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1.
Lipoic acid provokes aggregation of the monomeric maltose binding protein of Escherichia Coli into dimers and tetramers, and inhibits maltose binding. The sigmoidal shape of the curves showing the dependence of maltose binding versus lipoic acid concentration, and versus maltose concentration (in the presence of lipoic acid) suggests that the inhibition of the maltose binding protein by lipoic acid is a consequence of its aggregation. These results are discussed in relation to recent studies describing dimers of the maltose binding protein purified under certain conditions, and in relation to results suggesting an implication of lipoic acid in the binding protein-dependent transports.  相似文献   

2.
Highly purified [D-glucose-1-14C]lactose has been used to study the transport of lactose by Klebsiella sp. strain CT-1. Strain CT-1 transports lactose by a lactose-inducible system that exhibited an apparent Km of 6 mM lactose and an apparent Vmax of 140 nmol/min per mg of cell protein. Lactose uptake was inhibited competitively by o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactoside with a Ki value of 8 mM, but was not inhibited by thio-beta-methyl-galactoside. D-Glucose, D-mannose, 2-deoxyglucose, and alpha-methyl-D-glucoside also inhibited lactose uptake. Phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent hydrolysis of o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactoside and lactose-dependent release of pyruvate from phosphoenolpyruvate by benzene-treated CT-1 cells showed that CT-1 transports lactose by a phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system. Correlations between the growth rate of CT-1 on lactose and properties of the transport system indicated that transport is the rate limiting step in utilization of lactose.  相似文献   

3.
Galactose transport systems in Streptococcus lactis   总被引:12,自引:8,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Galactose-grown cells of Streptococcus lactis ML3 have the capacity to transport the growth sugar by two separate systems: (i) the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system and (ii) an adenosine 5'-triphosphate-energized permease system. Proton-conducting uncouplers (tetrachlorosalicylanilide and carbonyl cyanide-m-chlorophenyl hydrazone) inhibited galactose uptake by the permease system, but had no effect on phosphotransferase activity. Inhibition and efflux experiments conducted using beta-galactoside analogs showed that the galactose permease had a high affinity for galactose, methyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside, and methyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside, but possessed little or no affinity for glucose and lactose. The spatial configurations of hydroxyl groups at C-2, C-4, and C-6 were structurally important in facilitating interaction between the carrier and the sugar analog. Iodoacetate had no inhibitory effect on accumulation of galactose, methyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside, or lactose via the phosphotransferase system. However, after exposure of the cells to p-chloromercuribenzoate, phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent uptake of lactose and methyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside were reduced by 75 and 100%, respectively, whereas galactose phosphotransferase activity remained unchanged. The independent kinetic analysis of each transport system was achieved by the selective generation of the appropriate energy source (adenosine 5'-triphosphate or phosphoenolpyruvate) in vivo. The maximum rates of galactose transport by the two systems were similar, but the permease system exhibited a 10-fold greater affinity for sugar than did the phosphotransferase system.  相似文献   

4.
The role of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system (PTS) in the phenomenon of inducer exclusion was examined in whole cells of Salmonella typhimurium which carried the genes of the Escherichia coli lactose operon on an episome. In the presence of the PTS substrate methyl alpha-D-glucopyranoside, the extent of accumulation of the lactose analog methyl beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside was reduced. A strain carrying a mutation in the gene for Enzyme I was hypersensitive to the PTS effect, while a crr mutant strain was completely resistant. Influx, efflux, and exchange of galactosides via the lactose "permease" were inhibited by methyl alpha-glucoside. This inhibition occurred in the presence of metabolic energy poisons, and therefore does not involve either the generation of metabolic energy or energy-coupling to the lactose transport system. When the cellular content of the lactose permease was increased by induction with isopropyl beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside, cells gradually became less sensitive to inducer exclusion. The extent of inhibition of methyl beta-thiogalactoside accumulation by methyl alpha-glucoside was shown to be dependent on the relative cellular content of the PTS and lactose system. The data were consistent with an hypothesis involving partial inactivation of galactoside transport due to interaction between a component of the PTS and the lactose permease. By examination of the effects of the PTS and lactose uptake and melibiose permease-mediated uptake of methyl beta-thiogalactoside, it was further shown that the manner in which inducer exclusion is expressed is independent on the routes available to the non-PTS sugar for exit from the cell.  相似文献   

