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1.
Saccharomyces yeasts ferment several alpha-glucosides including maltose, maltotriose, turanose, alpha-methylglucoside, and melezitose. In the utilization of these sugars transport is the rate-limiting step. Several groups of investigators have described the characteristics of the maltose permease (D. E. Kroon and V. V. Koningsberger, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 204:590-609, 1970; R. Serrano, Eur. J. Biochem. 80:97-102, 1977). However, Saccharomyces contains multiple alpha-glucoside transport systems, and these studies have never been performed on a genetically defined strain shown to have only a single permease gene. In this study we isolated maltose-negative mutants in a MAL6 strain and, using a high-resolution mapping technique, we showed that one class of these mutants, the group A mutants, mapped to the MAL61 gene (a member of the MAL6 gene complex). An insertion into the N-terminal-coding region of MAL61 resulted in the constitutive production of MAL61 mRNA and rendered the maltose permease similarly constitutive. Transformation by high-copy-number plasmids containing the MAL61 gene also led to an increase in the maltose permease. A deletion-disruption of MAL61 completely abolished maltose transport activity. Taken together, these results prove that this strain has only a single maltose permease and that this permease is the product of the MAL61 gene. This permease is able to transport maltose and turanose but cannot transport maltotriose, alpha-methylglucoside, or melezitose. The construction of strains with only a single permease will allow us to identify other maltose-inducible transport systems by simple genetic tests and should lead to the identification and characterization of the multiple genes and gene products involved in alpha-glucoside transport in Saccharomyces yeasts.  相似文献   

2.
Fermentation of alpha-glucosides (maltose, maltotriose) by Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells is a critical phase in the processes of brewing and breadmaking. Utilization of alpha-glucosides requires the active transport of the sugar across the cell membrane and, subsequently, its hydrolysis by cytoplasmic glucosidases. Although transport activities are usually assayed using radiolabeled substrates, we have developed a simple, cheap and reliable colorimetric assay for the determination of alpha-glucoside uptake using p-nitrophenyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside (pNPalphaG) as substrate. Our results show that pNPalphaG is actively transported by S. cerevisiae cells by a H+-symport mechanism, which depends on the electrochemical proton gradient across the plasma membrane. pNPalphaG uptake is mediated by the AGT1 alpha-glucoside permease, which has a high affinity (Km=3 mM) for this chromogenic substrate. This simple colorimetric uptake assay can be used to analyze the expression and regulation of the AGT1 permease in S. cerevisiae cells.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Summary Maltotriose transport was studied in two brewer's yeast strains, an ale strain 3001 and a lager strain 3021, using laboratory-synthesized14C-maltotriose. The maltotriose transport systems preferred a lower pH (pH 4.3) to a higher pH (pH 6.6). Two maltotriose transport affinity systems have been indentified. The high affinity system hasK m values of 1.3 mM for strain 3021 and 1.4 mM for strain 3001. The low affinity competitively inhibited by maltose and glucose withK i values of 58 mM and 177 mM. respectively, for strain 3021, and 55 mM and 147 mM, respectively, for strain 3001. Cells grown in maltotriose and maltose had higher maltotriose and maltose transport rates, and cells grown in glucose had lower maltortriose and maltose transport rates. Early-logarithmic phase cells transported glucose faster than either maltose or maltotriose. Cells harvested later in the growth phase had increased maltotriose and maltose transport activity. Neither strain exhibited significant differences with respect to maltose and maltotriose transport activity.  相似文献   

5.
The HpMAL2 gene of the MAL gene cluster of Hansenula polymorpha codes for a permease similar to yeast maltose and alpha-glucoside transporters. Genomic disruption of HpMAL2 resulted in an inability of cells to grow on maltose, sucrose, trehalose, maltotriose and turanose, as well as a lack of p-nitrophenyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside (PNPG) transport. PNPG uptake was competitively inhibited by all these substrates, with Ki values between 0.23 and 1.47 mM. Transport by HpMal2p was sensitive to pH and a protonophore carbonyl cyanide-m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), revealing its energization by the proton gradient over the cell membrane. Although HpMAL2 was responsible for trehalose uptake, its expression was not induced during trehalose growth. A maltase disruption mutant did not grow on maltotriose and turanose, whereas it showed normal growth on trehalose, demonstrating the dispensability of maltase for intracellular hydrolysis of trehalose. In a Genolevures clone pBB0AA011B12, the promoter region and the N-terminal fragment of the putative transactivator of MAL genes is located adjacent to HpMAL2. A reporter gene assay showed that expression from that promoter was induced by maltose and sucrose, repressed by glucose, and derepressed during glycerol and trehalose growth. Therefore, we presume that the gene encodes a functional regulator.  相似文献   

