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1.
Homolactic fermentation of glucose and heterolactic fermentation of maltose with Lactococcus lactis 65.1 were confirmed. When moles of glucose were compared, the uptake rates of the two carbon sources were similar. The intracellular concentration of fructose-1,6-diphosphate (FDP) in maltose-assimilating cells was half of that in glucose-assimilating cells. Similarly, formation of FDP and lactate from maltose by extracts of maltose-grown cells was half of that formed from glucose by extracts of glucose-grown cells, indicating a difference in the utilization of the two carbon sources for energy metabolism. Concentrations of adenine nucleotides were similar in both types of cells. Glucose-1-phosphate was found in extracts of maltose-grown cells given maltose and, in addition, an inducible and low β-specific phosphoglucomutase activity was observed. β-Glucose-1-phosphate was not metabolized by cell extracts to either FDP or lactate, suggesting an alternative metabolic route. The amount of [14C]maltose incorporated into the cell material of maltose-grown cells was four times greater than that of [14C]glucose incorporated into the cell material of glucose-grown cells. The intracellular concentration of UTP was lower in maltose-assimilating cells than in glucose-assimilating cells. Cells grown on maltose were more spherical and less fragile than cells grown on glucose.  相似文献   

2.
Glycogen Formation by the Ruminal Bacterium Prevotella ruminicola   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Prevotella ruminicola is an important ruminal bacteria. In maltose-grown cells, nearly 60% of cell dry weight consisted of high-molecular-weight (>2 x 10(sup6)) glycogen. The ratio of glycogen to protein (grams per gram) was relatively low (1.3) during exponential growth, but when cell growth slowed during the transition to the stationary phase, the ratio increased to 1.8. As much as 40% of the maltose was converted to glycogen during cell growth. Glycogen accumulation in glucose-grown cells was threefold lower than that in maltose-grown cells. In continuous cultures provided with maltose, much less glycogen was synthesized at high (>0.2 per h) than at low dilution rates, where maltose was limiting (28 versus 60% of dry weight, respectively). These results indicated that glycogen synthesis was stimulated at low growth rates and was also influenced by the growth substrate. In permeabilized cells, glycogen was synthesized from [(sup14)C]glucose-1-phosphate but not radiolabelled glucose, indicating that glucose-1-phosphate is the initial precursor of glycogen formation. Glycogen accumulation may provide a survival mechanism for P. ruminicola during periods of carbon starvation and may have a role in controlling starch fermentation in the rumen.  相似文献   

3.
The synthesis of mitochondrial enzymes inSaccharomyces cerevisiae is partly derepressed during growth with maltose as compared with glucose. The present investigations were aimed at finding any more differences between maltose- and glucose-grown cultures that might indicate the nature of the effector(s) of catabolite repression.The capacity of the pentose-phosphate pathway in resting cells is the same whether they have been grown on maltose or on glucose; about 9% of the sugar is metabolized via this pathway. The activities of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase are the same in both cultures. There is, however, a correlation between the repression of aconitase synthesis by glucose and the intracellular level of glucose-6-phosphate.There are no differences between maltose- and glucose-grown cultures in the concentration of structural and reserve carbohydrates, RNA and proteins, except for glycogen. In young maltose-grown cultures the level of this polysaccharide is about 25% higher.The growth rate and the rate of sugar consumption per mg of cells in maltose-grown cultures are about 30% lower than in glucose-grown cultures. Probably the restriction of sugar consumption in maltose-grown cultures results in less accumulation of catabolites and in partial derepression of the synthesis of mitochondrial enzymes.The author is much indebted to Mrs. M. Vermeulen-Verdam for her skillful and enthusiastic assistance. He also thanks Mr. J. H. M. Bex, Mr. L. van Dijk, Mr. E. A. H. Huisman and Mr. A. de Wit for their cooperation in some parts of the present work.  相似文献   

