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1.
Uncoupled enzyme IIGlc of the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP): glucose phosphotransferase system (PTS) in Salmonella typhimurium is able to catalyze glucose transport in the absence of PEP-dependent phosphorylation. We have studied the energetics of glucose uptake catalyzed by this uncoupled enzyme IIGlc. The molar growth yields on glucose of two strains cultured anaerobically in glucose-limited chemostat-and batch cultures were compared. Strain PP 799 transported and phosphorylated glucose via an intact PTS, while strain PP 952 took up glucose exclusively via uncoupled enzyme IIGlc, followed by ATP-dependent phosphorylation by glucokinase. Thus the strains were isogenic except for the mode of uptake and phosphorylation of the growth substrate. PP 799 and PP 952 exhibited similar Y Glc values. Assuming equal Y ATP values for both strains this result indicated that there were no energetic demands for glucose uptake via uncoupled enzyme IIGlc.Abbreviations PTS phosphoenolpyruvate: carbohydrate phosphotransferase system - HPr histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein - GalP galactose permease  相似文献   

2.
InEnterobacteriaceae the nonphosphorylated form of IIAG1c of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system (PTS) can inhibit the uptake and subsequent metabolism of glycerol and maltose by binding to, and inhibiting, glycerol kinase and the Ma1K protein of the maltose transport system, respectively. In this report we show that the IIAGlc-Iike domain of the membrane-bound IIN-acetylglucosamine (IINag) of the PTS can replace IIAGlc in aSalmonella typhimurium crr mutant strain that lacks all soluble IIAGlc. The inhibition was most severe in cells which were partially induced for the glycerol or maltose up take systems. TheStreptococcus thermophilus lactose transporter LacS, which also contains a IIAGlc-like domain, could not replace IIAGlc. Neither IINag nor LacS could replace IIAGlc in activation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent sugar transport system (PTS) is present in a large variety of bacteria. It catalyzes transport and phosphorylation of hexoses and hexitols at the expense of phosphoenolpyruvate. Only three of four enzymes are required for this entire sequence. Each component has been isolated and purified to the homogeneity from one bacterial species or another allowing recent investigations intomechanistic aspects of energy coupling, energy conservation, transport and regulation using well-characterized enzymes. In each case the phosphorylation of the enzyme is a key element in that enzymes function.The initial step in the energy conversion process is the EI catalyzed conversion of phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate and P-HPr. EII is a metal requiring hydrophobic enzyme which is active only as a dimer. Kinetic and gel filtration data confirm that it forms functional ternary complexes with HPr or P-Hpr and phosphoenolpyruvate or pyruvate which influence both the degree of dimerization and the specific activity of the dimer. The dimer appears to carry only one phosphoryl group suggesting that negative cooperativity or a flip-flop mechanism may be involved in the sequence of phosphoryl group transfer.Many of the PTS phosphoenzyme intermediates carry the phosphoryl group as a phospho-histidine. A general mechanism for the transfer of the phosphoryl group to and from the active site histidine residue in each protein has been established with high resolution 1H NMR data. At physiological pH the active site histidine is deprotonated, whereas the phosphohistidine is protonated. Consequently the histidine, as a strong nucleophile, can abstract the phosphoryl group from the donor while protonation destabilizes the phosphohistidine facilitating passage of the phosphoryl group to the following enzyme intermediate. The change in protonation state accompanies a phosphorylation induced conformational change in the carrier.The ability of the PTS to regulate the activity of other permeases and catabolic enzymes has been attributed to EIII Glc. Data obtained with mutants suggest that changes in the phosphorylation state alter the regulatory properties of the enzyme. The nonphosphorylated species blocks various permeases and suppresses adenylate cyclase activity thereby inhibiting the synthesis of catabolic enzyme systems. The phosphorylated species stimulates adenylate cyclase and permits the uptake of inducers leading to the initiation of catabolic enzyme synthesis. Experiments with the isolated EIII Glc confirm that a phosphoenzyme intermediate exists.Transport and phosphorylation of the sugar are catalyzed by a membrane-bound EII via a phosphoenzyme intermediate which can be reached from P-HPr, P-EIII or sugar-P. The phosphorylation state controls the affinity of the enzyme for its substrates. EII is high affinity for P-HPr or P-EIII and low affinity for sugar. P-EII is high affinity for sugar and low affinity for P-HPr or P-EIII. The affinity of the enzyme for sugar substrates is controlled by the oxidation state of a dithiol. The reduced, dithiol form is high affinity for sugar substrates. The oxidized, disulfide form, is low affinity. Phosphorylation of the enzyme chould shift the affinity for substrates by altering the oxidation state of the enzyme.  相似文献   

