As in other bacteria that produce group-1 capsules,
galF delimits the 5’ region of
cpsKp13. This gene shows 100% identity to the
galF sequence present in
K. pneumoniae NK8 [GenBank:BAI43699], which codes for a UTP-glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase (EC 2.7.7.9, Figure

). This enzyme belongs to the nucleotidyltransferase family and catalyzes the reaction UTP

+

α-D-glucose 1-phosphate ↔ diphosphate

+

UDP-D-glucose. This enzyme is important because UDP-D-glucose serves as a precursor for the biosynthesis of bacterial lipopolysaccharides and capsular polysaccharides. It is also possible that the
galF product interacts with the product of
galU, thus elevating UDP-D-glucose concentration in the cell and providing more material for the synthesis of capsular polysaccharides [
11]. In fact, a
galU homolog found in Kp13 outside the
cps region (KP04702) shows 94% identity (BLASTP) to GalU from
Shigella flexneri [Swiss-Prot:P0AEP6]. Immediately downstream of the
rmlBADC operon, the gene
ugd is found (Figure

). It encodes a UDP-glucose 6-dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.22). As depicted in Figure

, this enzyme converts UDP-D-glucose to UDP-D-glucuronate, a common constituent of bacterial capsules [
7]. As with other sequences located in the 3’ region of the
cpsKp13 gene cluster, this coding sequence exhibits remarkable amino acid conservation. It is 100% identical to Ugd from
K. pneumoniae strains NK8 [GenBank:BAI43716] and VGH404 serotype K5 [GenBank:BAI43755] (Table

), both studied by Shu et al. [
15]. Uge catalyzes the conversion of UDP-D-glucuronate to UDP-D-galacturonate (Figure

), which is also present in both bacterial capsules and LPS. In fact, Kp13 has two copies of this gene,
uge-1 (KP03793) and
uge-2 (KP03786). A NAD-dependent epimerase domain (Pfam accession no. PF01370) is predicted to occupy amino acids 4 to 230 in both Uge sequences. Two copies of
uge are also found in the genome of
K. pneumoniae subsp.
rhinoscleromatis (which produces a K3 capsule), one in the
cps cluster and an inverted adjacent copy in the cluster for LPS synthesis [
16]. As the K3 CPS contains D-galacturonate in its composition,
uge was considered the last gene of its
cps cluster [
16] instead of
ugd as usually regarded [
15,
17]. In Kp13
uge-1 should also be considered within the
cps since the genes necessary to the flippase and polymerase activities,
wzx and
wzy respectively, are located downstream (Figure

); therefore, D-galacturonate could also form the Kp13 CPS composition. The effects of a
uge null mutation on colonization and virulence were studied in
K. pneumoniae 52145, which is a highly virulent strain able to colonize different surfaces [
18]. A
uge deletion reduced colonization and rendered the strain completely avirulent in an experimental model of pneumonia [
18]. This suggests that the
uge-1 and/or
uge-2 mutation in Kp13 could have important, measurable effects on colonization and virulence.
In the
cpsKp13 cluster, genes encoding enzymes that participate on the synthesis of dTDP-L-rhamnose from glucose 1-phosphate are found immediately downstream of the
gnd gene (Figure

). The
rmlBADC genes were found in three capsular serotypes studied by Shu et al. [
15]: K9, K14 and K52. In serotypes K9 and K52, these genes are also found downstream of
gnd. The lengths of the products encoded by
rmlA,
rmlB,
rmlC and
rmlD are shown in Table

, along with the best BLAST hits for these genes. The gene
rmlA codes for a glucose-1-phosphate thymidylyltransferase (EC 2.7.7.24), which catalyzes the first reaction of L-rhamnose synthesis: dTTP

+

α-D-glucose 1-phosphate

→

diphosphate

+

dTDP-D-glucose (Figure

). The second reaction is performed by dTDP-D-glucose 4,6-dehydratase (EC 4.2.1.46, Figure

), the product of
rmlB, which catalyzes the dehydration of dTDP-D-glucose to dTDP-4-keto 6-deoxy-D-glucose. Epimerization at the C3’ and C5’ positions of this molecule is performed by dTDP-4-dehydrorhamnose 3,5-epimerase (
rmlC, EC 5.1.3.13, Figure

), producing dTDP-4-oxo-L-rhamnose. Finally, dTDP-4-dehydrorhamnose reductase (EC 1.1.1.133, Figure

), encoded by
rmlD, catalyzes the reduction of dTDP-4-oxo-L-rhamnose to dTDP-L-rhamnose, which can be subsequently linked to the capsular polymer by a specific rhamnosyltransferase. All three conserved regions (the Y-X
3-K loop, the Wierenga motif G-X
2-G-X
2-G and the STDYVF sequence) discussed by Giraud and Naismith [
19] are present in Kp13’s RmlD.
Whereas the chemical composition of the Kp13 capsule remains to be determined, the pyrosequencing-based genomic analysis of
cpsKp13 allowed the identification of sugar metabolic pathways. Genes encoding enzymes for the biosynthesis of sugar nucleotide precursors in the Kp13 capsule, such as UDP-D-glucose, UDP-D-glucuronate, UDP-D-galacturonate and dTDP-L-rhamnose, are found in the
cps cluster. Thus, the capsule of Kp13 may contain any of these sugar nucleotide precursors. In particular, the presence of two genes in the
cps cluster encoding possible rhamnosyltransferases suggests that L-rhamnose makes up part of the Kp13 capsule (see discussion below). On the other hand,
galE (KP02995) was identified outside the
cps region, and it encodes a UDP-glucose 4-epimerase with roles in the amino sugar and nucleotide sugar pathways producing UDP-D-galactose from UDP-D-glucose (Figure

). The presence of this gene suggests that the capsule composition of Kp13 could also include UDP-D-galactose derivatives. Neither the
manA,
manB and
manC genes of the
cps cluster nor other genes of the mannose and fucose biosynthesis pathways were identified in the Kp13 genome. This suggests that the CPS of Kp13 does not contain GDP-D-mannose or GDP-L-fucose derivatives.