6.
Maltose and maltotriose are the major sugars in brewer's wort. Brewer's yeasts contain multiple genes for maltose transporters. It is not known which of these express functional transporters. We correlated maltose transport kinetics with the genotypes of some ale and lager yeasts. Maltose transport by two ale strains was strongly inhibited by other alpha-glucosides, suggesting the use of broad substrate specificity transporters, such as Agt1p. Maltose transport by three lager strains was weakly inhibited by other alpha-glucosides, suggesting the use of narrow substrate specificity transporters. Hybridization studies showed that all five strains contained complete MAL1, MAL2, MAL3, and MAL4 loci, except for one ale strain, which lacked a MAL2 locus. All five strains also contained both AGT1 (coding a broad specificity alpha-glucoside transporter) and MAL11 alleles. MPH genes (maltose permease homologues) were present in the lager but not in the ale strains. During growth on maltose, the lager strains expressed AGT1 at low levels and MALx1 genes at high levels, whereas the ale strains expressed AGT1 at high levels and MALx1 genes at low levels. MPHx expression was negligible in all strains. The AGT1 sequences from the ale strains encoded full-length (616 amino acid) polypeptides, but those from both sequenced lager strains encoded truncated (394 amino acid) polypeptides that are unlikely to be functional transporters. Thus, despite the apparently similar genotypes of these ale and lager strains revealed by hybridization, maltose is predominantly carried by AGT1-encoded transporters in the ale strains and by MALx1-encoded transporters in the lager strains.  相似文献   

7.
The single asparagine 322 mutant of the lactose permease was made by constructing a hybrid plasmid which contained the amino-terminal coding sequence from the wild-type permease gene and the carboxyl-terminal coding sequence from a previously characterized double mutant permease which contained an asparagine residue at position 322. Since histidine at position 322 has been postulated to be critically involved with H+ transport and the active accumulation of sugars, the ability of the Asn-322 mutant to couple H+ and sugar transport was carefully examined. Measurements of proton/lactose stoichiometries gave very similar values for the wild-type (0.78) and the Asn-322 strain (0.82). Moreover, the Asn-322 mutant was able to effectively accumulate lactose against a concentration gradient although the levels of accumulation in the Asn-322 mutant (approximately 5-7-fold) were significantly less than that of the wild-type strain (approximately 30-40-fold). Overall, these results are inconsistent with the notion that an ionizable histidine residue at position 322 is obligatorily required for H+ transport or the active accumulation of galactosides against a concentration gradient. The ability of the Asn-322 mutant to recognize a variety of sugars was compared with wild-type, Val-177, and Val-177/Asn-322 strains. The Asn-322 mutant exhibited an ability to recognize and transport maltose (an alpha-glucoside) which was significantly better than the wild-type strain but not as good as either the single Val-177 mutant or the double Val-177/Asn-322 mutant. Both the Asn-322 and the Val-177/Asn-322 strain showed a relatively poor recognition for alpha-galactosides (i.e. melibiose), beta-galactosides (lactose and thiodigalactoside), and beta-glucosides (cellobiose). In contrast, the single Val-177 strain exhibited a normal recognition for these sugars.  相似文献   