5.
Several carbohydrate permease systems in Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli are sensitive to regulation by the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system. Mutant Salmonella strains were isolated in which individual transport systems had been rendered insensitive to regulation by sugar substrates of the phosphotransferase system. In one such strain, glycerol uptake was insensitive to regulation; in another, the maltose transport system was resistant to inhibition; and in a third, the regulatory mutation specifically rendered the melibiose permease insensitive to regulation. An analogous mutation in E. coli abolished inhibition of the transport of beta-galactosides via the lactose permease system. The mutations were mapped near the genes which code for the affected transport proteins. The regulatory mutations rendered utilization of the particular carbohydrates resistant to inhibition and synthesis of the corresponding catabolic enzymes partially insensitive to repressive control by sugar substrates of the phosphotransferase system. Studies of repression of beta-galactosidase synthesis in E. coli were conducted with both lactose and isopropyl beta-thiogalactoside as exogenous sources of inducer. Employing high concentrations of isopropyl beta-thiogalactoside, repression of beta-galactosidase synthesis was not altered by the lactose-specific transport regulation-resistant mutation. By contrast, the more severe repression observed with lactose as the exogenous source of inducer was partially abolished by this regulatory mutation. The results support the conclusions that several transport systems, including the lactose permease system, are subject to allosteric regulation and that inhibition of inducer uptake is a primary cause of the repression of catabolic enzyme synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
Allosteric regulation of several sugar transport systems such as those specific for lactose, maltose and melibiose in Escherichia coli (inducer exclusion) is mediated by the glucose-specific enzyme IIA (IIAGlc) of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS). Deletion mutations in the cytoplasmic N and C termini of the lactose permease protein, LacY, and replacement of all cysteine residues in LacY with other residues did not prevent IIAGlc-mediated inhibition of lactose uptake, but several point and insertional mutations in the central cytoplasmic loop of this permease abolished transport regulation and IIAGlc binding. The results substantiate the conclusion that regulation of the lactose permease in E. coli by the PTS is mediated by a primary interaction of IIAGlc with the central cytoplasmic loop of the permease.  相似文献   

7.
Binding protein-dependent transport systems mediate the accumulation of diverse substrates in bacteria. The binding protein-dependent galactose transport of Salmonella typhimurium has been reconstituted in proteoliposomes. The proteoliposomes were made with proteins solubilized and renatured from inclusion bodies produced by a bacterial strain containing a plasmid with the mgl (methylgalactose permease) operon of Salmonella typhimurium. Galactose transport is dependent both on the addition of the purified galactose binding protein to the transport assay, and on ATP. The interaction between the liganded galactose binding protein and proteoliposomes displays Michaelis type kinetics with a Km of around 15 microM. Galactose transport is coupled to ATP hydrolysis with a stoichiometry (ATP/galactose) of 2.5:1. Galactose transport in proteoliposomes is not significantly inhibited by the uncoupler carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, but is inhibited by 0.5 mM vanadate. The present reconstitution of galactose transport in proteoliposomes suggests that the MglA, MglC and MglE proteins have been solubilized and renatured in an active form from the inclusion bodies of the mgl hyperproducing strain.  相似文献   

8.
Agrobacterium radiobacter NCIB 11883 was grown in lactose-limited continuous culture at a dilution rate of 0.045/h. Washed cells transported [14C]lactose and [methyl-14C]beta-D-thiogalactoside, a nonmetabolisable analog of lactose, at similar rates and with similar affinities (Km for transport, less than 1 microM). Transport was inhibited to various extents by the uncoupling agent carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone, by unlabeled beta-galactosides and D-galactose, and by osmotic shock. The accumulation ratio for methyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside was greater than or equal to 4,100. An abundant protein (molecular weight, 41,000) was purified from osmotic-shock fluid and shown by equilibrium dialysis to bind lactose and methyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside, the former with very high affinity (binding constant, 0.14 microM). The N-terminal amino acid sequence of this lactose-binding protein exhibited some homology with several other sugar-binding proteins from bacteria. Antiserum raised against the lactose-binding protein did not cross-react with two glucose-binding proteins from A. radiobacter or with extracts of other bacteria grown under lactose limitation. Lactose transport and beta-galactosidase were induced in batch cultures by lactose, melibiose [O-alpha-D-galactoside-(1----6)alpha-D-glucose], and isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside and were subject to catabolite repression by glucose, galactose, and succinate which was not alleviated by cyclic AMP. We conclude that lactose is transported into A. radiobacter via a binding protein-dependent active transport system (in contrast to the H+ symport and phosphotransferase systems found in other bacteria) and that the expression of this transport system is closely linked to that of beta-galactosidase.  相似文献   

