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1.
Arginine hydroxamate inhibits the growth of Bacillus subtilis. From a large number of mutants isolated as resistant to this arginine analogue, 29 were chosen for further investigation. Most of these shared diminished ability to utilize arginine, citrulline and/or ornithine as sole nitrogen source. All 29 had reduced levels of the catabolic enzymes arginase and ornithine aminotransferase under various conditions in which these enzymes are induced in the parent. In some circumstances, five of the mutants also showed elevated levels of the biosynthetic enzyme ornithine carbamoyltransferase. On the basis of these data, the 29 mutants were divided into six phenotypic classes; in four of these, control of ornithine carbamoyltransferase was the same as in the wild type, while in the other two it was altered. It is suggested that the isolates carry regulatory mutations, and that certain of these may affect simultaneously the formation of arginine catabolic and biosynthetic enzymes. The implication of the latter is that in B. subtilis, as in yeast, controls of the catabolic and biosynthetic pathways are connected. Single representatives of five of the phenotypic classes carry mutations conferring arginine hydroxamate resistance linked to cysA by transduction with phage PBSI; this did not appear to be true for a representative of the sixth class.  相似文献   

2.
Specific activities of arginase and ornithine aminotransferase, inducible enzymes of arginine catabolism in Bacillus subtilis 168, were examined in cells grown with various carbon and nitrogen sources. Levels of these enzymes were similar in arginine-induced cultures whether glucose or citrate was the carbon source (in contrast to histidase), suggesting that carbon source catabolite repression has only limited effect. In media with combinations of nitrogen sources, glutamine strongly repressed induction of these enzymes by proline or arginine. Ammonium, however, only repressed induction by proline and had no effect on induction by arginine. These effects correlate with generation times in media containing these substances as sole nitrogen sources: growth rates decreased in the order glutamine-arginine-ammonium-proline. Similar phenomena were observed when glutamine or ammonium were added to arginine- or proline-grown cultures, or when arginine or proline were added to glutamine- or ammonium-grown cultures. In the latter cases, an additional feature was apparent, namely a surprisingly long transition between steady-state enzyme levels. The results are compared with those for other bacteria and for eucaryotic microorganisms.  相似文献   

3.
In Pseudomonas aeruginosa arginine can be degraded by the arginine "dihydrolase" system, consisting of arginine deiminase, catabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase, and carbamate kinase. Mutants of P. aeruginosa strain PAO affected in the structural gene (arcB) of the catabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase were isolated. Firt, and argF mutation (i.e., a block in the anabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase) was suppressed specifically by a mutationally altered catabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase capable of functioning in the anabolic direction. The suppressor locus arcB (Su) was mapped by transduction between hisII and argA. Second, mutants having lost suppressor activity were obtained. The Su- mutations were very closely linked to arcB (Su) and caused strongly reduced ornithine carbamoyltransferase activities in vitro. Under aerobic conditions, a mutant (PA0630) which had less than 1% of the wild-type catabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase activity grew on arginine as the only carbon and nitrogen source, at the wild-type growth rate. When oxygen was limiting, strain PA0630 grown on arginine excreted citrulline in the stationary growth phase. These observations suggest that during aerobic growth arginine is not degraded exclusively via the dihydrolase pathway.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Repression of biosynthetic enzyme synthesis in Pseudomonas putida is incomplete even when the bacteria are growing in a nutritionally complex environment. The synthesis of four of the enzymes of the arginine biosynthetic pathway (N-acetyl-alpha-glutamokinase/N-acetylglutamate-gamma-semialdehyde dehydrogenase, ornithine carbamoyltransferase and acetylornithine-delta-transaminase) could be repressed and derepressed, but the maximum difference observed between repressed and derepressed levels for any enzyme of the pathway was only 5-fold (for ornithine carbamoyltransferase). No repression of five enzymes of the pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway (aspartate carbamoyltransferase, dihydro-orotase, dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase, orotidine-5'-phosphate pyrophosphorylase and orotidine-5'-phosphate decarboxylase) could be detected on addition of pyrimidines to minimal asparagine cultures of P. putida A90, but a 1-5- to 2-fold degree of derepression was found following pyrimidine starvation of pyrimidine auxotrophic mutants of P. putida A90. Aspartate carbamoyltransferase in crude extracts of P. putida A90 was inhibited in vitro by (in order of efficiency) pyrophosphate, CTP, UTP and ATP, at limiting but not at saturating concentrations of carbamoyl phosphate.  相似文献   

