Abstract

Two research groups showed that several Bdellovibrio strains incorporated into their outer membranes intact OmpF porin proteins derived from their Escherichia coli prey. These results could not be reproduced by another group using Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus 109J. They showed that a major protein appearing in the Bdellovibrio Triton X-100-insoluble outer membrane was coded for by the bdellovibrios. We reconciled these results by examining the strain used by this group and by reviving a freeze-dried culture of strain 109J which had been stored for almost 9 years. B. bacteriovorus 109J failed to acquire substantial amounts of the OmpF protein from E. coli ML35, and a protein coded for by the bdellovibrios was expressed in its place. However, B. bacteriovorus 109J incorporated the OmpF protein from rough K-12 strains of E. coli, and the revived 9-year-old culture of B. bacteriovorus 109J incorporated more of the OmpF protein from the smooth E. coli ML35 than did its contemporary counterpart. The protein isolated from the outer membrane of the bdellovibrios was identified as the OmpF protein of E. coli by its protease peptide profile on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by Western blot analysis. This confirmed that bdellovibrios relocalize outer membrane proteins from their prey, but relocalization may be an unstable trait which can be influenced by the prey.

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