Abstract

The ops and tps genes of Myxococcus xanthus have ca. 90% DNA and amino acid sequence homology and are in the same orientation separated by a spacer region of only 1.4 kilobases. The products of the two genes were found to cross-react immunologically, and both were capable of Ca2+-dependent self-assembly on the surface of myxospores. However, the ops and tps genes were expressed very differently during the developmental cycle of M. xanthus. The tps gene is induced early during fruiting body formation on a solid surface, and its product, protein S, is made in large quantities (up to 15% of total protein synthesis). When the cells turn into myxospores, protein S is assembled on the outer surface of the spore. We have now also found it in much smaller quantities inside the spores. The ops gene, on the other hand, appears to be induced later in development, after the cells have sporulated, since the ops gene product was found only inside the spores. When an ops gene under the control of a tps gene promoter was inserted into a wild-type strain, the ops gene product was synthesized at the same time as protein S and assembled onto the spore surface.

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