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1.
Summary Growth of yeast cells on glucose resulted in complete inactivation of maltose transport and repression of the high affinity glucose transport system. When the cells were grown on maltose or subjected to substrate starvation, an increase in glucose and maltose transport was observed in both brewing and non-brewing yeast strains. The concentration of glucose employed in the growth medium was also observed to affect sugar transport activity. The higher the glucose concentration, the more pronounced the repressive effect. In addition, the time of growth of yeast on glucose or maltose also intermining the rate of sugar transport. These results are consistent with the repressive effect of glucose on the high affinity glucose and maltose transport systems.  相似文献   

2.
Summary A number of 2-deoxy-d-glucose (2-DOG) resistant mutants exhibiting resistance to glucose repression were isolated from variousSaccharomyces yeast strains. Most of the mutants isolated were observed to have improved maltose uptake ability in the presence of glucose. Fermentation studies indicated that maltose was taken up at a faster rate and glucose taken up at a slower rate in the mutant strains compared to the parental strains, when these sugars were fermented together. When these sugars were fermented separately, only the 2-DOG resistant mutant obtained fromSaccharomyces cerevisiae strain 1190 exhibited alterations in glucose and maltose uptake compared to the parental strain. Kinetic analysis of sugar transport employing radiolabelled glucose and maltose indicated that both glucose and maltose were transported with higher rates in the mutant strain. These results suggested that the high affinity glucose transport system was regulated by glucose repression in the parental strain but was derepressed in the mutant.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Aims: We undertook to improve an industrial Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain by derepressing it for maltose utilization in the presence of high glucose concentrations. Methods and Results: A mutant was obtained from an industrial S. cerevisiae strain following random UV mutagenesis and selection on maltose/5‐thioglucose medium. The mutant acquired the ability to utilize glucose simultaneously with maltose and possibly also sucrose and galactose. Aerobic sugar metabolism was still largely fermentative, but an enhanced respirative metabolism resulted in a 31% higher biomass yield on glucose. Kinetic characterization of glucose transport in the mutant revealed the predominance of the high‐affinity component. Northern blot analysis showed that the mutant strain expresses only the HXT6/7 gene irrespective of the glucose concentration in the medium, indicating a severe deregulation in the induction/repression pathways modulating HXT gene expression. Interestingly, maltose‐grown cells of the mutant display inverse diauxy in a glucose/maltose mixture, preferring maltose to glucose. Conclusion: In the mutant here reported, the glucose transport step seems to be uncoupled from downstream regulation, because it seems to be unable to sense abundant glucose, via both repression and induction pathways. Significance and Impact of the Study: We report here the isolation of a S. cerevisiae mutant with a novel derepressed phenotype, potentially interesting for the industrial fermentation of mixed sugar substrates.  相似文献   

5.
Hexose transport in plasma membrane vesicles prepared from L6 rat myoblasts was shown to be stereospecific, activated by glucose starvation and occurred by both high and low affinity systems. Transport by the high affinity system was shown to occur by an active transport process. Furthermore, the high affinity system was shown to be defective in vesicles prepared from F72 cells (hexose transport mutant). These results indicate that the high affinity hexose transport system is retained in the plasma membrane vesicles. Thus plasma membrane vesicles could be of value in further characterization of the L6 high affinity hexose transport system, without interference from the various metabolic events occurring in whole cells.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The non-metabolizable and toxic glucose analogue 2-deoxy-d-glucose (2-DOG) has been widely employed to screen for regulatory mutants which lack catabolite repression. A number of yeast mutants resistant to 2-DOG have recently been isolated in this laboratory. One such mutant, derived from aSaccharomyces cerevisiae haploid strain, was demonstrated to be derepressed for maltose, galactose and sucrose uptake. Furthermore, kinetic analysis of glucose transport suggested that the high affinity glucose transport system was also derepressed in the mutant strain. In addition, the mutant had an increased intracellular concentration of trehalose relative to the parental strain. These results indicate that the 2-DOG resistant mutant is defective in general glucose repression.  相似文献   

