Abstract

The functions of the riboflavin synthesis gene homologues ribA, ribBA, ribC, and ribD from Helicobacter pylori strain P1 were confirmed by complementation of defined Escherichia coli mutant strains. The H. pylori ribBA gene, which is similar to bifunctional ribBA genes of Gram-positive bacteria, fully complemented the ribB mutation and partially restored growth in a ribC mutant. However, ribBA did not complement the ribA mutation in E. coli, thus explaining the presence of the additional separate copy of the ribA gene in the H. pylori chromosome. In E. coli exclusively ribA conferred hemolytic activity and gave rise to production of molecules with fluorescence characteristics similar to flavins, as observed earlier. The E. coli hemolysin ClyA was not involved in causing the hemolytic phenotype. No riboflavin synthesis genes on plasmids conferred iron uptake functions to a siderophore-deficient mutant of E. coli. Marker exchange mutagenesis of the genes in H. pylori was not successful indicating that riboflavin synthesis is essential for basic metabolic functions of the gastric pathogen.

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