8.
W Klein  W Boos 《Journal of bacteriology》1993,175(6):1682-1686
Trehalose transport in Escherichia coli after growth at low osmolarity is mediated by enzyme IITre of the phosphotransferase system (W. Boos, U. Ehmann, H. Forkl, W. Klein, M. Rimmele, and P. Postma, J. Bacteriol. 172:3450-3461, 1990). The apparent Km (16 microM) of trehalose uptake is low. Since trehalose is a good source of carbon and the apparent affinity of the uptake system is high, it was surprising that the disaccharide trehalose [O-alpha-D-glucosyl(1-1)-alpha-D-glucoside] has no problems diffusing through the outer membrane at high enough rates to allow full growth, particularly at low substrate concentrations. Here we show that induction of the maltose regulon is required for efficient utilization of trehalose. malT mutants that lack expression of all maltose genes, as well as lamB mutants that lack only the lambda receptor (maltoporin), still grow on trehalose at the usual high (10 mM) trehalose concentrations in agar plates, but they exhibit the half-maximal rate of trehalose uptake at concentrations that are 50-fold higher than in the wild-type (malT+) strain. The maltose system is induced by trehalose to about 30% of the fully induced level reached when grown in the presence of maltose in a malT+ strain or when grown on glycerol in a maltose-constitutive strain [malT(Con)]. The 30% level of maximal expression is sufficient for maximal trehalose utilization, since there is no difference in the concentration of trehalose required for the half-maximal rate of uptake in trehalose-grown strains with the wild-type gene (malT+) or with strains constitutive for the maltose system [malT(Con)]. In contrast, when the expression of the lambda receptor is reduced to less than 20% of the maximal level, trehalose uptake becomes less efficient. Induction of the maltose system by trehalose requires metabolism of trehalose. Mutants lacking amylotrehalase, the key enzyme in trehalose utilization, accumulate trehalose but do not induce the maltose system.  相似文献   

9.
Maltotriose utilization by Saccharomyces cerevisiae and closely related yeasts is important to industrial processes based on starch hydrolysates, where the trisaccharide is present in significant concentrations and often is not completely consumed. We undertook an integrated study to better understand maltotriose metabolism in a mixture with glucose and maltose. Physiological data obtained for a particularly fast-growing distiller's strain (PYCC 5297) showed that, in contrast to what has been previously reported for other strains, maltotriose is essentially fermented. The respiratory quotient was, however, considerably higher for maltotriose (0.36) than for maltose (0.16) or glucose (0.11). To assess the role of transport in the sequential utilization of maltose and maltotriose, we investigated the presence of genes involved in maltotriose uptake in the type strain of Saccharomyces carlsbergensis (PYCC 4457). To this end, a previously constructed genomic library was used to identify maltotriose transporter genes by functional complementation of a strain devoid of known maltose transporters. One gene, clearly belonging to the MAL transporter family, was repeatedly isolated from the library. Sequence comparison showed that the novel gene (designated MTY1) shares 90% and 54% identity with MAL31 and AGT1, respectively. However, expression of Mty1p restores growth of the S. cerevisiae receptor strain on both maltose and maltotriose, whereas the closely related Mal31p supports growth on maltose only and Agt1p supports growth on a wider range of substrates, including maltose and maltotriose. Interestingly, Mty1p displays higher affinity for maltotriose than for maltose, a new feature among all the alpha-glucoside transporters described so far.  相似文献   

10.
Alpha-glucosidase III, which was different in substrate specificity from honeybee alpha-glucosidases I and II, was purified as an electrophoretically homogeneous protein from honeybees, by salting-out chromatography, DEAE-cellulose, DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B, Bio-Gel P-150, and CM-Toyopearl 650M column chromatographies. The enzyme preparation was confirmed to be a monomeric protein and a glycoprotein containing about 7.4% of carbohydrate. The molecular weight was estimated to approximately 68,000, and the optimum pH was 5.5. The substrate specificity of alpha-glucosidase III was kinetically investigated. The enzyme did not show unusual kinetics, such as the allosteric behaviors observed in alpha-glucosidases I and II, which are monomeric proteins. The enzyme was characterized by the ability to rapidly hydrolyze sucrose, phenyl alpha-glucoside, maltose, and maltotriose, and by extremely high Km for substrates, compared with those of alpha-glucosidases I and II. Especially, maltotriose was hydrolyzed over 3 times as rapidly as maltose. However, maltooligosaccharides of four or more in the degree of polymerization were slowly degraded. The relative rates of the k0 values for maltose, sucrose, p-nitrophenyl alpha-glucoside and maltotriose were estimated to be 100, 527, 281 and 364, and the Km values for these substrates, 11, 30, 13, and 10 mM, respectively. The subsite affinities (Ai's) in the active site were tentatively evaluated from the rate parameters for maltooligosaccharides. In this enzyme, it was peculiar that the Ai value at subsite 3 was larger than that of subsite 1.  相似文献   