4.
A beta-phosphoglucomutase (beta-PGM) mutant of Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis ATCC 19435 was constructed using a minimal integration vector and double-crossover recombination. The mutant and the wild-type strain were grown under controlled conditions with different sugars to elucidate the role of beta-PGM in carbohydrate catabolism and anabolism. The mutation did not significantly affect growth, product formation, or cell composition when glucose or lactose was used as the carbon source. With maltose or trehalose as the carbon source the wild-type strain had a maximum specific growth rate of 0.5 h(-1), while the deletion of beta-PGM resulted in a maximum specific growth rate of 0.05 h(-1) on maltose and no growth at all on trehalose. Growth of the mutant strain on maltose resulted in smaller amounts of lactate but more formate, acetate, and ethanol, and approximately 1/10 of the maltose was found as beta-glucose 1-phosphate in the medium. Furthermore, the beta-PGM mutant cells grown on maltose were considerably larger and accumulated polysaccharides which consisted of alpha-1,4-bound glucose units. When the cells were grown at a low dilution rate in a glucose and maltose mixture, the wild-type strain exhibited a higher carbohydrate content than when grown at higher growth rates, but still this content was lower than that in the beta-PGM mutant. In addition, significant differences in the initial metabolism of maltose and trehalose were found, and cell extracts did not digest free trehalose but only trehalose 6-phosphate, which yielded beta-glucose 1-phosphate and glucose 6-phosphate. This demonstrates the presence of a novel enzymatic pathway for trehalose different from that of maltose metabolism in L. lactis.  相似文献   

5.
Two distinct forms of phosphoglucomutase were found in Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis, strains 19435 and 65.1, growing on maltose: beta-phosphoglucomutase (beta-PGM), which catalyzes the reversible conversion of beta-glucose 1-phosphate to glucose 6-phosphate in the maltose catabolism, and alpha-phosphoglucomutase (alpha-PGM). beta-PGM was purified to more than 90% homogeneity in crude cell extract from maltose-grown lactococci, and polyclonal antisera to the enzyme were prepared. The molecular mass of beta-PGM was estimated by gel filtration to be 28 kDa; its isoelectric point was 4.8. The corresponding values for alpha-PGM were 65 kDa and 4.4, respectively. The expression of both PGM enzymes was investigated under different growth conditions. The specific activity and amount of beta-PGM per milliliter of cell extract increased with time in lactococci grown on maltose, but the enzyme was absent in lactococci grown on glucose, indicating enzyme synthesis to be induced by maltose in the growth medium. When glucose was added to maltose-grown lactococci, both the specific activity and amount of beta-PGM per milliliter of cell extract decreased rapidly. This suggests that synthesis of beta-PGM is repressed by glucose in the medium. Although the specific activity of alpha-PGM did not change during growth on maltose or glucose, lactococcal strain 19435 showed a much higher specific activity of both alpha- and beta-PGM than strain 65.1 when grown on maltose.  相似文献   

6.
Activity of D-lactate dehydrogenase (D-LDH) was shown not only in cell extracts from Megasphaera elsdenii grown on DL-lactate, but also in cell extracts from glucose-grown cells, although glucose-grown cells contained approximately half as much D-LDH as DL-lactate-grown cells. This indicates that the D-LDH of M. elsdenii is a constitutive enzyme. However, lactate racemase (LR) activity was present in DL-lactate-grown cells, but was not detected in glucose-grown cells, suggesting that LR is induced by lactate. Acetate, propionate, and butyrate were produced similarly from both D- and L-lactate, indicating that LR can be induced by both D- and L-lactate. These results suggest that the primary reason for the inability of M. elsdenii to produce propionate from glucose is that cells fermenting glucose do not synthesize LR, which is induced by lactate.  相似文献   

7.
Lactobacillus sanfrancisco LTH 2581 can use only glucose and maltose as sources of metabolic energy. In maltose-metabolizing cells of L. sanfrancisco, approximately half of the internally generated glucose appears in the medium. The mechanisms of maltose (and glucose) uptake and glucose excretion have been investigated in cells and in membrane vesicles of L. sanfrancisco in which beef heart cytochrome c oxidase had been incorporated as a proton-motive-force-generating system. In the presence of ascorbate, N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD), and cytochrome c, the hybrid membranes facilitated maltose uptake against a concentration gradient, but accumulation of glucose could not be detected. Similarly, in intact cells of L. sanfrancisco, the nonmetabolizable glucose analog alpha-methylglucoside was taken up only to the equilibration level. Selective dissipation of the components of the proton and sodium motive force in the hybrid membranes indicated that maltose is transported by a proton symport mechanism. Internal [14C]maltose could be chased with external unlabeled maltose (homologous exchange), but heterologous maltose/glucose exchange could not be detected. Membrane vesicles of L. sanfrancisco also catalyzed glucose efflux and homologous glucose exchange. These activities could not be detected in membrane vesicles of glucose-grown cells. The results indicate that maltose-grown cells of L. sanfrancisco express a maltose-H+ symport and glucose uniport system. When maltose is the substrate, the formation of intracellular glucose can be more rapid than the subsequent metabolism, which leads to excretion of glucose via the uniport system.  相似文献   