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In most streptococci, glucose is transported by the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP):glucose/mannose phosphotransferase system (PTS) via HPr and IIABMan, two proteins involved in regulatory mechanisms. While most strains of Streptococcus thermophilus do not or poorly metabolize glucose, compelling evidence suggests that S. thermophilus possesses the genes that encode the glucose/mannose general and specific PTS proteins. The purposes of this study were to determine (i) whether these PTS genes are expressed, (ii) whether the PTS proteins encoded by these genes are able to transfer a phosphate group from PEP to glucose/mannose PTS substrates, and (iii) whether these proteins catalyze sugar transport. The pts operon is made up of the genes encoding HPr (ptsH) and enzyme I (EI) (ptsI), which are transcribed into a 0.6-kb ptsH mRNA and a 2.3-kb ptsHI mRNA. The specific glucose/mannose PTS proteins, IIABMan, IICMan, IIDMan, and the ManO protein, are encoded by manL, manM, manN, and manO, respectively, which make up the man operon. The man operon is transcribed into a single 3.5-kb mRNA. To assess the phosphotransfer competence of these PTS proteins, in vitro PEP-dependent phosphorylation experiments were conducted with purified HPr, EI, and IIABMan as well as membrane fragments containing IICMan and IIDMan. These PTS components efficiently transferred a phosphate group from PEP to glucose, mannose, 2-deoxyglucose, and (to a lesser extent) fructose, which are common streptococcal glucose/mannose PTS substrates. Whole cells were unable to catalyze the uptake of mannose and 2-deoxyglucose, demonstrating the inability of the S. thermophilus PTS proteins to operate as a proficient transport system. This inability to transport mannose and 2-deoxyglucose may be due to a defective IIC domain. We propose that in S. thermophilus, the general and specific glucose/mannose PTS proteins are not involved in glucose transport but might have regulatory functions associated with the phosphotransfer properties of HPr and IIABMan.  相似文献   

7.
Our research group is studying the phosphotransferase system (PTS) of Streptomyces coelicolor, which, in other bacteria, is centrally involved in carbon source uptake and regulation. We have surveyed the public available S. coelicolor genome sequence produced by the ongoing genome sequencing project for pts gene homologues (http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Projects/S_coelicolor/). Three genes encoding homologues of the general PTS components enzyme I (ptsI), HPr (ptsH), and enzyme IIACrr (crr; IIAGlc-homologue) and six genes encoding homologues of sugar-specific PTS components were identified. The deduced primary sequences of the sugar-specific components shared significant similarities to PTS permeases of the mannitol/fructose family and of the glucose/sucrose family. A model is presented, in which possible functions of the novel described PTS homologues are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
InEnterobacteriaceae the nonphosphorylated form of IIAG1c of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system (PTS) can inhibit the uptake and subsequent metabolism of glycerol and maltose by binding to, and inhibiting, glycerol kinase and the Ma1K protein of the maltose transport system, respectively. In this report we show that the IIAGlc-Iike domain of the membrane-bound IIN-acetylglucosamine (IINag) of the PTS can replace IIAGlc in aSalmonella typhimurium crr mutant strain that lacks all soluble IIAGlc. The inhibition was most severe in cells which were partially induced for the glycerol or maltose up take systems. TheStreptococcus thermophilus lactose transporter LacS, which also contains a IIAGlc-like domain, could not replace IIAGlc. Neither IINag nor LacS could replace IIAGlc in activation of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

