Abstract
Several strains of Escherichia coli K12 were compared for activity of the periplasmic “pH 2.5 acid phosphatase”, an enzyme whose expression is regulated negatively by cyclic AMP. Two distinct enzyme levels differing by about four-fold were observed. This strain-dependent difference does not involve modifications in the structure of the enzyme, but results from a difference in its expression. We show that (1) strains with a high- or a low level of enzyme differ in the gene locus appR located in the 59 min region of the chromosome, a site remote from the structural gene appA; (2) the appR + versus appR enzyme ratio is 3–4 in wild-type strains, adenylate cyclase-deficient strains (cya) or cyclic AMP receptor protein-deficient strains (crp) grown in rich medium or in glucose minimal medium, but is close to 1 in cya strains in the presence of 0.1 mM cyclic AMP and in wild-type strains grown with succinate as carbon source; (3) in a crp genetic background, appR strains, contrary to appR + strains, are able to grow on minimal medium with succinate as the sole carbon source. The selection, from an appR + crp strain, of clones growing on succinateminimal medium. yielded mutations in the same region of the chromosome and showing the same phenotype as “naturally-occurring” appR strains. All appR strains analysed so far showed other similar deficiencies. The possibility that mutated appR gene products might function as weak substitutes for a functional cAMP-CRP complex is discussed.