Abstract

The genes for utilization of cellobiose are normally cryptic in both laboratory strains and natural isolates of Escherichia coli. A survey of natural isolates of E. coli reveals that functional genes for cellobiose utilization, while rare, are present. The fraction of E. coli that utilized cellobiose ranged from less than 0.01% in human fecal samples to 7% in fecal samples obtained from horses. Samples obtained from sheep, cows, dogs, and pigs contained 0.1 to 0.5% cellobiose-positive E. coli. Neither the previously identified cel genes nor the bgl genes from E. coli K-12 were expressed during growth on cellobiose by any of the 14 naturally occurring Cel+ isolates that were tested. All of the naturally occurring Cel+ isolates possessed a cel operon, but all were deleted for the major portion of the bgl operon. The functional cel+ genes from these natural isolates differed from the mutationally activated cel+ genes obtained in earlier studies in that (i) the mutationally activated cel+ genes were temperature sensitive, while the functional genes were not, and (ii) transport of cellobiose was inducible in the strains carrying functional cel+ genes, while it was expressed constitutively in strains carrying mutationally activated genes.

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