9.
Sondej M  Seok YJ  Badawi P  Koo BM  Nam TW  Peterkofsky A 《Biochemistry》2000,39(11):2931-2939
The unphosphorylated form of enzyme IIAglc of the Escherichia coli phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system inhibits transport catalyzed by lactose permease. We (Seok et al. (1997) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 94, 13515-13519) previously characterized the area on the cytoplasmic face of lactose permease that interacts with enzyme IIAglc, using radioactive enzyme IIAglc. Subsequent studies (Sondej et al. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96, 3525-3530) suggested consensus binding sequences on proteins that interact with enzyme IIAglc. The present study characterizes a region on the surface of enzyme IIAglc that interfaces with lactose permease. Acetylation of lysine residues by sulfosuccinimidyl acetate treatment of enzyme IIAglc, but not lactose permease, reduced the degree of interaction between the two proteins. To localize the lysine residue(s) on enzyme IIAglc that is(are) involved in the regulatory interaction, selected lysine residues were mutagenized. Conversion of nine separate lysines to glutamic acid resulted in proteins that were still capable of phosphoryl acceptance from HPr. Except for Lys69, all the modified proteins were as effective as the wild-type enzyme IIAglc in a test for binding to lactose permease. The Lys69 mutant was also defective in phosphoryl transfer to glucose permease. To derive further information concerning the contact surface, additional selected residues in the vicinity of Lys69 were mutagenized and tested for binding to lactose permease. On the basis of these studies, a model for the region of the surface of enzyme IIAglc that interacts with lactose permease is proposed.  相似文献   

10.
The genes coding for the lactose permease and beta-galactosidase, two proteins involved in the metabolism of lactose by Lactobacillus bulgaricus, have been cloned, expressed, and found functional in Escherichia coli. The nucleotide sequences of these genes and their flanking regions have been determined, showing the presence of two contiguous open reading frames (ORFs). One of these ORFs codes for the lactose permease gene, and the other codes for the beta-galactosidase gene. The lactose permease gene is located in front of the beta-galactosidase gene, with 3 bp in the intergenic region. The two genes are probably transcribed as one operon. Primer extension studies have mapped a promoter upstream from the lactose permease gene but not the beta-galactosidase gene. This promoter is similar to those found in E. coli with general characteristics of GC-rich organisms. In addition, the sequences around the promoter contain a significantly higher number of AT base pairs (80%) than does the overall L. bulgaricus genome, which is rich in GC (GC content of 54%). The amino acid sequences obtained from translation of the ORFs are found to be highly homologous (similarity of 75%) to those from Streptococcus thermophilus. The first 460 amino acids of the lactose permease shows homology to the melibiose transport protein of E. coli. Little homology was found between the lactose permease of L. bulgaricus and E. coli, but the residues which are involved in the binding and the transport of lactose are conserved. The carboxy terminus is similar to that of the enzyme III of several phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase systems.  相似文献   