7.
alpha-Glucosides are the most abundant fermentable sugars in the industrial applications of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and the active transport across the plasma membrane is the rate-limiting step for their metabolism. In this report we performed a detailed kinetic analysis of the active alpha-glucoside transport system(s) present in a wild-type strain, and in strains with defined alpha-glucoside permeases. Our results indicate that the wild-type strain harbors active transporters with high and low affinity for maltose and trehalose, and low-affinity transport systems for maltotriose and alpha-methylglucoside. The maltose permease encoded by the MAL21 gene showed a high affinity (K(m) approximately 5 mM) for maltose, and a low affinity (K(m) approximately 90 mM) for trehalose. On the other hand, the alpha-glucoside permease encoded by the AGT1 gene had a high affinity (K(m) approximately 7 mM) for trehalose, a low affinity (K(m) approximately 18 mM) for maltose and maltotriose, and a very low affinity (K(m) approximately 35 mM) for alpha-methylglucoside.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
In Kluyveromyces lactis, galactose transport has been thought to be mediated by the lactose permease encoded by LAC12. In fact, a lac12 mutant unable to grow on lactose did not grow on galactose either and showed low and uninducible galactose uptake activity. The existence of other galactose transport systems, at low and at high affinity, had, however, been hypothesized on the basis of galactose uptake kinetics studies. Here we confirmed the existence of a second galactose transporter and we isolated its structural gene. It turned out to be HGT1, previously identified as encoding the high-affinity glucose carrier. Analysis of galactose transporter mutants, hgt1 and lac12, and the double mutant hgt1lac12, suggested that Hgt1 was the high-affinity and Lac12 was the low-affinity galactose transporter. HGT1 expression was strongly induced by galactose and insensitive to glucose repression. This could explain the rapid adaptation to galactose observed in K. lactis after a shift from glucose to galactose medium.  相似文献   

10.
11.
1. The effect of carbon source variation in bacterial growth media on their growth rate, inducible enzyme and cyclic AMP synthesis was examined: an inverse relationship between the culture's growth rate and its differential rate of inducible enzyme (tryptophanase and beta-galactosidase), and cyclic AMP synthesis was found. 2. The effect of the culture's growth phase on its sensitivity or resistance to glucose catabolite repression was determined in the wild type and a catabolite insensitive mutant (ABDROI): the wild type's sensitivity to glucose repression was not affected, whereas the insensitivity of the mutant was found to be limited to its early logarithmic phase of growth. At late log, or stationary phase, the mutant was found to be sensitive to glucose repression. 3. Examination of the kinetics of glucose uptake by the mutant, using alpha-[1 4-C] methyl-glucoside showed evidence for two transport systems each with a different affinity to glucose. A low affinity transport system (apparent Km of 3.4-10-minus 5 M) which appears mostly at the early logarithmic phase of growth. A high affinity transport system (apparent Km of 1.2-10-minus 5 M) which appears mostly at the late log and stationary phases of growth. 4. The effect of the culture density variation on its sensitivity to glucose repression showed that sensitivity to glucose catabolic repression is primarily a reflection of the formation of an allosteric effector molecule between glucose and its specific transport molecule which in turn regulates the activity of the adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of hexoses with different transport and phosphorylation systems on the utilization of maltose by a galactose constitutive mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been studied. Galactose, mannose and fructose inhibit both the entrance of maltose in the cells and the phosphorylation of the glucose generated by intracellular hydrolysis of maltose. Transport of maltose is less affected than glucose phosphorylation and, once inside the cell, maltose is hydrolysed and the sparing glucose subsequently excreted. In addition to the well known inactivating effect of glucose, we have found that galactose inactivates the maltose transporter and that this inactivation is enhanced by maltose, which fails to inactivate the system by itself. As reported for glucose, inactivation by galactose involves proteolysis. Other strains of yeast with inducible pathways for both galactose and maltose behave similarly to the galactose constitutive mutant, with some minor changes. The use of maltose as a source of intracellular glucose has allowed to find the existence of mutual interferences in the utilization of hexoses by yeast at the phosphorylation step, that otherwise would have remained unnoticed.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Thermoanaerobacter ethanolicus is a gram-positive thermophile that produces considerable amounts of ethanol from soluble sugars and polymeric substrates, including starch. Growth on maltose, a product of starch hydrolysis, was associated with the production of a prominent membrane-associated protein that had an apparent molecular weight of 43,800 and was not detected in cells grown on xylose or glucose. Filter-binding assays revealed that cell membranes bound maltose with high affinity. Metabolic labeling of T. ethanolicus maltose-grown cells with [14C]palmitic acid showed that this protein was posttranslationally acylated. A maltose-binding protein was purified by using an amylose resin affinity column, and the binding constant was 270 nM. Since maltase activity was found only in the cytosol of fractionated cells and unlabeled glucose did not compete with radiolabeled maltose for uptake in whole cells, it appeared that maltose was transported intact. In whole-cell transport assays, the affinity for maltose was approximately 40 nM. Maltotriose and α-trehalose competitively inhibited maltose uptake in transport assays, whereas glucose, cellobiose, and a range of disaccharides had little effect. Based on these results, it appears that T. ethanolicus possesses a high-affinity, ABC type transport system that is specific for maltose, maltotriose, and α-trehalose.  相似文献   

