Purple sulfur bacteria store sulfur as intracellular globules enclosed by a protein envelope. We cloned the genes
sgpA, sgpB, and
sgpC, which encode the three different proteins that constitute the sulfur globule envelope of
Chromatium vinosum D (DSMZ 180
T). Southern hybridization analyses and nucleotide sequencing showed that these three genes are not clustered in the same operon.
All three genes are preceded by sequences resembling σ
70-dependent promoters, and hairpin structures typical for rho-independent terminators are found immediately downstream of the
translational stop codons of
sgpA, sgpB, and
sgpC. Insertional inactivation of
sgpA in
Chr. vinosum showed that the presence of only one of the homologous proteins SgpA and SgpB suffices for formation of intact sulfur globules.
All three
sgp genes encode translation products which – when compared to the isolated proteins – carry amino-terminal extensions. These
extensions meet all requirements for typical signal peptides indicating an extracytoplasmic localization of the sulfur globule
proteins. A fusion of the
phoA gene to the sequence encoding the proposed signal peptide of
sgpA led to high specific alkaline phosphatase activities in
Escherichia coli, further supporting the envisaged targeting process. Together with electron microscopic evidence these results provide strong
indication for an extracytoplasmic localization of the sulfur globules in
Chr. vinosum and probably in other Chromatiaceae. Extracytoplasmic formation of stored sulfur could contribute to the transmembranous
Δp that drives ATP synthesis and reverse electron flow in
Chr. vinosum.
Key words Chromatium vinosum - Phototrophic - sulfur bacteria - Sulfur globules - Extracytoplasmic - localization - Sulfide oxidation - Sulfur deposition - Thiocapsa roseoperscina - Interposon mutagenesis - phoA fusion
Received: 1 October 1997 / Accepted: 17 December 1997