11.
Sahin-Tóth M  Kaback HR 《Biochemistry》2000,39(20):6170-6175
The sucrose (CscB) permease is the only member of the oligosaccharide:H(+) symporter family in the Major Facilitator Superfamily that transports sucrose but not lactose or other galactosides. In lactose permease (lac permease), the most studied member of the family, three residues have been shown to participate in galactoside binding: Cys148 hydrophobically interacts with the galactosyl ring, while Glu126 and Arg144 are charge paired and form H-bonds with specific galactosyl OH groups. In the present study, the role of the corresponding residues in sucrose permease, Asp126, Arg144, and Ser148, is investigated using a functional Cys-less mutant (see preceding paper). Replacement of Ser148 with Cys has no significant effect on transport activity or expression, but transport becomes highly sensitive to the sulfhydryl reagent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) in a manner similar to that of lac permease. However, in contrast to lac permease, substrate affords no protection whatsoever against NEM inactivation of transport or alkylation with [(14)C]NEM. Neutral (Ala, Cys) mutations of Asp126 and Arg144 abolish sucrose transport, while membrane expression is not affected. Similarly, combination of two Ala mutations within the same molecule (Asp126-->Ala/Arg144-->Ala) yields normally expressed, but completely inactive permease. Conservative replacements result in highly active molecules: Asp126-->Glu permease catalyzes sucrose transport comparable to Cys-less permease, while mutant Arg144-->Lys exhibits decreased but significant activity. The observations demonstrate that charge pair Asp126-Arg144 plays an essential role in sucrose transport and suggest that the overall architecture of the substrate binding sites is conserved between sucrose and lac permeases.  相似文献   

12.
This paper describes the isolation and characterization of a mutant of Escherichia coli that transports lactose and its analog thiomethylgalactoside via the arabinose permeation system. Unlike transport via the lactose permease, this transport is not inhibited by thiodigalactoside, but was inhibited by arabinose, xylose, and fucose. The site of the mutation was in the arabinose C gene and confers constitutivity on the entire arabinose operon. Furthermore, this transport was found in 24 independently isolated arabinose-constitutive strains, and in strains which had been induced with arabinose and then starved to remove all traces of it. It was therefore concluded that lactose and thiomethylgalactoside are low-affinity substrates of at least one component of the normal arabinose permeation system.  相似文献   

13.
An Escherichia coli strain which overproduces the lactose permease was used to investigate the mechanism of allosteric regulation of this permease and those specific for melibiose, glycerol, and maltose by the phosphoenolpyruvate-sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS). Thio-beta-digalactoside, a high affinity substrate of the lactose permease, released the glycerol and maltose permeases from inhibition by methyl-alpha-d-glucoside. Resumption of glycerol uptake occurred immediately upon addition of the galactoside. The effect was not observed in a strain which lacked or contained normal levels of the lactose permease, but growth of wild-type E. coli in the presence of isopropyl-beta-thiogalactoside plus cyclic AMP resulted in enhanced synthesis of the lactose permease so that galactosides relieved inhibition of glycerol uptake. Thiodigalactoside also relieved the inhibition of glycerol uptake caused by the presence of other PTS substrates such as fructose, mannitol, glucose, 2-deoxyglucose, and 5-thioglucose. Inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity by methyl-alpha-glucoside was also relieved by thiodigalactoside in E. coli T52RT provided that the lactose permease protein was induced to high levels. Cooperative binding of sugar and enzyme III(Glc) to the melibiose permease in Salmonella typhimurium was demonstrated, but no cooperativity was noted with the glycerol and maltose permeases. These results are consistent with a mechanism of PTS-mediated regulation of the lactose and melibiose permeases involving a fixed number of allosteric regulatory proteins (enzyme III(Glc)) which may be titrated by the increased number of substrate-activated permease proteins. This work suggests that the cooperativity in the binding of sugar substrate and enzyme III(Glc) to the permease, demonstrated previously in in vitro experiments, has mechanistic significance in vivo. It substantiates the conclusion that PTS-mediated regulation of non-PTS permease activities involves direct allosteric interaction between the permeases and enzyme III(Glc), the postulated regulatory protein of the PTS.  相似文献   