6.
Cells of the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 supplemented with micromolar concentrations of L-[(14)C]arginine took up, concentrated, and catabolized this amino acid. Metabolism of L-[(14)C]arginine generated a set of labeled amino acids that included argininosuccinate, citrulline, glutamate, glutamine, ornithine, and proline. Production of [(14)C]ornithine preceded that of [(14)C]citrulline, and the patterns of labeled amino acids were similar in cells incubated with L-[(14)C]ornithine, suggesting that the reaction of arginase, rendering ornithine and urea, is the main initial step in arginine catabolism. Ornithine followed two metabolic pathways: (i) conversion into citrulline, catalyzed by ornithine carbamoyltransferase, and then, with incorporation of aspartate, conversion into argininosuccinate, in a sort of urea cycle, and (ii) a sort of arginase pathway rendering glutamate (and glutamine) via Delta(1)pyrroline-5-carboxylate and proline. Consistently with the proposed metabolic scheme (i) an argF (ornithine carbamoyltransferase) insertional mutant was impaired in the production of [(14)C]citrulline from [(14)C]arginine; (ii) a proC (Delta(1)pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase) insertional mutant was impaired in the production of [(14)C]proline, [(14)C]glutamate, and [(14)C]glutamine from [(14)C]arginine or [(14)C]ornithine; and (iii) a putA (proline oxidase) insertional mutant did not produce [(14)C]glutamate from L-[(14)C]arginine, L-[(14)C]ornithine, or L-[(14)C]proline. Mutation of two open reading frames (sll0228 and sll1077) putatively encoding proteins homologous to arginase indicated, however, that none of these proteins was responsible for the arginase activity detected in this cyanobacterium, and mutation of argD (N-acetylornithine aminotransferase) suggested that this transaminase is not important in the production of Delta(1)pyrroline-5-carboxylate from ornithine. The metabolic pathways proposed to explain [(14)C]arginine catabolism also provide a rationale for understanding how nitrogen is made available to the cell after mobilization of cyanophycin [multi-L-arginyl-poly(L-aspartic acid)], a reserve material unique to cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

7.
The three enzymes of the arginine deiminase pathway in Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain PAO were induced strongly (50- to 100-fold) by a shift from aerobic growth conditions to very low oxygen tension. Arginine in the culture medium was not essential for induction, but increased the maximum enzyme levels twofold. The induction of the three enzymes arginine deiminase (EC 3.5.3.6), catabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase (EC 2.1.3.3), and carbamate kinase (EC 2.7.2.3) appeared to be coordinate. Catabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase was studied in most detail. Nitrate and nitrite, which can replace oxygen as terminal electron acceptors in P. aeruginosa, partially prevented enzyme induction by low oxygen tension in the wild-type strain, but not in nar (nitrate reductase-negative) mutants. Glucose was found to exert catabolite repression of the deiminase pathway. Generally, conditions of stress, such as depletion of the carbon and energy source or the phosphate source, resulted in induced synthesis of catabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase. The induction of the deiminase pathway is thought to mobilize intra- and extracellular reserves of arginine, which is used as a source of adenosine 5'-triphosphate in the absence of respiration.  相似文献   

8.
Nitrogen regulation of arginase in Neurospora crassa.   总被引:5,自引:3,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The final products of the arginine catabolism that can be utilized as a nitrogen source in Neurospora crassa are ammonium, glutamic acid, and glutamine. The effect of these compounds on arginase induction by arginine was studied. In wild-type strain 74-A, induction by arginine was almost completely repressed by glutamic acid plus ammonium, whereas ammonium or glutamic acid alone had only moderate effects. Arginine products of catabolism also repressed arginase induction. A mutant, ure-1, which lacks urease activity, hyperinduced its arginase with arginine as a nitrogen source. The addition of either ammonium or glutamine produced effects similar to those in the wild-type strain. The effect of ammonium on arginase induction is mediated through its conversion into glutamine. This was demonstrated in mutant am-1, which lacks L-glutamate dehydrogenase activity. In this mutant, the effect of glutamic acid was reduced, and, with ammonium, it was completely lost. The addition of glutamine or glutamic acid plus ammonium to this strain decreased by threefold the induction of arginase by arginine. Proline, a final product of arginine catabolism, competitively inhibited arginase activity. This effect and the repression of arginase by glutamine are examples of negative modulation of the first enzyme in a catabolic pathway by its final products.  相似文献   