9.
Summary In Escherichia coli K12, eight substrate-specific, membrane-bound enzymes II of the PEP-dependent carbohydrate: phosphotransferase system (PTS), specific for hexoses, hexosamines and hexitols, have been characterised in a series of isogenic and constitutive strains. In such mutants, lacking all but one enzyme II, the transport and vectorial phosphorylation activities as well as the chemotactical response in capillary tube assays have been compared. According to the data obtained, all enzymes II not only are directly involved in the transport and vectorial phosphorylation of their substrates, but they have also a primary role as the chemoreceptors for these substrates: (1) Metabolism of the attractant beyond the phosphorylation step is not a pre-requisite to eliciting positive chemotaxis. (2) Mutants, having only one enzyme II react in the capillary tube assay only to substrates of this enzyme II, but not to substrates of the missing enzymes II. This holds for enzymes II consisting of one membrane-bound protein as well as for systems containing a soluble factor III (FIII). (3) The substrate specificities or affinities, whether tested by transport and chemotaxis assays in vivo or by phosphorylation tests in vitro, are in correpondence. (4) The activities of enzymes II, regulated in a complex way at the level of enzyme synthesis and activity and tested as above, are also in agreement. (5) Mutants lacking the soluble proteins enzyme I or HPr of the PTS no longer respond chemotactically to any substrate taken up and phosphorylated by enzymes II. It is concluded that in PTS enzymes II some functions required for transport and chemotaxis are identical. It is suggested furthermore, that the alternation of intrinsic membrane-bound proteins between a phosphorylated and a dephosphorylated state, rather than binding of the substrate to the enzyme II, is the decisive stimulus in the chemotaxis toward carbohydrates taken up by these transport systems.  相似文献   

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The mannitol transporter enzyme IIMtl of the bacterial phosphotransferase system is a multi‐domain protein that catalyzes mannitol uptake and phosphorylation. Here we investigated the domain association between cytosolic A and B domains of enzyme IIMtl, which are natively connected in Escherichia coli, but separated in Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis. NMR backbone assignment and residual dipolar couplings indicated that backbone folds were well conserved between the homologous domains. The equilibrium binding of separately expressed domains, however, exhibited ~28‐fold higher affinity compared to the natively linked ones. Phosphorylation of the active site loop significantly contributed to the binding by reducing conformational dynamics at the binding interface, and a few key mutations at the interface were critical to further stabilize the complex by hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interactions. The affinity increase implicated that domain associations in cell could be maintained at an optimal level regardless of the linker.  相似文献   

12.
Kim YJ  Ryu Y  Koo BM  Lee NY  Chun SJ  Park SJ  Lee KH  Seok YJ 《FEBS letters》2010,584(22):4537-4544
Vibrio vulnificus is an opportunistic human pathogen that causes severe infections in susceptible individuals. While the components of the Escherichia coli phosphoenolpyruvate: sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) have been shown to regulate numerous targets, little such information is available for the V. vulnificus PTS. Here we show that enzyme IIAGlc of the PTS regulates the peptidase activity of a mammalian insulysin homolog in V. vulnificus. While interaction of IIAGlc with the insulysin homolog is independent of the phosphorylation state of IIAGlc, only unphosphorylated IIAGlc activates the insulysin homolog. Taken together, our results suggest that the V. vulnificus insulysin-IIAGlc complex plays a role in survival in the host by sensing glucose.

Structured summary

MINT-8045996: IIA glu (uniprotkb:Q7MBY2) binds (MI:0407) to vIDE (uniprotkb:Q7MIS6) by pull down (MI:0096)MINT-8045817, MINT-8045967: IIA glu (uniprotkb:Q7MBY2) physically interacts (MI:0915) with vIDE (uniprotkb:Q7MIS6) by pull down (MI:0096)  相似文献   

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Glucose is a universal energy source and a potent inducer of surface colonization for many microbial species. Highly efficient sugar assimilation pathways ensure successful competition for this preferred carbon source. One such pathway is the phosphoenolpyruvate phosphotransferase system (PTS), a multicomponent sugar transport system that phosphorylates the sugar as it enters the cell. Components required for transport of glucose through the PTS include enzyme I, histidine protein, enzyme IIAGlc, and enzyme IIBCGlc. In Escherichia coli, components of the PTS fulfill many regulatory roles, including regulation of nutrient scavenging and catabolism, chemotaxis, glycogen utilization, catabolite repression, and inducer exclusion. We previously observed that genes encoding the components of the Vibrio cholerae PTS were coregulated with the vps genes, which are required for synthesis of the biofilm matrix exopolysaccharide. In this work, we identify the PTS components required for transport of glucose and investigate the role of each of these components in regulation of biofilm formation. Our results establish a novel role for the phosphorylated form of enzyme I in specific regulation of biofilm-associated growth. As the PTS is highly conserved among bacteria, the enzyme I regulatory pathway may be relevant to a number of biofilm-based infections.  相似文献   