11.
The hyperthermophilic marine archaeon Thermococcus litoralis exhibits high-affinity transport activity for maltose and trehalose at 85 degrees C. The K(m) for maltose transport was 22 nM, and that for trehalose was 17 nM. In cells that had been grown on peptone plus yeast extract, the Vmax for maltose uptake ranged from 3.2 to 7.5 nmol/min/mg of protein in different cell cultures. Cells grown in peptone without yeast extract did not show significant maltose or trehalose uptake. We found that the compound in yeast extract responsible for the induction of the maltose and trehalose transport system was trehalose. [14C]maltose uptake at 100 nM was not significantly inhibited by glucose, sucrose, or maltotriose at a 100 microM concentration but was completely inhibited by trehalose and maltose. The inhibitor constant, Ki, of trehalose for inhibiting maltose uptake was 21 nM. In contrast, the ability of maltose to inhibit the uptake of trehalose was not equally strong. With 20 nM [14C]trehalose as the substrate, a 10-fold excess of maltose was necessary to inhibit uptake to 50%. However, full inhibition was observed at 2 microM maltose. The detergent-solubilized membranes of trehalose-induced cells contained a high-affinity binding protein for maltose and trehalose, with an M(r) of 48,000, that exhibited the same substrate specificity as the transport system found in whole cells. We conclude that maltose and trehalose are transported by the same high-affinity membrane-associated system. This represents the first report on sugar transport in any hyperthermophilic archaeon.  相似文献   

12.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, glucose activation of cAMP synthesis requires both the presence of the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) system, Gpr1-Gpa2, and uptake and phosphorylation of the sugar. In a hxt-null strain that lacks all physiologically important glucose carriers, glucose transport as well as glucose-induced cAMP signalling can be restored by constitutive expression of the galactose permease. Hence, the glucose transporters do not seem to have a regulatory function but are only required for glucose uptake. We established a system in which the GPCR-dependent glucose-sensing process is separated from the glucose phosphorylation process. It is based on the specific transport and hydrolysis of maltose providing intracellular glucose in the absence of glucose transport. Preaddition of a low concentration (0.7 mM) of maltose to derepressed hxt-null cells and subsequent addition of glucose restored the glucose-induced cAMP signalling, although there was no glucose uptake. Addition of a low concentration of maltose itself does not increase the cAMP level but enhances Glu6P and apparently fulfils the intracellular glucose phosphorylation requirement for activation of the cAMP pathway by extracellular glucose. This system enabled us to analyse the affinity and specificity of the GPCR system for fermentable sugars. Gpr1 displayed a very low affinity for glucose (apparent Ka = 75 mM) and responded specifically to extracellular alpha and beta D-glucose and sucrose, but not to fructose, mannose or any glucose analogues tested. The presence of the constitutively active Gpa2val132 allele in a wild-type strain bypassed the requirement for Gpr1 and increased the low cAMP signal induced by fructose and by low glucose up to the same intensity as the high glucose signal. Therefore, the low cAMP increases observed with fructose and low glucose in wild-type cells result only from the low sensitivity of the Gpr1-Gpa2 system and not from the intracellular sugar kinase-dependent process. In conclusion, we have shown that the two essential requirements for glucose-induced activation of cAMP synthesis can be fulfilled separately: an extracellular glucose detection process dependent on Gpr1 and an intracellular sugar-sensing process requiring the hexose kinases.  相似文献   

