Molecular analysis of an operon in Bacillus subtilis encoding a novel ABC transporter with a role in exoprotein production, sporulation and competence Leskelä, Soile and Kontinen, Vesa P. and Sarvas, Matti,, 142, 71-77 (1996), doi = https://doi.org/10.1099/13500872-142-1-71, publicationName = Microbiology Society, issn = 1350-0872, abstract= The levels of exoamylase and other exoenzymes of Bacillus subtilis are pleiotropically decreased by the ecs-26 (prs-26) and ecs-13 (prs-13) mutations. These mutations also cause a competence- and sporulation-deficient phenotype. In the present work, the ecs locus, which has been defined by the ecs-26 and ecs-13 mutations, was cloned and sequenced. Sequence analysis revealed a putative operon of three ORFs (ecsA, ecsB and ecsC). ecsA can encode a putative polypeptide of 248 amino acid residues containing an ATP-binding site. The polypeptide shows about 30% sequence similarity with the ATP-binding components of numerous membrane transporters of the ABC-type (ATP-binding cassette transporters or traffic ATPases). The ecs-26 mutation was found to result from a transition of one base pair changing the glycine164 of EcsA to a glutamic acid residue in the vicinity of the putative ATP-binding pocket. ecsB was predicted to encode a hydrophobic protein with six membrane-spanning helices in a pattern found in other hydrophobic components of ABC transporters. The properties deduced for the ecsA and ecsB gene products are consistent with the interpretation that ecs encodes a novel ABC-type membrane transporter of B. subtilis. The third ORF, ecsC, can encode a putative polypeptide of 237 amino acid residues. The polypeptide does not resemble components of ABC transporters., language=, type=