15.
Bao H  Duong F 《PloS one》2012,7(4):e34836
The maltose transporter MalFGK(2), together with the substrate-binding protein MalE, is one of the best-characterized ABC transporters. In the conventional model, MalE captures maltose in the periplasm and delivers the sugar to the transporter. Here, using nanodiscs and proteoliposomes, we instead find that MalE is bound with high-affinity to MalFGK2 to facilitate the acquisition of the sugar. When the maltose concentration exceeds the transport capacity, MalE captures maltose and dissociates from the transporter. This mechanism explains why the transport rate is high when MalE has low affinity for maltose, and low when MalE has high affinity for maltose. Transporter-bound MalE facilitates the acquisition of the sugar at low concentrations, but also captures and dissociates from the transporter past a threshold maltose concentration. In vivo, this maltose-forced dissociation limits the rate of transport. Given the conservation of the substrate-binding proteins, this mode of allosteric regulation may be universal to ABC importers.  相似文献   

16.
Active transport of maltose in Escherichia coli requires the presence of both maltose-binding protein (MBP) in the periplasm and a complex of MalF, MalG, and MalK proteins (FGK2) located in the cytoplasmic membrane. Earlier, mutants in malF or malG were isolated that are able to grow on maltose in the complete absence of MBP. When the wild-type malE+ allele, coding for MBP, was introduced into these MBP-independent mutants, they frequently lost their ability to grow on maltose. Furthermore, starting from these Mal- strains, Mal+ secondary mutants that contained suppressor mutations in malE were isolated. In this study, we examined the interaction of wild-type and mutant MBPs with wild-type and mutant FGK2 complexes by using right-side-out membrane vesicles. The vesicles from a MBP-independent mutant (malG511) transported maltose in the absence of MBP, with Km and Vmax values similar to those found in intact cells. However, addition of wild-type MBP to these mutant vesicles produced unexpected responses. Although malE+ malG511 cells could not utilize maltose, wild-type MBP at low concentrations stimulated the maltose uptake by malG511 vesicles. At higher concentrations of the wild-type MBP and maltose, however, maltose transport into malG511 vesicles became severely inhibited. This behaviour of the vesicles was also reflected in the phenotype of malE+ malG511 cells, which were found to be capable of transporting maltose from a low external concentration (1 microM), but apparently not from millimolar concentrations present in maltose minimal medium. We found that the mutant FGK2 complex, containing MalG511, had a much higher apparent affinity towards the wild-type MBP than did the wild-type FGK2 complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Two transport systems for glucose were detected: a high affinity system with a Km of 27 muM, and a low affinity system with a Km of 3.3 mM. The high affinity system transported glucose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose (Km = 26 muM), 3-O-methylglucose (Km = 19 muM), D-glucosamine (Km = 652 muM), D-fructose (Km = 2.3 mM) and L-sorbose (Km = 2.2 mM). All sugars were accumulated against concentration gradients. The high affinity system was strongly or completely inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, quercetin, 2,4-dinitrophenol and sodium azide. The system had a distinct pH optimum (7.4) and optimum temperature (45 degrees C). The low affinity system transported glucose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose (Km = 7.5 mM), and 3-O-methylglucose (Km = 1.5 mM). Accumulation again occurred against a concentration gradient. The low affinity system was inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, quercetin and 2,4-dinitrophenol, but not by sodium azide. The rate of uptake by the low affinity system was constant over a wide temperature range (30--50 degrees C) and was not much affected by pH; but as the pH of the medium was altered from 4.5 to 8.9 a co-ordinated increase in affinity for 2-deoxy-D-glucose (from 52.1 mM to 0.3 mM) and decrease in maximum velocity (by a factor of five) occurred. Both uptake systems were present insporelings germinated in media containing sodium acetate as sole carbon source. Only the low affinity system could initially be demonstrated in glucose-grown tissue, although the high affinity system was restored by starvation inglucose-free medium. The half-ti me for restoration of high affinity activity was 3.5 min and the process was unaffected by cycloheximide. Addition of glucose to an acetate-grown culture inactivated the high affinity system with a half-life of 5--7.5 s. Addition of cycloheximide to an acetate-grown culture caused decay of the high affinity system with a half-life of 80 min. Regulation is thus thought to depend on modulation of protein activity rather than synthesis, and the kinetics of glucose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose and 3-O-methylglucose uptake would be consistent with there being a single carrier showing negative co-operativity. Analysis of transport defective mutants revealed defects in both transport systems although the mutants used were alleles of a single gene. It is concluded that this gene (the ftr cistron) is the structural gene for an allosteric molecule which serves both transport systems.  相似文献   

