Reversible inhibition of bacterial bioluminescence by long-chain fatty acids |
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Authors: | S. Ulitzur J. W. Hastings |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Food Engineering and Biotechnology, Technion-Israel Institute for Technology, Haifa, Israel;(2) The Biological Laboratories, Harvard University, 02138 Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA |
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Abstract: | Long-chain unsaturated fatty acids, as well as certain saturated fatty acids such as lauric acid, are inhibitors of the in vivo luminescence of wild-type strains of four species of luminous bacteria (Beneckea harveyi, Photobacterium phosphoerum, P. fischeri, andP. leiognathi) as well as the myristic acid-stimulated luminescence in the aldehyde dim mutant M17 ofB. harveyi. Based on studies with the system in vivo, the principal site of action of all the fatty acids appears to be the reductase activity that converts myristic acid to myristyl aldehyde. This was confirmed by in vitro studies: Reductase activity in crude cell-free extracts is strongly inhibited by oleic acid. |
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