13.
The REG1 gene encodes a regulatory subunit of the type-1 protein phosphatase (PP1) Glc7 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which directs the catalytic subunit to substrates involved in glucose repression. Loss of REG1 relieves glucose repression of many genes, including the MAL structural genes that encode the maltose fermentation enzymes. In this report, we explore the role of Reg1p and its homolog Reg2p in glucose-induced inactivation of maltose permease. Glucose stimulates the proteolysis of maltose permease and very rapid loss of maltose transport activity – more rapid than can be explained by loss of the permease protein alone. In a reg1Δ strain we observe a significantly reduced rate of glucose-induced proteolysis of maltose permease, and the rapid loss of maltose transport activity does not occur. Instead, surprisingly, the slow rate of proteolysis of maltose permease is accompanied by an increase in maltose transport activity. Loss of Reg2p modestly reduces the rates of both glucose-induced proteolysis of maltose permease and inactivation of maltose transport activity. Overexpression of Reg2p in a reg1Δ strain suppresses the effect on maltose permease proteolysis and partially restores the inactivation of maltose transport activity, but does not affect the insensitivity of MAL gene expression to repression by glucose observed in this strain. Thus, protein phosphatase type-1 (Glc7p-Reg1p and Glc7p-Reg2p) plays a role in transduction of the glucose signal during glucose-induced proteolysis of maltose permease, but only Glc7p-Reg1p is involved in glucose-induced inactivation of maltose transport activity and glucose repression of MAL gene expression. Overexpression of REG1 partially restores proteolysis of maltose permease in a grr1Δ strain, which lacks glucose signaling, but does not rescue rapid inactivation of maltose transport activity or sensitivity to glucose repression. A model for the role of Reg1p and Reg2p in glucose signaling pathways is discussed. We also uncovered a previously unrecognized G2/M delay in the grr1Δ but not the reg1Δ strains, and this delay is suppressed by REG1 overexpression. The G1/S delay seen in grr1Δ mutants is slightly suppressed as well, but REG1 overexpression does not suppress other grr1Δ phenotypes such as insensitivity to glucose repression. Received: 21 October 1999 / Accepted: 28 December 1999  相似文献   

14.
Two alpha-glucosidase encoding genes (aglA and aglB) from Bifidobacterium adolescentis DSM 20083 were isolated and characterized. Both alpha-glucosidases belong to family 13 of the glycosyl hydrolases. Recombinant AglA (EC 3.2.1.10) and AglB (EC 3.2.1.20), expressed in Escherichia coli, showed high hydrolytic activity towards isomaltose and pnp-alpha-glucoside. The K(m) for pnp-alpha-glucoside was 1.05 and 0.47 mM and the V(max) was 228 and 113 U mg(-1) for AglA and AglB, respectively. Using pnp-alpha-glucoside as substrate, the pH optimum for AglA was 6.6 and the temperature optimum was 37 degrees C. For AglB, values of pH 6.8 and 47 degrees C were found. AglA also showed high hydrolytic activity towards isomaltotriose and, to a lesser extent, towards trehalose. AglB has a high preference for maltose and less activity towards sucrose; minor activity was observed towards melizitose, low molecular weight dextrin, maltitol, and maltotriose. The recombinant alpha-glucosidases were tested for their transglucosylation activity. AglA was able to synthesize oligosaccharides from trehalose and sucrose. AglB formed oligosaccharides from sucrose, maltose, and melizitose.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
A study has been made in everted sacs of guinea pig jejunum to see if the two transport systems of glucose analogues characterized at the brush border membrane vesicles are operative. The transport kinetics of D-galactose and alpha-methylglucoside up to 80 mM concentrations has been studied, as well as the mutual inhibitions between them at low and high concentrations of the substrate and at different concentrations of the inhibitor. Low temperature (20 degrees C) inhibits galactose transport at 0.1 mM (70%) and 40 mM (78%) concentrations. A mass transfer coefficient, KD, somewhat higher for galactose than for alpha-methylglucoside, was obtained when the transport component was abolished by phlorizin. The transport of D-galactose and alpha-methylglucoside seemed to be compatible with the function of one system shared by both substrates, which presents greater affinity for alpha-methylglucoside. The functional existence of two systems of active transport at the brush border of guinea pig was not evidenced in intestinal preparations of whole tissue, due perhaps to the effect of the unstirred water layers. However, differences in KD values and some results of the mutual inhibitions may suggest a second system.  相似文献   