8.
Three strains of Lactococcus lactis ssp. lactis, a dairy strain 65.1, a type strain ATCC 19435, and a mutant AS 211, were grown on glucose and on maltose under chemostat conditions. When the culture was shifted from glucose-limiting to non-limiting conditions, the product shifted from mixed acids to lactate. Mixed acids were obtained in all maltose cultures; however, an enhanced lactate formation was observed in 19435 and AS 211. An inorganic-phosphate (Pi)-dependent maltose phosphorylase activity was found to be responsible for the initial conversion of maltose. The activation of maltose phosphorylase by Pi was strain-specific. When growth was on maltose under non-limiting conditions, a correlation was found between high initial maltose phosphorylase and -phosphoglucomutase activities and lactate production. No such correlation was observed in maltose-limited cells. In glucose-grown cells under non-limiting conditions, homo-fermentative lactate formation coincided with high concentrations of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (Fru1,6P 2) and pyruvate (Pyr) and low concentrations of phosphoenolpyruvate (PPyr). Under limiting conditions, mixed acid formation coincided with low concentrations of Fru1,6P 2 and Pyr and high concentrations of PPyr. In maltose-grown cells there was no correlation between intracellular intermediary metabolite concentrations and product formation. Therefore, in addition to intracellular intermediary metabolite concentrations, the product formation on maltose is suggested to be regulated by the transport and initial phosphorylating steps.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Streptococcus lactis ferments glucose in a homolactic fashion but a heterolactic fermentation pattern is observed when it is grown on maltose. Using in vivo phosphorus-31 and carbon-13 NMR studies of glucose-metabolizing cells we confirmed that fructosediphosphate (FDP) is the major glycolytic intermediate and that the production of lactate causes major changes both in the intra- and extracellular pH values. Starved cells contain mainly 3-phosphoglycerate (3-PGA) and some phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP). Metabolism of maltose also brings about major changes in pH, but it was unclear from the poorly resolved in vivo spectra if FDP was the main glycolytic intermediate present. This question was further studied by analyzing perchloric acid extracts by phosphorus-31 NMR. These studies showed that glucose-metabolizing cells have higher levels of FDP and lower levels of inorganic phosphate (P i ) than maltose-metabolizing cells. 3-PGA always remained present in the latter cells suggesting that these exist in a semi-starved state which is probably the reason for their heterolactic fermentation pattern. In the course of these studies we also examined the effects of the inhibitors 2-deoxyglucose, fluoride and iodoacetate. We could demonstrate that by judicious choice of carbon sources and inhibitors one could completely reduce the intracellular P i pool. This suggests that one should be able to regulate the shift from heterolactic to homolactic fermentation, as P i is considered to be the most potent inhibitor of pyruvate kinase in these cells.Sponsored by grants from the Swedish Natural Sciences Research Council (NFR) (to BHH and HJV), the Biotechnology Research Foundation (SBF) (to BHH) and the Canadian Natural Sciences Research Council (NSERC) (to HJV)  相似文献   

