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1.
Mutants of Escherichia coli K-12 defective in the mannitol-specific enzyme II complex of the phosphoenolpyruvate phosphotransferase system (PTS) or lacking mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase have been isolated. These mutants fail only to grow on mannitol. Growth of the dehydrogenase-negative mutant on casein hydrolysate can be abruptly inhibited by exposure to mannitol. A mutant with constitutive expression of both of these enzymes has also been isolated. All three mutations are clustered in a region represented at min 71 of the Taylor map. In a mutant with less than 5% of the activity of enzyme I of the PTS, both the enzyme II complex and the dehydrogenase remain inducible by mannitol. In the mutant defective in the enzyme II complex, mannitol is able to induce the dehydrogenase. Thus, mannitol, rather than its phosphorylated product, seems to be the inducer.  相似文献   

2.
Reversal of the Mannitol-Sorbitol Diauxie in Escherichia coli   总被引:16,自引:12,他引:4  
In Escherichia coli K-12 the proteins involved in the dissimilation of mannitol and sorbitol are specified by two separate gene clusters. The mannitol cluster appears to consist of a regulatory gene mtlC, a gene mtlA coding an enzyme II complex of the phosphoenolpyruvate phosphotransferase system, and a gene mtlD coding a mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase. Three corresponding genes, sblC, sblA, and sblD, exist for the sorbitol pathway. In both pathways the hexitol captured from the medium and delivered into the cytoplasm as a phosphorylated compound is dehydrogenated to fructose-6-phosphate. The enzyme II complex for sorbitol is able to catalyze the phosphorylation also of mannitol if this substrate is present at high concentrations. Consequently mtlA(-) mutants lacking the enzyme II complex for mannitol can grow on mannitol either if the sorbitol phosphorylating system is preinduced by sorbitol or if mtlA is suppressed by a mutation of sblC to constitutivity. In wild-type cells, the induction of the enzymes in the mannitol pathway and dissimilation of the substrate are not prevented by glucose. The sorbitol system, however, is sensitive to glucose and to mannitol as well. In the suppressed strains (mtlA(-), sblC(c)) in which mannitol is utilized through the sorbitol enzyme, glucose becomes effective in restraining the consumption of mannitol, causing a definite diauxie. Moreover, in a mixture of mannitol and sorbitol, the latter is utilized preferentially. This reversal of normal diauxic pattern is consequent to the fact that the enzyme II complex for sorbitol has relatively poor affinity for mannitol.  相似文献   

3.
The inducible, mannitol-specific Enzyme II of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system has been purified approximately 230-fold from Escherichia coli membranes. The enzyme, initially solubilized with deoxycholate, was first subjected to hydrophobic chromatography on hexyl agarose and then purified by several ion exchange steps in the presence of the nonionic detergent, Lubrol PX. The purified protein appears homogeneous by several criteria and probably consists of a single kind of polypeptide chain with a molecular weight of 60,000 (+/- 5%). In addition to catalyzing phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphorylation of mannitol in the presence of the soluble enzymes of the phosphotransferase system, the purified Enzyme II also catalyzes mannitol 1-phosphate:mannitol transphosphorylation in the absence of these components. A number of other physical and catalytic properties of the enzyme are described. The availability of a stable, homogeneous Enzyme II should be invaluable for studying the mechanism of sugar translocation and phosphorylation catalyzed by the bacterial phosphotransferase system.  相似文献   

4.
The mechanism by which the oxidation-reduction potential regulates the bacterial phosphotransferase system in Escherichia coli has been investigated. Transphosphorylation experiments verified that the oxidizing agent, potassium ferricyanide, directly inhibits mannitol enzyme II activity. Phosphorylation of enzyme IImtl with enzyme I, heat-stable phosphocarrier protein of the phosphotransferase system, and phosphoenolpyruvate partially protects the enzyme from ferricyanide inhibition. The enzyme is even less sensitive to inhibition during catalytic turnover. Preincubation of unphosphorylated enzyme with ferricyanide, however, reversibly inactivates it even at high mannitol concentrations. The results are inconsistent with a regulatory mechanism in which sulfhydryl oxidation influences the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate. Instead, it is concluded that the oxidized enzyme is inactive.  相似文献   