15.
The bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent carbohydrate phosphotransferase system (PTS) consists of several proteins whose primary functions are to transport and phosphorylate their substrates. The complexity of the PTS undoubtedly reflects its additional roles in chemotaxis to PTS substrates and in regulation of other metabolic processes in the cell. The PTS permeases (Enzymes II) are the membrane-associated proteins of the PTS that sequentially recognize, transport, and phosphorylate their specific substrates in separate steps, and theEscherichia coli mannitol permease is one of the best studied of these proteins. It consists of two cytoplasmic domains (EIIA and EIIB) involved in mannitol phosphorylation and an integral membrane domain (EIIC) which is sufficient to bind mannitol, but which transports mannitol at a rate that is dependent on phosphorylation of the EIIA and EIIB domains. Recent results show that several residues in a hydrophilic, 85-residue segment of the EIIC domain are important for the binding, transport, and phosphorylation of mannitol. This segment may be at least partially exposed to the cytoplasm of the cell. A model is proposed in which this region of the EIIC domain is crucial in coupling phosphorylation of the EIIB domain to transport through the EIIC domain of the mannitol permease.  相似文献   

16.
The recombinant catalytic α-subunit of N-glycan processing glucosidase II from Schizosaccharomyces pombe (SpGIIα) was produced in Escherichia coli. The recombinant SpGIIα exhibited quite low stability, with a reduction in activity to <40% after 2-days preservation at 4 °C, but the presence of 10% (v/v) glycerol prevented this loss of activity. SpGIIα, a member of the glycoside hydrolase family 31 (GH31), displayed the typical substrate specificity of GH31 α-glucosidases. The enzyme hydrolyzed not only α-(1→3)- but also α-(1→2)-, α-(1→4)-, and α-(1→6)-glucosidic linkages, and p-nitrophenyl α-glucoside. SpGIIα displayed most catalytic properties of glucosidase II. Hydrolytic activity of the terminal α-glucosidic residue of Glc2Man3-Dansyl was faster than that of Glc1Man3-Dansyl. This catalytic α-subunit also removed terminal glucose residues from native N-glycans (Glc2Man9GlcNAc2 and Glc1Man9GlcNAc2) although the activity was low.  相似文献   

17.
Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)-dependent phosphorylation experiments have indicated that the grampositive bacteriumStaphylococcus carnosus possesses an EIICBA fusion protein specific for glucose. Here we report the cloning of a 7 kb genomic DNA fragment containing two genes,glcA andglcB, coding for the glucose-specific PTS transporters EIIGlc1 and EIIGlc2 which are 69% identical. The translation products derived from the nucleotide sequence consist of 675 and 692 amino acid residues and have calculated molecular weights of 73 025 and 75 256, respectively. Both genes can be stably maintained inEscherichia coli cells and restore the ability to ferment glucose toptsG deletion mutants ofE. coli. This demonstrates the ability of the PTS proteins HPr and/or EIIAGlc of a gram-negative organism (E. coli) to phosphorylate an EIICBAGlc from a gram-positive organism (S. carnosus).  相似文献   

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20.
A P-HPr:β-glucoside phosphotransferase (enzyme IIbgl)
  • 1 The nomenclautre of the enzymes II is that suggested by Lin (1)
  • has been extracted from membranes of a β-glucoside fermenting strain of Escherichia coli K 12 using the nonionic detergent Triton X–100. The extracted enzyme was rendered virtually free of both lipid and detergent by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. At this stage, the partially purified enzyme had negligible activity, but activity was restored effectively by the addition of (1) nonionic detergents of the Tween or Triton series and (2) crude E. coli phospholipids or an anionic lipid enriched fraction, but not phosphatidylethanolamine. Detergent activators were most effective at or near the critical micelle concentration, but were inhibitory when added at concentrations above the critical micelle concentration. In order to obtain maximal initial rates of phosphotransferase activity, it was necessary to incubate the extracted, partially purified enzyme with detergent activator and HPr prior to the addition of the other assay system components. High detergent concentration inhibited the initial rate of phosphorylation by interfering with an essential step (or steps) that occur during this preliminary incubation. The activation occuring during the preliminary incubation was also highly temperature dependent; a precipitous decrease in activation was detected below 16° when Tween 40 was employed as the detergent activator. Phosphorylation mediated by the membrane associated form of the phosphotransferase was not influenced by the physical state of the lipid components of the membrane. This is in marked contrast to the properties of the phosphorylation reaction mediated by the phosphotransferase in intact cells.  相似文献   

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