10.
A β-phosphoglucomutase (β-PGM) mutant of Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis ATCC 19435 was constructed using a minimal integration vector and double-crossover recombination. The mutant and the wild-type strain were grown under controlled conditions with different sugars to elucidate the role of β-PGM in carbohydrate catabolism and anabolism. The mutation did not significantly affect growth, product formation, or cell composition when glucose or lactose was used as the carbon source. With maltose or trehalose as the carbon source the wild-type strain had a maximum specific growth rate of 0.5 h−1, while the deletion of β-PGM resulted in a maximum specific growth rate of 0.05 h−1 on maltose and no growth at all on trehalose. Growth of the mutant strain on maltose resulted in smaller amounts of lactate but more formate, acetate, and ethanol, and approximately 1/10 of the maltose was found as β-glucose 1-phosphate in the medium. Furthermore, the β-PGM mutant cells grown on maltose were considerably larger and accumulated polysaccharides which consisted of α-1,4-bound glucose units. When the cells were grown at a low dilution rate in a glucose and maltose mixture, the wild-type strain exhibited a higher carbohydrate content than when grown at higher growth rates, but still this content was lower than that in the β-PGM mutant. In addition, significant differences in the initial metabolism of maltose and trehalose were found, and cell extracts did not digest free trehalose but only trehalose 6-phosphate, which yielded β-glucose 1-phosphate and glucose 6-phosphate. This demonstrates the presence of a novel enzymatic pathway for trehalose different from that of maltose metabolism in L. lactis.  相似文献   

11.
Utilisation of maltose and glucose by lactobacilli isolated from sourdough   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Abstract The utilisation of glucose and maltose was investigated with Lactobacillus strains isolated from sourdough starters. These preparations have been in continuous use for a long period to produce sourdough from rye, wheat and sorghum. The major metabolic products formed by resting cells from glucose or maltose were lactate, ethanol and acetate. Upon fermentation of maltose, resting cells of Lactobacillus sanfrancisco, L. reuteri, L. fermentum and Lactobacillus ep. released up to 13.8 mM glucose after 8 h. The ratio of released glucose per mol of utilised maltose was up to 1:1. Glucose formation was high when starved cells of L. sanfrancisco and Lactobacillus sp. were used. This is consistent with maltose utilisation via maltose phosphorylase which phosphorylates maltose without the expenditure of ATP and thus allows the cell to waste glucose in the presence of abundant maltose. The glucose formed may be utilised by the lactobacilli or other microorganisms, e.g. yeasts. However, the release of glucose into the medium by sourdough lactobacilli prevents competitors from utilising the abundant maltose by glucose repression. In strains of L. sanfrancisco , maltose utilisation was very effective and not subject to glucose repression. Therefore, they overgrow other microorganisms sharing this habitat. Wild isolates of L. sanfrancisco were initially unable to grow on glucose. Upon growth on maltose such strains required adaptation times of up to 150 h to grow on glucose. After subsequent transfer of glucose-grown cells to fresh medium the strains resumed growth both on glucose or maltose. They readily lost their ability to grow on glucose upon exposure to maltose. L. sanfrancisco exhibited biphasic growth characteristics on media containing glucose, maltose or both carbon sources. Evidence is provided that biphasic growth and metabolite formation are dependent on the redox potential.  相似文献   

12.
J Lou  K A Dawson    H J Strobel 《Applied microbiology》1997,63(11):4355-4359
Prevotella bryantii is an important amylolytic bacterium in the rumen that produces considerable amounts of glycogen when it is grown on maltose. Radiolabel studies indicated that glucose-1-phosphate was converted to UDP-glucose, and this latter intermediate served as the immediate precursor for glycogen synthesis. High levels of UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase activities (> 1,492 nmol/min/mg of protein) were detected in cells grown on maltose, cellobiose, glucose, or sucrose, and activity was greatly stimulated (by approximately 60-fold) by the addition of fructose-1,6-bis phosphate (half-maximal activation concentration was 240 microM). However, ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase activity was not detected in any of the cultures. Glycogen synthase activity in maltose-grown cultures (48 nmol/min/mg of protein) was higher than that in cellobiose-, sucrose-, and glucose-grown cultures (< 26 nmol/min/mg of protein). This is the first report of a bacterium that exclusively uses UDP-glucose to synthesize glycogen. The elucidation of this unique glycogen biosynthesis pathway provides information necessary to further investigate the role of bacterial glycogen accumulation in rumen metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
Lysine-mediated inhibition of postexponential growth in Saccharomyces cerevisiae occurred when glucose, fructose, or maltose, but not lactate, pyruvate, or ethanol, was used as the carbon source. Arginine starvation is not responsible for the inhibitory effect, since neither the intracellular pool of glucose-grown (inhibited) cells nor that of lactate-grown (noninhibited) cells contained arginine.  相似文献   