5.
Column chromatography of the Escherichia coli mannitol permease (mannitol-specific enzyme II of the phosphotransferase system) in the presence of deoxycholate has revealed that the active permease can exist in at least two association states with apparent molecular weights consistent with a monomer and a dimer. The monomeric conformation is favored by the presence of mannitol and by the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)-dependent phosphorylation of the protein. The dimer is stabilized by inorganic phosphate (Pi), which also stimulates phospho-exchange between mannitol and mannitol 1-phosphate (a partial reaction in the overall PEP-dependent phosphorylation of mannitol). Kinetic analysis of the phospho-exchange reaction revealed that Pi stimulates phospho-exchange by increasing the Vmax of the reaction. A kinetic model for mannitol permease function is presented involving both conformations of the permease. The monomer (or a less-stable conformation of the dimer) is hypothesized to be involved in the initial mannitol-binding and PEP-dependent phosphorylation steps, while the stably associated dimer is suggested to participate in later steps involving direct phosphotransfer between the permease, mannitol and mannitol 1-phosphate.  相似文献   

6.
Purified mannitol-specific enzyme II (EIImtl), in the presence of the detergent Lubrol, catalyzes the phosphorylation of mannitol from P-HPr via a classical ping-pong mechanism involving the participation of a phosphorylated EIImtl intermediate. This intermediate has been demonstrated by using radioactive phosphoenolpyruvate. Upon addition of mannitol, at least 80% of the enzyme-bound phosphoryl groups can be converted to mannitol 1-phosphate. The EIImtl concentration dependence of the exchange reaction indicates that self-association is a prerequisite for catalytic activity. The self-association can be achieved by increasing the EIImtl concentration or at low concentrations of EIImtl by adding HPr or bovine serum albumin. The equilibrium is shifted toward the dissociated form by mannitol 1-phosphate, resulting in a mannitol 1-phosphate induced inhibition. Mannitol does not affect the association state of the enzyme. Both mannitol and mannitol 1-phosphate also act as classical substrate inhibitors. The apparent Ki of each compound, however, is approximately equal to its apparent Km, suggesting that mannitol and mannitol 1-phosphate bind at the same site on EIImtl. Due to strong inhibition provided by mannitol and mannitol 1-phosphate in the exchange reaction, the kinetics of this reaction cannot be used to determine whether the reaction proceeds via a ping-pong or an ordered reaction mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
Mannitol is dissimilated by Aerobacter aerogenes via an inducible pathway initiated by a phosphotransferase system dependent upon phosphoenolpyruvate as the phosphoryl donor. A mutational block in this pathway can be suppressed either at the phenotypic level by induction of d-arabitol dehydrogenase, an enzyme fortuitously capable of converting mannitol to fructose, or genotypically by a constitutive mutation in the d-arabitol system.  相似文献   

8.
The uptake of mannitol in Escherichia coli is controlled by the phosphoenolpyruvate dependent phosphotransferase system. Enzyme II mannitol (EIIMtl) is part of the phosphotransferase system and consists of three covalently bound domains. IICMtl, the integral membrane domain of EIIMtl, is responsible for mannitol transport across the cytoplasmic membrane. In order to understand this molecular process, two-dimensional crystals of IICMtl were grown by reconstitution into lipid bilayers and their structure was investigated by cryo-electron crystallography. The IICMtl crystals obey p22121 symmetry and have a unit cell of 125 Ax65 A, gamma=90 degrees. A projection structure was determined at 5 A resolution using both electron images and electron diffractograms. The unit cell contains two IICMtl dimers with a size of about 40 Ax90 A, which are oriented up and down in the crystal. Each monomer exhibits six domains of high density which most likely correspond to transmembrane alpha-helices and cytoplasmic loops.  相似文献   

