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1.
Some enzymatic activities of the glycolytic and hexose monophosphate pathways of Candida parapsilosis, a yeast lacking alcohol dehydrogenase but able to grow on high glucose concentrations, were compared to those of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Cells were grown either on 8% glucose or on 2% glycerol and activities measured under optimal conditions. Results were as follows: glycolytic enzymes of C. parapsilosis, except glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, exhibited an activity weaker than that of S. cerevisiae, especially when yeasts were grown on glycerol. Fructose-1,6 bisphosphatase, an enzyme implicated in gluconeogenesis and in the hexose monophosphate pathway, and known to be very sensitive to catabolite repression in S. cerevisiae, was always active in C. parapsilosis even when cells were grown on 8% glucose. However, the allosteric properties towards AMP and fructose-2,6-bisphosphate were the same in both strains. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, two other enzymes of the hexose monophosphate pathway, exhibited a higher activity in C. parapsilosis than in S. cerevisiae. Regulation of two important control points of the glycolytic flux, phosphofructokinase and pyruvate kinase, was investigated. In C. parapsilosis phosphofructokinase was poorly sensitive to ATP but fructose-2,60bisphosphate completely relieved the light ATP inhibition. Pyruvate kinase did not require fructose-1,6-bisphosphate for its activity, and by this way, did not regulate the glycolytic flux. The high glyceraldehyde-3-P-dehydrogenase activity, together with the relative insensitivity of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase to catabolite repression and the high glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase activities suggested that in C. parapsilosis, as in other Candida species and opposite to S. cerevisiae, the glucose degradation mainly occurred through the hexose monophosphate pathway, under both growth conditions used.Abbreviations C. parapsilosis Candida parapsilosis - S. cerevisiae Saccharomyces cerevisiae - C. utilis Candida utilis  相似文献   

2.
Summary Glycolytic parameters were determined in recessive yeast mutants with partial defects in carbon catabolite repression. Specific activities of pyruvate kinase and pyruvate decarboxylase in glucose grown cells of all mutant and wild type stains were 4–5 times higher than in ethanol grown cells. Mutants of gene HEX1 had a reduced hexose phosphorylating activity on allmedia wheras those of gene HEX2 had elevated levels but only in glucose grown cells. Mutants of gene CAT80 were normal in this respect. All other glycolytic enzymes were normal in all mutants. This was also true for glycolytic intermediates. Only hexlmutants showed a reduced fermentation of repressing sugars. The three genes appear to be involved in catabolite repression of several but not of all repressible enzymes. Even though all three types of mutants show a limited overlap in their effects on certain enzymes, they still are distinctly different in their action spectra. Carbon catabolite repression apparently does not depend on the sole accumulation of glycolytic intermediales. The activity of the products of the three genes HEX1, HEX2 and CAT80 are required directly or indirectly for triggering carbon catabolite repression. Even a small segment of carbon catabolite repression is controlled by several genes with regulatory functions indicating that the entire regulatory circuit is highly complex.  相似文献   

3.
Summary A mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with reduced hexokinase activity and deficient in carbon catabolite inactivation is described. The reason for this lack of inactivation is not a lowered concentration of glycolysis metabolites or other low molecular effectors such as glucose, and ATP. The results point to the hexose phosphorylation step as initiator for carbon catabolite inactivation. It appears that one of the hexokinase isoenzymes, altered in the mutant, initiates the inactivation by conformational change. Repression of enzymes that are subject to carbon catabolite inactivation, is normal in the mutant. This indicates that inactivation and repression of those enzymes proceed in different ways, even though they may share common intermediate reactions.  相似文献   

4.
Hexokinase II is an enzyme central to glucose metabolism and glucose repression in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Deletion of HXK2, the gene which encodes hexokinase II, dramatically changed the physiology of S. cerevisiae. The hxk2-null mutant strain displayed fully oxidative growth at high glucose concentrations in early exponential batch cultures, resulting in an initial absence of fermentative products such as ethanol, a postponed and shortened diauxic shift, and higher biomass yields. Several intracellular changes were associated with the deletion of hexokinase II. The hxk2 mutant had a higher mitochondrial H+-ATPase activity and a lower pyruvate decarboxylase activity, which coincided with an intracellular accumulation of pyruvate in the hxk2 mutant. The concentrations of adenine nucleotides, glucose-6-phosphate, and fructose-6-phosphate are comparable in the wild type and the hxk2 mutant. In contrast, the concentration of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate, an allosteric activator of pyruvate kinase, is clearly lower in the hxk2 mutant than in the wild type. The results suggest a redirection of carbon flux in the hxk2 mutant to the production of biomass as a consequence of reduced glucose repression.  相似文献   

5.
Hexokinase II is an enzyme central to glucose metabolism and glucose repression in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Deletion of HXK2, the gene which encodes hexokinase II, dramatically changed the physiology of S. cerevisiae. The hxk2-null mutant strain displayed fully oxidative growth at high glucose concentrations in early exponential batch cultures, resulting in an initial absence of fermentative products such as ethanol, a postponed and shortened diauxic shift, and higher biomass yields. Several intracellular changes were associated with the deletion of hexokinase II. The hxk2 mutant had a higher mitochondrial H(+)-ATPase activity and a lower pyruvate decarboxylase activity, which coincided with an intracellular accumulation of pyruvate in the hxk2 mutant. The concentrations of adenine nucleotides, glucose-6-phosphate, and fructose-6-phosphate are comparable in the wild type and the hxk2 mutant. In contrast, the concentration of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate, an allosteric activator of pyruvate kinase, is clearly lower in the hxk2 mutant than in the wild type. The results suggest a redirection of carbon flux in the hxk2 mutant to the production of biomass as a consequence of reduced glucose repression.  相似文献   