14.
When Cladosporium resinae is provided with n-hexadecane and glucose, n-hexadecane is used preferentially. Studies using [14C]glucose indicated that n-hexadecane did not inhibit glucose uptake but did retard oxidation of glucose to CO2 and assimilation of glucose carbon into trichloroacetic acid-insoluble material. Glucose could be recovered quantitatively from hydrocarbon-grown cells that had been transferred to glucose. Four enzymes that may be involved in glucose metabolism, hexokinase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, glucose-phosphate isomerase, and succinate dehydrogenase, were not detected in cells grown on hexadecane but were present in cells grown on glucose. Addition of hexadecane to extracts of glucose-grown cells resulted in immediate loss of activity for each of the four enzymes, but two other enzymes did not directly involved in glucose metabolism, adenosine triphosphatase and alanine-ketoacid aminotransferase, were not inhibited by hexadecane in vitro. Cells grown on hexadecane and transferred to glucose metabolize intracellular hexadecane; after 1 day, activity of hexokinase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, glucosephosphate isomerase, and succinate dehydrogenase could be detected and 22% of the intracellular hydrocarbon had been metabolized. Hexadecane-grown cells transferred to glucose plus cycloheximide showed the same level of activity of all the four enzymes as cells transferred to glucose alone. Thus, intracellular n-hexadecane or a metabolite of hexadecane can inthesis of those enzymes is not inhibited.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract Pullulan is an industrial biopolymer produced by the yeast-like fungus Aureobasidium , usually by direct fermentation of starch. Despite evidence that autogenous amylases produced during these fermentations are detrimental to the final molecular mass of the product, fundamental studies of these enzymes have not been reported. Total extracellular amylases were studied from the promising production strain NRRL Y-12,974. Growth rates and yields were equivalent in cultures grown on glucose, maltose, soluble starch, or cornstarch. Total amylase levels were low and varied only three-fold, from 0.01 IU ml−1 in glucose-grown cultures to 0.03 IU ml−1 in soluble-starch-grown cultures. All cultures showed both α-amylase activity and activity against pullulan. Synthetic oligosaccharide substrates were apparently attacked by an α-glucosidase, produced in highest levels by maltose-grown cultures.  相似文献   

16.
Extracts of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (ATCC 7700) cells grown on glucose, gluconate, or glycerol had enzyme activities related to the Entner-Doudoroff pathway. These activities were present in no more than trace amounts when the bacteria were grown on succinate. Fructose-1,6-diphosphate aldolase could not be detected in extracts of the bacteria grown on any of the above carbon sources. Therefore, it appears that P. aeruginosa degrades glucose via an inducible Entner-Doudoroff pathway. The apparent absence of fructose-1,6-diphosphate aldolase in cells growing on succinate suggests that the bacteria can form hexose and pentose phosphates from succinate by an alternate route. d-Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, a branch-point enzyme of the Entner-Doudoroff pathway, was purified 50-fold from glucose-grown cells. Its molecular weight, estimated by sucrose density gradient centrifugation, was found to be approximately 190,000. The enzyme was strongly inhibited by adenosine triphosphate, guanosine triphosphate, and deoxyguanosine triphosphate, which decreased the apparent binding of glucose-6-phosphate to the enzyme. It is suggested that adenine nucleotide-linked control of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase may regulate the overall catabolism of hexose phosphates and prevent their wasteful degradation under certain conditions requiring gluconeogenesis.  相似文献   

17.
Lactic streptococci, classically regarded as homolactic fermenters of glucose and lactose, became heterolactic when grown with limiting carbohydrate concentrations in a chemostat. At high dilution rates (D) with excess glucose present, about 95% of the fermented sugar was converted to l-lactate. However, as D was lowered and glucose became limiting, five of the six strains tested changed to a heterolactic fermentation such that at D = 0.1 h(-1) as little as 1% of the glucose was converted to l-lactate. The products formed after this phenotypic change in fermentation pattern were formate, acetate, and ethanol. The level of lactate dehydrogenase, which is dependent upon ketohexose diphosphate for activity, decreased as fermentation became heterolactic with Streptococcus lactis ML(3). Transfer of heterolactic cells from the chemostat to buffer containing glucose resulted in the nongrowing cells converting nearly 80% of the glucose to l-lactate, indicating that fine control of enzyme activity is an important factor in the fermentation change. These nongrowing cells metabolizing glucose had elevated (ca. twofold) intracellular fructose 1,6-diphosphate concentrations ([FDP](in)) compared with those in the glucose-limited heterolactic cells in the chemostat. [FDP](in) was monitored during the change in fermentation pattern observed in the chemostat when glucose became limiting. Cells converting 95 and 1% of the glucose to l-lactate contained 25 and 10 mM [FDP](in), respectively. It is suggested that factors involved in the change to heterolactic fermentation include both [FDP](in) and the level of lactate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