9.
A mutant (nit8) with a lowered activity of glutamine synthetase (GS) was isolated in Aspergillus nidulans. The levels of GS and of an arginine catabolic enzyme, ornithine transaminase (OTA) were assayed under a variety of growth conditions leading to repression, depression and induction of OTA in the wild type, nit8 and several regulatory mutants. The results obtained appear to exclude the possibility of involvement of GS in the regulation of arginine catabolism in A. nidulans.  相似文献   

10.
Mapping of the arginine deiminase gene in Pseudomonas aeruginosa   总被引:8,自引:5,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
A mutant of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO lacking arginine deiminase activity (arcA) was isolated by screening for a derivative of an arcB mutant (deficient in catabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase) that did not excrete citrulline under conditions of limited aeration. The arcA mutation was highly cotransducible with arcB.  相似文献   

11.
Arginase, ornithine carbamoyl transferase (OCT) and arginine deiminase activities were found in cell-free extracts of Nostoc PCC 73102, a free-living cyanobacterium originally isolated from the cycad Macrozamia. Addition of either arginine, ornithine or citrulline to the growth medium induced significant changes in their in vitro activities. Moreover, growth in darkness, compared to in light, induced higher in vitro activities. The in vitro activities of arginase and arginine deiminase, two catabolic enzymes primarily involved in the breakdown of arginine, increased substantially by a combination of growth in darkness and addition of either arginine, or ornithine, to the growth medium. The most significant effects on the in vitro OCT activities where observed in cells grown with the addition of ornithine. Cells grown in darkness exhibited about 6% of the in vivo nitrogenase activity observed in cells grown in light. However, addition of external carbon (glucose and fructose) to cells grown in darkness resulted in in vivo nitrogenase activity levels similar to, or even higher than, cells grown in light. Growth with high in vivo nitrogenase activity or in darkness with the addition of external carbon, resulted in repressed levels of in vitro arginase and arginine deiminase activities. It is suggested that nitrogen starvation induces a mobilization of the stored nitrogen, internal release of the amino compound arginine, and an induction of two catabolic enzymes arginase and arginine deiminase. A similar and even more pronunced induction can be observed by addition of external arginine to the growth medium.  相似文献   

12.
In Agrobacterium tumefaciens and Rhizobia arginine can be used as the sole nitrogenous nutrient via degradation by an inducible arginase. These microorganisms were found to exhibit arginine inhibition of ornithine carbamoyltransferase activity. This inhibition is competitive with respect to ornithine (Km for ornithine = 0.8 mM; Ki for arginine = 0.05 mM). This type of urea cycle regulation has not been observed among other microorganisms which degrade arginine via an arginase. The competitive pattern of this inhibition leads to its being inoperative in ornithine-grown cells, where the intracellular concentration of ornithine is high. In arginine-grown cells, however, the intracellular arginine and ornithine concentrations are compatible with inhibition and ornithine recycling appears to be effectively blocked in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
The formation of the arginine deiminase pathway enzymes in Streptococcus faecalis ATCC 11700 was investigated. The addition of arginine to growing cells resulted in the coinduction of arginine diminase (EC 3.5.3.6), ornithine carbamoyltransferase (EC 2.1.3.3), and carbamate kinase (EC 2.7.2.3). Growth on glucose-arginine or on glucose-fumarate-arginine produced a decrease in the specific activity of the arginine fermentation system. Aeration had a weak repressing effect on the arginine deiminase pathway enzymes in cells growing on arginine as the only added substrate. By contrast, depending on the growth phase, a marked repression of the pathway by oxygen was observed in cells growing on glucose-arginine. We hypothesize that, in S. faecalis, the ATP pool is an important signal in the regulation of the arginine deiminase pathway. Mutants unable to utilize arginine as an energy source, isolated from the wild type, exhibited four distinct phenotypes. In group I the three enzymes of the arginine deiminase pathway were present and probably affected in the arginine uptake system. Group II mutants had no detectable arginine deiminase, whereas group III mutants had low levels of ornithine carbamoyltransferase. Group IV mutants were defective for all three enzymes of the pathway.  相似文献   