18.
Glucose is the main sugar transport form in animals, whereas plants use sucrose to supply non-photosynthetic organs with carbon skeletons and energy. Many aspects of sucrose transport, metabolism, and signaling are not well understood, including the route of sucrose efflux from leaf mesophyll cells and transport across vacuolar membranes. Tools that can detect sucrose with high spatial and temporal resolution in intact organs may help elucidate the players involved. Here, FRET sensors were generated by fusing putative sucrose-binding proteins to green fluorescent protein variants. Plant-associated bacteria such as Rhizobium and Agrobacterium can use sucrose as a nutrient source; sugar-binding proteins were, thus, used as scaffolds for developing sucrose nanosensors. Among a set of putative sucrose-binding protein genes cloned in between eCFP and eYFP and tested for sugar-dependent FRET changes, an Agrobacterium sugar-binding protein bound sucrose with 4 mum affinity. This FLIPsuc-4mu protein also recognized other sugars including maltose, trehalose, and turanose and, with lower efficiency, glucose and palatinose. Homology modeling enabled the prediction of binding pocket mutations to modulate the relative affinity of FLIPsuc-4mu for sucrose, maltose, and glucose. Mutant nanosensors showed up to 50- and 11-fold increases in specificity for sucrose over maltose and glucose, respectively, and the sucrose binding affinity was simultaneously decreased to allow detection in the physiological range. In addition, the signal-to-noise ratio of the sucrose nanosensor was improved by linker engineering. This novel reagent complements FLIPs for glucose, maltose, ribose, glutamate, and phosphate and will be used for analysis of sucrose-derived carbon flux in bacterial, fungal, plant, and animal cells.  相似文献   

19.
The periplasmic binding protein-dependent transport systems Ugp and Mal of Escherichia coli transport sn-glycerol-3-phosphate and maltose, respectively. The UgpC and MalK proteins of these transport systems, which couple energy to the transport process by ATP-hydrolysis, are highly homologous, suggesting that they might be functionally exchangeable. Complementation experiments showed that UgpC expression could restore growth of a malK mutant on maltose as a carbon source, provided that it was expressed at a sufficiently high level in the absence of the integral inner membrane components UgpA and/or UgpE of the Ugp system. Conversely, MalK expression could complement ugpC mutants and restore the utilization of sn-glycerol-3-phosphate as a phosphate source. The hybrid transporters appeared to be less efficient than the wild-type systems. The complementation of ugpC mutations by MalK was strongly inhibited by the presence of glucose or alpha-methylglucoside, which are substrates of the phosphotransferase system. This inhibition is probably due to hypersensitivity of the hybrid UgpBAE-MalK transporter to inducer exclusion. UgpC expression did not complement the regulatory function of MalK in mal gene expression. The exchangeability of UgpC and MalK indicates that these proteins do not contribute to a substrate-binding site conferring substrate specificity to the transporter. These are the first examples of functional, hybrid periplasmic permeases in which the energy-coupling components could be functionally exchanged.  相似文献   

20.
A wild-type strain, Sp972 h, of Schizosaccharomyces pombe was mutagenized with ethylmethanesulfonate (EMS), and 2-deoxyglucose (2-DOG)-resistant mutants were isolated. Out of 300 independent 2-DOG-resistant mutants, 2 failed to grow on glucose and fructose (mutants 3/8 and 3/23); however, their hexokinase activity was normal. They have been characterized as defective in their sugar transport properties, and the mutations have been designated as std1-8 and std1-23 (sugar transport defective). The mutations are allelic and segregate as part of a single gene when the mutants carrying them are crossed to a wild-type strain. We confirmed the transport deficiency of these mutants by [14C]glucose uptake. They also fail to grow on other monosaccharides, such as fructose, mannose, and xylulose, as well as disaccharides, such as sucrose and maltose, unlike the wild-type strain. Lack of growth of the glucose transport-deficient mutants on maltose revealed the extracellular breakdown of maltose in S. pombe, unlike in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Both of the mutants are unable to grow on low concentrations of glucose (10 to 20 mM), while one of them, 3/23, grows on high concentrations (50 to 100 mM) as if altered in its affinity for glucose. This mutant (3/23) shows a lag period of 12 to 18 h when grown on high concentrations of glucose. The lag disappears when the culture is transferred from the log phase of its growth on high concentrations. These mutants complement phenotypically similar sugar transport mutants (YGS4 and YGS5) reported earlier by Milbradt and Hoefer (Microbiology 140:2617–2623, 1994), and the clone complementing YGS4 and YGS5 was identified as the only glucose transporter in fission yeast having 12 transmembrane domains. These mutants also demonstrate two other defects: lack of induction and repression of shunt pathway enzymes and defective mating.  相似文献   

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