9.
Purified mannitol-specific enzyme II (EII) from Escherichia coli was reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles with the aid of a detergent-dialysis procedure followed by a freeze-thaw sonication step. The orientation of EII in the proteoliposomes was random. The cytoplasmic moiety of the inverted EII could be removed with trypsin without effecting the integrity of the liposomal membrane. This enabled us to study the two different EII orientations independently. The population of inverted EII molecules was monitored by measuring active extrusion of mannitol after the addition of phosphoenolpyruvate, EI, and histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein (HPr) at the outside of the vesicles. The population of correctly oriented EII molecules was monitored by measuring active uptake of mannitol with internal phosphoenolpyruvate, EI, and HPr. A low rate of facilitated diffusion of mannitol via the unphosphorylated carrier could be measured. On the other hand, a high phosphorylation activity without translocation was observed at the outside of the liposomes. The kinetics of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent transport reaction and the nonvectorial phosphorylation reaction were compared. Transport of mannitol into the liposomes via the correctly oriented EII molecules occurred with a high affinity (Km, lower than 10 microM) and with a relatively low Vmax. Phosphorylation at the outside of the liposomes catalyzed by the inverted EII molecules occurred with a low affinity (Km of about 66 microM), while the maximal velocity was about 10 times faster than the transport reaction. The latter observation is kinetic proof for the lack of strict coupling between transport and phosphorylation in these enzymes.  相似文献   

10.
Four classes of Vibrio parahaemolyticus mutants defective in the phosphoenolpyruvate: glucose phosphotransferase system (PTS) are described. They were phenotypically different, and were defective in different PTS components. The components designated tentatively as II, I, III, and H were separated by gel filtration of a wild-type extract. Component II, which was specific for glucose and found in the particulate fraction, is probably membrane-bound, glucose-specific enzyme II. Both components I and H were soluble proteins, and the latter was relatively heat-stable. Component I was required for phosphorylation of glucose, trehalose, fructose, mannose, and mannitol. Component H was also required for phosphorylating all the above sugars except fructose. These and some additional findings strongly suggest that components I and H correspond to enzyme I and HPr, respectively. Component III, a soluble heat-stable protein, may be equivalent to the sugar-specific factor III found in other organisms, although it seems to participate in phosphorylating two sugars, glucose and trehalose. There were evidences that mutants defective in components I and III were deficient in cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate synthesis under certain conditions.  相似文献   

11.
Several independent assay procedures were used to estimate the activities of the enzyme constituents of the phosphoenolpyruvate-sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) in osmotically shocked bacterial membrane vesicles. The soluble enzymes of the system were found to be in association with the membrane by several criteria. Phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent sugar phosphorylation was catalyzed by this membrane-bound enzyme system far more efficiently than by a mixture of the individual enzymes at corresponding concentrations. By contrast, the rates of the phosphoryl exchange reactions catalyzed by enzyme I and the enzyme II complexes were essentially the same for the associated and dissociated forms of the system. Functional association of the PTS-enzyme complex was stabilized by Mg++ and phosphoenolpyruvate and could be destroyed by detergent treatment, sonication, or by passage of the vesicle preparation through a French pressure cell. These results lead to the possibility that in the intact bacterial cell the soluble enzymes of the phosphotransferase system exist, in part, as peripheral membrane constituents associated with the integral membrane enzyme II complexes.  相似文献   

12.
Mutant strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO were isolated on the basis of their inability to utilize mannitol as sole carbon source for growth. Four linkage groups (I through IV) among these mutant strains were resolved by two-factor crosses using the general transducing phage F116, and the strains appeared to contain point mutations as evidenced by ability to give rise to spontaneous revertants with wild phenotype on mannitol minimal agar. Group I strains were affected only in ability to grow on mannitol; all were deficient in inducible mannitol dehydrogenase activity, and all but one were deficient in inducible mannitol transport activity. Fructokinase was induced in group I strains and in wild-type bacteria during growth in the presence of mannitol but not fructose, indicating the presence of a pathway specific for endogenously generated fructose. Cells grown on fructose contained phosphoenolpyruvate:fructose-1-phosphotransferase activity, and mannitol-grown cells contained a lower level of this activity. Group II mutants were deficient in constitutive phosphoglucoisomerase, failed to grow on mannitol, grew very slowly on glycerol and fructose, but grew normally on glucose and gluconate. Group III strains were deficient in both nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide- and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-linked glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activities that reside in a single enzyme species. 6-Phosphogluconate appeared to be the inductive effector for this enzyme, which was not required for aerobic growth on glucose or gluconate. A single mannitol-negative mutant in group IV also failed to grow on glycerol and glucose, but no biochemical lesion was identified.  相似文献   