14.
The Escherichia coli strain carrying the lac Y54-41 gene encodes a mutant lactose permease which carries out normal downhill transport of galactosides but is defective in uphill accumulation. In this study, the mutant lac Y54-41 gene was cloned onto the multicopy vector pUR270. As expected, the cloned gene was shown to express normal downhill transport activity but was markedly defective in the uphill transport of methyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside. Direct measurements of H+ transport revealed that the mutant permease can transport H+ with methyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside but at a significantly reduced capacity compared to the wild-type strain. However, under conditions where the mutant and wild-type strains both transport lactose at similar rates, no detectable H+ transport was observed in the mutant strain. The entire cloned lac Y54-41 gene was subjected to DNA sequencing, and a single base substitution was found which replaces glycine 262 in the protein with a cysteine residue. Inhibition experiments showed that the mutant permease is dramatically more sensitive to three different sulfhydryl reagents: N-ethylmaleimide, p-hydroxymericuribenzoate, and p-hydroxymercuriphenylsulfonic acid. However, the lactose analogue, thiodigalactoside, was only marginally effective at protecting against inhibition in the mutant strain. The results are consistent with the idea that the sulfhydryl reagents are inhibiting the mutant permease activity by reacting with cysteine 262.  相似文献   

15.
Enzyme IIA(Glc) of the Escherichia coli phosphoenolpyruvate:glucose phosphotransferase system plays a direct role in regulating inducible transport systems. Dephosphorylated IIA(Glc) binds directly to lactose permease in a reaction that requires binding of a galactosidic substrate. A double-Cys mutation (Ile129 --> Cys/Lys131 --> Cys) was introduced into helix IV of the permease near the IIA(Glc) binding site in cytoplasmic loop IV/V and in the vicinity of the galactoside binding site at the interface of helices IV, V, and VIII. The mutant no longer requires galactoside for IIA(Glc) binding as demonstrated by both a [(125)I]IIA(Glc) binding assay and a newly developed fluorescence anisotropy assay. Further characterization of the mutant shows that it binds substrate with high affinity, but is almost completely defective in all modes of translocation across the cytoplasmic membrane. The data are consistent with the interpretation that the double mutant is locked in an inward-facing conformation.  相似文献   

16.
Streptococcus pyogenes accumulated thiomethyl-beta-galactoside as the 6-phosphate ester due to the action of the phosphoenolpyruvate:lactose phosphotransferase system. Subsequent addition of glucose resulted in rapid efflux of the free galactoside after intracellular dephosphorylation (inducer expulsion). Efflux was shown to occur in the apparent absence of the galactose permease, but was inhibited by substrate analogs of the lactose enzyme II and could not be demonstrated in a mutant of S. lactis ML3 which lacked this enzyme. The results suggest that the enzymes II of the phosphotransferase system can catalyze the rapid efflux of free sugar under appropriate physiological conditions.  相似文献   

17.
By subjecting the lac y gene of Escherichia coli to oligonucleotide-directed, site-specific mutagenesis, Cys148 in the lac permease has been replaced with a Gly residue [Trumble, W. R., Viitanen, P. V., Sarkar, H. K., Poonian, M. S., & Kaback, H. R. (1984) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 119, 860]. Recombinant plasmids bearing wild-type or mutated lac y were constructed and used to transform E. coli T184. Steady-state levels of lactose accumulation, the apparent Km for lactose under energized conditions, and the KD for p-nitrophenyl alpha-D-galactopyranoside are comparable in right-side-out vesicles containing wild-type or mutant permease. In contrast, the Vmax for lactose transport in vesicles containing mutant permease is significantly decreased. Although antibody binding studies reveal that vesicles from the mutant contain almost as much permease as wild-type vesicles, surprisingly only about one-fourth of the altered molecules bind p-nitrophenyl alpha-D-galactopyranoside with high affinity. Mutant permease is less sensitive to inactivation by N-ethylmaleimide, although the alkylating agent is still capable of completely inhibiting transport activity. Importantly, beta-galactosyl 1-thio-beta-D-galactopyranoside affords complete protection of wild-type permease against N-ethylmaleimide but has no protective effect whatsoever in the mutant. The rate of inactivation of wild-type and mutant permeases by N-ethylmaleimide is increased at alkaline pH and by the presence of a proton electrochemical gradient (interior negative and alkaline), and these phenomena are exaggerated in vesicles containing mutant permease. Finally, p-(chloromercuri)benzenesulfonate, which completely displaces bound p-nitrophenyl alpha-D-galactopyranoside from wild-type permease, does not affect binding in the mutant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The mannitol permease, or D-mannitol-specific enzyme II of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent carbohydrate phosphotransferase system (PTS) of Escherichia coli, both transports and phosphorylates its substrate. Previous analyses of the amino acid sequences of PTS permeases specific for various carbohydrates in different species of bacteria revealed several regions of similarity. The most highly conserved region includes a GIXE motif, in which the glutamate residue is completely conserved among the permeases that contain this motif. The corresponding residue in the E. coli mannitol permease is Glu-257, which is located in a large putative cytoplasmic loop of the transmembrane domain of the protein. We used site-directed mutagenesis to investigate the role of Glu-257. The properties of proteins with mutations at position 257 suggest that a carboxylate side chain at this position is essential for mannitol binding. E257A and E257Q mutant proteins did not bind mannitol detectably, while the E257D mutant could still bind this substrate. Kinetic studies with the E257D mutant protein also showed that a glutamate residue at position 257 of this permease is specifically required for efficient mannitol transport. While the E257D permease phosphorylated mannitol with kinetic parameters similar to those of the wild-type protein, the Vmax for mannitol uptake by this mutant protein is less than 5% that of the wild type. These results suggest that Glu-257 of the mannitol permease and the corresponding glutamate residues of other PTS permeases play important roles both in binding the substrate and in transporting it through the membrane.  相似文献   