18.
A detailed study of the glucose fermentation pathway and the modulation of catabolic oxidoreductase activities by energy sources (i.e., glucose versus lactate or fumarate) in Propionispira arboris was performed. 14C radiotracer data show the CO2 produced from pyruvate oxidation comes exclusively from the C-3 and C-4 positions of glucose. Significant specific activities of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase were detected, which substantiates the utilization of the Embden-Meyerhoff-Parnas path for glucose metabolism. The methylmalonyl coenzyme A pathway for pyruvate reduction to propionate was established by detection of significant activities (greater than 16 nmol/min per mg of protein) of methylmalonyl coenzyme A transcarboxylase, malate dehydrogenase, and fumarate reductase in cell-free extracts and by 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic demonstration of randomization of label from [2-13C]pyruvate into positions 2 and 3 of propionate. The specific activity of pyruvate-ferredoxin oxidoreductase, malate dehydrogenase, fumarate reductase, and transcarboxylase varied significantly in cells grown on different energy sources. D-Lactate dehydrogenase (non-NADH linked) was present in cells of P. arboris grown on lactate but not in cells grown on glucose or fumarate. These results indicate that growth substrates regulate synthesis of enzymes specific for the methylmalonyl coenzyme A path and initial substrate transformation.  相似文献   

19.
Enzymatic activities involved in glucose fermentation of Actinomyces naeslundii were studied with glucose-grown cells from batch cultures. Glucose could be phosphorylated to glucose 6-phosphate by a glucokinase that utilized polyphosphate and GTP instead of ATP as a phosphoryl donor. Glucose 6-phosphate was further metabolized to the end products lactate, formate, acetate, and succinate through the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway. The phosphoryl donor for phosphofructokinase was only PPi. Phosphoglycerate kinase, pyruvate kinase, and acetate kinase coupled GDP as well as ADP, but P(i) compounds were not their phosphoryl acceptor. Cell extracts showed GDP-dependent activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, which assimilates bicarbonate and phosphoenolpyruvate into oxaloacetate, a precursor of succinate. Considerable amounts of GTP, polyphosphate, and PPi were found in glucose-fermenting cells, indicating that these compounds may serve as phosphoryl donors or acceptors in Actinomyces cells. PPi could be generated from UTP and glucose 1-phosphate through catalysis of UDP-glucose synthase, which provides UDP-glucose, a precursor of glycogen.  相似文献   

20.
Streptococcus mutans JC2 produced formate, acetate, ethanol, and lactate when suspensions were incubated with an excess of galactose or mannitol under strictly anaerobic conditions. The galactose- or mannitol-grown cell suspensions produced more formate, acetate, and ethanol than the glucose-grown cells even when incubated with glucose. The levels of lactate dehydrogenase and fructose 1,6-bisphosphate were not significantly different in these cells, but the level of pyruvate formate-lyase was higher in the galactose- or mannitol-grown cells, and that of triose phosphate was lower in the galactose-grown cells. This suggests that the regulation of pyruvate formate-lyase may play a major role in the change of the fermentation patterns. The cells of S. mutans grown on glucose produced a significant amount of volatile products even in the presence of excess glucose under strictly anaerobic conditions. However, when the anaerobically grown cells were exposed to air, only lactate was produced from glucose. When cells were anaerobically grown on mannitol and then exposed to air for 2 min, only trace amounts of fermentation products were formed from mannitol under anaerobic conditions. It was found that the pyruvate formate-lyase in the cells was inactivated by exposure of the cells to air.  相似文献   

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