13.
Three positive selection procedures were developed for the isolation of plasmid-encoded mutants which were defective in the mannitol enzyme II (IIMtl) of the phosphotransferase system (mtlA mutants). The mutants were characterized with respect to the following properties: (i) fermentation, (ii) transport, (iii) phosphoenolpyruvate(PEP)-dependent phosphorylation, and (iv) mannitol-1-phosphate-dependent transphosphorylation of mannitol. Cell lysis in response to indole acrylic acid, which causes the lethal overexpression of the plasmid-encoded mtlA gene, was also scored. No correlation was noted between residual IIMtl activity in the mutants and sensitivity to the toxic effect of indole acrylic acid. Plasmid-encoded mutants were isolated with (i) total or partial loss of all activities assayed, (ii) nearly normal rates of transphosphorylation but reduced rates of PEP-dependent phosphorylation, (iii) nearly normal rates of PEP-dependent phosphorylation but reduced rates of transphosphorylation, and (iv) total loss of transport activity but substantial retention of both phosphorylation activities in vitro. A mutant of this fourth class was extensively characterized. The mutant IIMtl was shown to be more thermolabile than the wild-type enzyme, it exhibited altered kinetic behavior, and it was shown to arise by a single nucleotide substitution (G-895----A) in the mtlA gene, causing a single amino acyl substitution (Gly-253----Glu) in the permease. The results show that a single amino acyl substitution can abolish transport function without abolishing phosphorylation activity. This work serves to identify a site which is crucial to the transport function of the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Fructose and mannitol are fermented by Clostridium thermocellum in a medium containing salts and 0.5% yeast extract. The initial reaction in the catabolism of fructose was found to be the formation of fructose l-phosphate by phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP):fructose phosphotransferase which resembles the Kundig-Roseman phosphotransferase system. The phosphorylation of fructose l-phosphate to form fructose-1, 6-diphosphate is catalyzed by fructose l-phosphate kinase. Fructose-1, 6-diphosphate can be further metabolized by the Embden-Meyerhof pathway. The formation of both PEP:fructose phosphotransferase and fructose l-phosphate kinase is induced by growth in fructose medium. Mannitol catabolism was found to proceed by the phosphorylation of mannitol by PEP:mannitol phosphotransferase to form mannitol l-phosphate. Mannitol l-phosphate is converted to fructose 6-phosphate by a nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-specific mannitol l-phosphate dehydrogenase. The fructose 6-phosphate formed in the reaction can enter the glycolytic scheme. The formation of both PEP:mannitol phosphotransferase and mannitol l-phosphate dehydrogenase is induced by growth in mannitol medium. Evidence is presented for the induction by mannitol of PEP:mannitol phosphotransferase and mannitol l-phosphate dehydrogenase in suspensions of fructose-grown cells.  相似文献   

15.
Purified mannitol Enzyme II from Escherichia coli was reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles employing the octylglucoside dilution procedure and was shown to catalyze vectorial mannitol 1-phosphate:mannitol transphosphorylation. Reconstitution of the enzyme into liposomes showed a marked dependency upon the octylglucoside concentration with an optimum at 1.2%. The reconstituted transphosphorylation activity exhibited an absolute dependence upon mannitol 1-phosphate as the phosphoryl donor, was sensitive to N-ethylmaleimide, and had a pH optimum near 6. The intravesicular radiolabeled mannitol phosphate could be released from the proteoliposomes by the addition of either 50 microM unlabeled mannitol or 0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate. The rate of formation of intraliposomal mannitol phosphate, measured as a function of the mannitol Enzyme II concentration, showed a sigmoidal response, suggesting that at high enzyme concentrations the mannitol Enzyme II exists in an aggregated or oligomeric state and that this form is more active than the monomeric or dissociated form of the enzyme in catalyzing the vectorial mannitol transphosphorylation reaction.  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.
The permeases of the Escherichia coli phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS), the sugar-specific enzymes II, are energized by sequential phosphoryl transfer from phosphoenolpyruvate to (i) enzyme I, (ii) the phosphocarrier protein HPr, (iii) the enzyme IIA domains of the permeases, and (iv) the enzyme IIBC domains of the permeases which transport and phosphorylate their sugar substrates. A number of site-specific mutants of HPr were examined by using kinetic approaches. Most of the mutations exerted minimal effects on the kinetic parameters characterizing reactions involving phosphoryl transfer from phospho-HPr to various sugars. However, when the well-conserved aspartyl 69 residue in HPr was changed to a glutamyl residue, the affinities for phospho-HPr of the enzymes II specific for mannitol, N-acetylglucosamine, and beta-glucosides decreased markedly without changing the maximal reaction rates. The same mutation reduced the spontaneous rate of phosphohistidyl HPr hydrolysis but did not appear to alter the rate of phosphoryl transfer from phospho-enzyme I to HPr. When the adjacent glutamyl residue 70 in HPr was changed to a lysyl residue, the Vmax values of the reactions catalyzed by the enzymes II were reduced, but the Km values remained unaltered. Changing this residue to alanine exerted little effect. Site-specific alterations in the C terminus of the beta-glucoside enzyme II which reduced the maximal reaction rate of phosphoryl transfer about 20-fold did not alter the relative kinetic parameters because of the aforementioned mutations in HPr. Published three-dimensional structural analyses of HPr and the complex of HPr with the glucose-specific enzyme IIA (IIAGlc) (homologous to the beta-glucoside and N-acetylglucosamine enzyme IIA domains) have revealed that residues 69 and 70 in HPr are distant from the active phosphorylation site and the IIAGlc binding interface in HPr. The results reported therefore suggest that residues D-69 and E-70 in HPr play important roles in controlling conformational aspects of HPr that influence (i) autophosphohydrolysis, (ii) the interaction of this protein with the sugar permeases of the bacterial phosphotransferase system, and (iii) catalysis of phosphoryl transfer to the IIA domains in these permeases.  相似文献   

