stable as the strain possessing OmpC/OmpF against these treatments. PhoE, like OmpC and OmpF, was assembled into a hexagonal lattice with lipopolysaccharide that covered the peptidoglycan sacculus. These results suggest that PhoE can take the place of OmpC/OmpF in the maintenance of the cell surface structure. The importance of porins in general in the maintenance of the cell structure is discussed.
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