19.
The N-acetyl-D-mannosamine (ManNAc) transport system of Escherichia coli K92 was studied when this bacterium was grown in a chemically defined medium containing ManNAc as carbon source. Kinetic measurements were carried out in vivo at 37 degrees C in 25 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.5. Under these conditions, the uptake rate was linear for at least 15 min and the calculated Km for ManNAc was 280 microM. The transport system was strongly inhibited by sodium arsenate (97%), potassium cyanide (84%) and 2,4-dinitrophenol (88%) added at final concentrations of 1 mM (each). Analysis of bacterial ManNAc phosphotransferase activity revealed in vitro ManNAc phosphorylation activity only when phosphoenolpyruvate was present. These results strongly support the notion that ManNAc uptake depends on a specific phosphotransferase system. Study of specificities showed that N-acetylglucosamine and mannosamine specifically inhibited the transport of ManNAc in this bacterium. Analysis of expression revealed that the ManNAc transport system was induced by ManNAc, glucosamine, galactosamine, mannosamine and mannose but not by N-acetylglucosamine or N-acetylgalactosamine. Moreover, ManNAc permease was subject to glucose repression and cAMP stimulation. Full induction of the ManNAc transport system required the simultaneous presence of both cAMP and ManNAc.  相似文献   

20.
The N-acetyl-D-galactosamine (GalNAc) transport system of Escherichia coli K92 was studied when the bacterium was grown in a chemically defined medium containing GalNAc as a carbon source. Kinetic measurements were carried out in vivo at 37 degrees C in 25 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.0. Under these conditions, the uptake rate was linear for at least 3 min and the calculated Km for GalNAc was 3 microM. The transport system was strongly inhibited by sodium arsenate (70%), potassium cyanide (62%) and 2,4-dinitrophenol (75%). Analysis of bacterial GalNAc phosphotransferase activity revealed in vitro GalNAc phosphorylation activity only when phosphoenolpyruvate was present. These results strongly support the notion that GalNAc uptake depends on a specific phosphotransferase system. Study of activity regulation showed that N-acetylglucosamine and mannosamine specifically inhibit the transport of GalNAc in this bacterium. Analysis of expression revealed that the GalNAc transport system is specifically induced by GalNAc but not by N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) or N-acetylmannosamine (ManNAc), two intimately related sugars. Moreover, full induction of GalNAc transport required the presence of both cAMP and GalNAc. Comparative studies revealed that E. coli K92 has developed a regulation mechanism that specifically induces the appropriate permease based on the presence of each respective phospho-amino sugar (GlcNAc, ManNAc and GalNAc). In this regulation system, GlcNAc is the preferred amino sugar as the carbon source. Finally, when E. coli K92 was grown using GalNAc, capsular polysialic acid production was strongly affected. The presence of intracellular phosphoderivative acetylamino sugars, generated by the action of the phosphotransferase transport system, can be responsible for this effect.  相似文献   

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