18.
Clostridium difficile ATCC 43255 fermented less than 10% of the mannitol in a medium at pH 7; however, when the initial pH of the medium was adjusted to 8.5 or 9, about 80% of the mannitol was fermented. Cell extracts of C. difficile phosphorylated mannitol with phosphoenolpyruvate, not ATP, indicating a phosphoenolpyruvate phosphotransferase system transport phosphorylation of mannitol. The phosphorylation product was dehydrogenated by D-mannitol-1-phosphate:NAD oxidoreductase. Growth at an initial pH of 8.5 yielded cytotoxin titers of 10(7) to 10(8) in Trypticase-yeast extract-mannitol medium, wit a titer of 10(8) as early as 13 h.  相似文献   

19.
Structural information about proteins involved in bacterial hexose transport mediated by the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system is rapidly accumulating. Within the past year, two crystal structures and two solution NMR structures of the histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein have been reported, adding structural details to previous NMR and crystallographic work on this protein and on enzyme IIA. The crystal structure of the regulatory complex between the glucose enzyme IIA and glycerol kinase has been determined, and the association of the histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein and either the glucose enzyme IIA or the mannitol enzyme IIA have been studied by NMR. Proposals concerning the mechanism of phosphoryl transfer and the protein-protein interactions involved may now be tested more rigorously using these data.  相似文献   

20.
The overall stereochemical course of the reactions leading to the phosphorylation of methyl alpha-D-glucopyranoside by the glucose-specific enzyme II (enzyme IIGlc) of the Escherichia coli phosphotransferase system has been investigated. With [(R)-16O,17O,18O]phosphoenolpyruvate as the phosphoryl donor and in the presence of enzyme I, HPr, and enzyme IIIGlc of the phosphotransferase system, membranes from E. coli containing enzyme IIGlc catalyzed the formation of methyl alpha-D-glucopyranoside 6-phosphate with overall inversion of the configuration at phosphorus (with respect to phosphoenolpyruvate). It has previously been shown that sequential covalent transfer of the phosphoryl group of phosphoenolpyruvate to enzyme I, to HPr, and to enzyme IIIGlc occurs before the final transfer from phospho-enzyme IIIGlc to the sugar, catalyzed by enzyme IIGlc. Because overall inversion of the configuration of the chiral phospho group of phosphoenolpyruvate implies an odd number of transfer steps, the phospho group has been transferred at least five times, and transfer from phospho-enzyme IIIGlc to the sugar must occur in two steps (or a multiple thereof). On the basis that no membrane protein other than enzyme IIGlc is directly involved in the final phospho transfer steps, our results imply that a covalent phospho-enzyme IIGlc is an intermediate during transport and phosphorylation of glucose by the E. coli phosphotransferase system.  相似文献   

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