18.
Maltotriose, the second most abundant sugar of brewer's wort, is not fermented but is respired by several industrial yeast strains. We have isolated a strain capable of growing on a medium containing maltotriose and the respiratory inhibitor, antimycin A. This strain produced equivalent amounts of ethanol from 20 g l−1 glucose, maltose, or maltotriose. We performed a detailed analysis of the rates of active transport and intracellular hydrolysis of maltotriose by this strain, and by a strain that does not ferment this sugar. The kinetics of sugar hydrolysis by both strains was similar, and our results also indicated that yeast cells do not synthesize a maltotriose-specific α-glucosidase. However, when considering active sugar transport, a different pattern was observed. The maltotriose-fermenting strain showed the same rate of active maltose or maltotriose transport, while the strain that could not ferment maltotriose showed a lower rate of maltotriose transport when compared with the rates of active maltose transport. Thus, our results revealed that transport across the plasma membrane, and not intracellular hydrolysis, is the rate-limiting step for the fermentation of maltotriose by these Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells. Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology (2001) 27, 34–38. Received 13 January 2001/ Accepted in revised form 29 May 2001  相似文献   

19.
The purpose of this study was to examine the sugar recognition and transport properties of the sucrose permease (CscB), a secondary active transporter from Escherichia coli. We tested the hypothesis that maltose transport is conferred by the wild-type CscB transporter. Cells of E. coli HS4006 harboring pSP72/cscB were red on maltose MacConkey agar indicator plates. We were able to measure “downhill” maltose transport and establish definitive kinetic behavior for maltose entry in such cells. Maltose was an effective competitor of sucrose transport in cells with CscB, suggesting that the respective maltose and sucrose binding sites and translocation pathways through the CscB channel overlap. Accumulation (“uphill” transport) of maltose by cells with CscB was profound, demonstrating active transport of maltose by CscB. Sequencing of cscB encoded on plasmid pSP72/cscB used in cells for transport studies indicate an unaltered primary CscB structure, ruling out the possibility that mutation conferred maltose transport by CscB. We conclude that maltose is a bona fide substrate for the sucrose permease of E. coli. Thus, future studies of sugar binding, transport, and permease structure should consider maltose, as well as sucrose. Yang Peng and Sanath Kumar contributed equally to this paper.  相似文献   

20.
Zhao M  Kálai T  Hideg K  Altenbach C  Hubbell WL  Kaback HR 《Biochemistry》2000,39(37):11381-11388
A series of nitroxide spin-labeled alpha- or beta-galactopyranosides and a nitroxide spin-labeled beta-glucopyranoside have been synthesized and examined for binding to the lactose permease of Escherichia coli. Out of the twelve nitroxide spin-labeled galactopyranosides synthesized, 1-oxyl-2, 5, 5-trimethyl-2-[3-nitro-4-N-(hexyl-1-thio-beta-D-galactopyranosid-1 -yl )]aminophenyl pyrrolidine (NN) exhibits the highest affinity for the permease based on the following observations: (a) the analogue inhibits lactose transport with a K(I) about 7 microM; (b) NN blocks labeling of single-Cys148 permease with 2-(4'-maleimidylanilino) naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid (MIANS) with an apparent affinity of about 12 microM; (c) electron paramagnetic resonance demonstrates binding of the spin-labeled sugar by purified wild-type permease in a manner that is reversed by nonspin-labeled ligand. The equilibrium dissociation constant (K(D)) is about 23 microM and binding stoichiometry is approximately unity. In contrast, the nitroxide spin-labeled glucopyranoside does not inhibit active lactose transport or labeling of single-Cys148 permease with MIANS. It is concluded that NN binds specifically to lac permease with an affinity in the low micromolar range. Furthermore, affinity of the permease for the spin-labeled galactopyranosides is directly related to the length, hydrophobicity, and geometry of the linker between the galactoside and the nitroxide spin-label.  相似文献   

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