14.
The levels of enzymes and metabolites of arginine metabolism were determined in exponential cultures of Neurospora crassa grown on various carbon sources. The carbon sources decreased in effectiveness (as determined by generation times) in the following order: sucrose, acetate, glycerol, and ethanol. The basal and induced levels of the catabolic enzymes, arginase (EC 3.5.3.1) and ornithine transaminase (EC 2.6.1.13), were lower in mycelia grown on poor carbon sources. Arginase was more sensitive to variations in carbon source than was ornithine transaminase. Induction of both enzymes was sensitive to nitrogen metabolite control, but this sensitivity was reduced in mycelia grown on glycerol or ethanol. The pools of arginine and ornithine were reduced in mycelia grown in unsupplemented medium containing poor carbon sources, but the biosynthetic enzyme ornithine transcarbamylase (EC 2.1.3.3) was not derepressed. The arginine pools were similar, regardless of carbon source, in mycelia grown in arginine-supplemented medium. The ornithine pool was reduced by growth on poor carbon sources. The rate of arginine degradation was proportional to the level of arginase in both sucrose- and glycerol-grown mycelia. The distribution of arginine between cytosol and vesicles was only slightly altered by growth on glycerol instead of sucrose. The slightly smaller cytosolic arginine concentration did not appear to be sufficient to account for the alterations in basal and induced enzyme levels. The results suggest a possible carbon metabolite effect on the expression or turnover of a variety of genes for enzymes of arginine metabolism in Neurospora.  相似文献   

15.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO was able to grow in the absence of exogenous terminal electron acceptors, provided that the medium contained 30 to 40 mM L-arginine and 0.4% yeast extract. Under strictly anaerobic conditions (O2 at less than 1 ppm), growth could be measured as an increase in protein and proceeded in a non-exponential way; arginine was largely converted to ornithine but not entirely consumed at the end of growth. In the GasPak anaerobic jar (Becton Dickinson and Co.), the wild-type strain PAO1 grew on arginine-yeast extract medium in 3 to 5 days; mutants could be isolated that were unable to grow under these conditions. All mutants (except one) were defective in at least one of the three enzymes of the arginine deiminase pathway (arcA, arcB, and arcC mutants) or in a novel function that might be involved in anaerobic arginine uptake (arcD mutants). The mutations arcA (arginine deiminase), arcB (catabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase), arcC (carbamate kinase), and arcD were highly cotransducible and mapped in the 17-min chromosome region. Some mutations in the arc cluster led to low, noninducible levels of all three arginine deiminase pathway enzymes and thus may affect control elements required for induction of the postulated arc operon. Two fluorescent pseudomonads (P. putida and P. fluorescens) and P. mendocina, as well as one PAO mutant, possessed an inducible arginine deiminase pathway and yet were unable to grow fermentatively on arginine. The ability to use arginine-derived ATP for growth may provide P. aeruginosa with a selective advantage when oxygen and nitrate are scarce.  相似文献   

16.
The submitochondrial localization of the four mitochondrial enzymes associated with urea synthesis in liver of Squalus acanthias (spiny dogfish), a representative elasmobranch, was determined. Glutamine- and acetylglutamate-dependent carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase, ornithine carbamoyltransferase, glutamine synthetase, and arginase were all localized within the matrix of liver mitochondria. The subcellular and submitochondrial localization and activities of several related enzymes involved in nitrogen metabolism and gluconeogenesis in liver and dogfish are also reported. Pyruvate carboxylase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase were localized in the mitochondrial matrix. Synthesis of citrulline by isolated mitochondria from ornithine proceeds at a near optimal rate at ornithine concentrations as low as 0.08 mM. The same stoichiometry and rates of citrulline synthesis are observed when ornithine is replaced by arginine. The mitochondrial location of arginase does not appear to reflect a mechanism for regulating ornithine availability.  相似文献   

17.
Utilization of arginine by Klebsiella aerogenes.   总被引:9,自引:9,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Klebsiella aerogenes utilized arginine as the sole source of carbon or nitrogen for growth. Arginine was degraded to 2-ketoglutarate and not to succinate, since a citrate synthaseless mutant grows on arginine as the only nitrogen source. When glucose was the energy source, all four nitrogen atoms of arginine were utilized. Three of them apparently did not pass through ammonia but were transferred by transamination, since a mutant unable to produce glutamate by glutamate synthase or glutamate dehydrogenase utilized three of four nitrogen atoms of arginine. Urea was not involved as intermediate, since a unreaseless mutant did not accumulate urea and grew on arginine as efficiently as the wild-type strain. Ornithine appeared to be an intermediate, because cells grown either on glucose and arginine or arginine alone could convert arginine in the presence of hydroxylamine to ornithine. This indicates that an amidinotransferase is the initiating enzyme of arginine breakdown. In addition, the cells contained a transaminase specific for ornithine. In contrast to the hydroxylamine-dependent reaction, this activity could be demonstrated in extracts. The arginine-utilizing system (aut) is apparently controlled like the enzymes responsible for the degradation of histidine (hut) through induction, catabolite repression, and activation by glutamine synthetase.  相似文献   

18.
Enzyme repression in the arginine pathway ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae was demonstrated by comparison of specific enzyme activities in yeast grown with and without arginine in various mineral salts media. Of the enzymes tested only ornithine transcarbamoylase was found to be repressed by exogenous arginine. Acetylornithine-glutamate transacetylase and argininosuccinate lyase were not affected. No relationship between specific enzyme activities and intracellular arginine concentration was observed.During the adaptation of yeast grown in a medium supplemented with amino acids to a mineral salts medium, the enzymes ornithine transcarbamoylase and argininosuccinate lyase were not derepressed beyond their specific activities normally present in yeast grown in mineral salts media. Neither were the arginine-degrading enzymes arginase and ornithine transaminase broken down during this adaptation.Thanks are due to Professor E. G. Mulder and to Professor H. Veldkamp for stimulatory discussions; to the Heineken's Brouwerij, Rotterdam, and to the Landbouwhogeschoolfonds for research grants.  相似文献   

19.
The enzymes in the arginine breakdown pathway (arginase, ornithine-delta-transaminase, and Delta'-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase) were found to be present in Bacillus licheniformis cells during exponential growth on glutamate. These enzymes could be coincidentally induced by arginine or ornithine to a very high level and their synthesis could be repressed by the addition of glucose, clearly demonstrating catabolite repression control of the arginine degradative pathway. The strongest catabolite repression control of arginase occurred when cells were grown on glucose and this control decreased when cells were grown on glycerol, acetate, pyruvate, or glutamate. The proline catabolite pathway was present in B. licheniformis during exponential growth on glutamate. The proline oxidation and the Delta'-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase in this breakdown pathway were induced by l-proline to a high level. The Delta'-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase was found to be under catabolite repression control. Arginase could be induced by proline and arginine addition induced proline oxidation, suggesting a common in vivo inducer for these convergent pathways.  相似文献   

20.
The arginine deiminase (ADI) pathway in Pseudomonas aeruginosa serves to generate ATP. The three enzymes involved, ADI, catabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase and carbamate kinase, are induced by oxygen limitation and encoded by the contiguous arcABC genes. A 1.5-kb region upstream from arcABC was sequenced and found to contain an open reading frame, arcD, coding for a hydrophobic polypeptide of 52 kDa. The content and distribution of hydrophobic amino acids suggest that the arcD gene product may be a transmembrane protein. When arcD was fused to an Escherichia coli promoter, the ArcD protein was synthesized in E. coli maxicells and detected in the membrane fraction. In sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis the ArcD protein migrated like a 32-kDa protein; such anomalous electrophoretic mobility is known for other highly hydrophobic proteins. Mutations in arcD rendered the cells unable to utilize extracellular arginine as an energy source. Since anaerobic arginine consumption and ornithine release are coupled in P. aeruginosa, it is proposed that arcD specifies an arginine: ornithine antiporter or a part thereof. Insertions of IS21 or Tn1725 in arcD had a strong polar effect on the expression of the arcAB enzymes, indicating that the arc genes are organized as an arcDABC operon.  相似文献   

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