6.
Summary A recessive mutant cat1-1, wild type CAT1, was isolated in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. It did not grow on glycrrol nor ferment maltose even with fully constitutive, glucose resistant maltase synthesis. It prevented derepression of isocitrate lyase, fructose-1,6-diphosphatase and maltase in a constitutive but glucose sensitive maltase mutant. Derepression of malate dehydrogenase was retarded and slowed down. Sucrose fermentation and invertase synthesis was not affected. Respiration was normal. From this mutant, two reverse mutants were isolated. One was recessive, acted as a suppressor of cat1-1 and was called cat2-1, wild type CAT2; the other was dominant and allelic to CAT1 and designated CAT1-2 d. CAT1-2 d and cat2-1 caused an earlier derepression of enzymes studied but did not affect the repressed nor the fully derepressed enzyme levels. CAT1-2 d and cat2-1 did not show any additive effects. It is proposed that carbon catabolite repression acts in two ways. The direct way represses synthesis of sensitive enzymes, during growth on repressing carbon sources whereas the other way regulates the derepression process. After alleviation of carbon catabolite repression, gene CAT1 becomes active and prevents the activity of CAT2 which functions as a repressor of sensitive enzyme synthesis. The CAT2 gene product has to be eliminated before derepression can actually occur. The time required for this causes a delay in derepression after the depletion of a repressible carbon source. cat1-1 cannot block CAT2 activity and therefore, derepression is blocked. cat2-1 is inactive and derepression can start after carbon catabolite repression has ceased. CAT1-2 d is permanently active as a repressor of CAT2 and eliminates the delay in derepression.  相似文献   

7.
8.
A spontaneous mutant of the yeast Candida maltosa SBUG 700 was isolated showing pseudohyphal marphology under all growth conditions tested. The C. maltosa PHM mutant takes up glucose with the kinetics of C. maltosa SBUG 700 and starved cells contain the same cyclic AMP concentration. Addition of glucose to the PHM mutant does not result in an increase of the intracellular cyclic AMP level and in catabolite inactivation of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, malate dehydrogenase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. However, addition of 2,4-dinitrophenol is followed by a rapid, transient increase of the cyclic AMP level in the mutant cells, but not by catabolite inactivation. These results show that a common mechanism might be responsible for catabolite inactivation and glucose-induced cAMP signaling or that glucose-induced cAMP signaling is required for catabolite inactivation in C. maltosa.  相似文献   

9.
The yeast Yarrowia lipolytica produces an extracellular lipase encoded by the LIP2 gene. However, very little is known about the mechanisms controlling its expression, especially on glucose media. In this work, the involvement of hexokinase Hxk1 in the glucose catabolite repression of LIP2 was investigated in a lipase overproducing mutant less sensitive to glucose repression. This mutant has a reduced capacity to phosphorylate hexose compared with the wild-type strain, but no differences could be observed between the HXK1 sequences in the two isolates. This suggested that the reduced phosphorylating activity of the mutant strain probably resulted from a modification in the level of HXK1 expression. However, overexpression of the HXK1 gene in this mutant led to a decrease of both LIP2 induction and extracellular lipase activity, suggesting that the hexokinase is involved in the glucose catabolite repression of LIP2 in Y lipolytica.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Upon differential centrifugation of cell-free extracts of Trypanosoma brucei, 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase and fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase behaved as cytosolic enzymes. The two activities could be separated from each other by chromatography on both blue Sepharose and anion exchangers. 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase had a Km for both its substrates in the millimolar range. Its activity was dependent on the presence of inorganic phosphate and was inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate but not by citrate or glycerol 3-phosphate. The Km of fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase was 7 microM; this enzyme was inhibited by fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (Ki = 10 microM) and, less potently, by fructose 6-phosphate, phosphoenolpyruvate and glycerol 3-phosphate. Melarsen oxide inhibited 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase (Ki less than 1 microM) and fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase (Ki = 2 microM) much more potently than pyruvate kinase (Ki greater than 100 microM). The intracellular concentrations of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate and hexose 6-phosphate were highest with glucose, intermediate with fructose and lowest with glycerol and dihydroxyacetone as glycolytic substrates. When added with glucose, salicylhydroxamic acid caused a decrease in the concentration of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, ATP, hexose 6-phosphate and fructose 1,6-bisphosphate. These studies indicate that the concentration of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate is mainly controlled by the concentration of the substrates of 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase. The changes in the concentration of phosphoenolpyruvate were in agreement with the stimulatory effect of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate on pyruvate kinase. At micromolar concentrations, melarsen oxide blocked almost completely the formation of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate induced by glucose, without changing the intracellular concentrations of ATP and of hexose 6-phosphates. At higher concentrations (3-10 microM), this drug caused cell lysis, a proportional decrease in the glycolytic flux, as well as an increase in the phosphoenolypyruvate concentrations which was restricted to the extracellular compartment. Similar changes were induced by digitonin. It is concluded that the lytic effect of melarsen oxide on the bloodstream form of T. brucei is not the result of an inhibition of pyruvate kinase.  相似文献   

12.
Glucose and other sugars, such as galactose or maltose, are able to cause carbon catabolite repression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Although glycolytic intermediates have been suggested as signal for repression, no evidence for such a control mechanism is available. The establishment of a correlation between levels of intracellular metabolites and the extent of catabolite repression may facilitate the identification of potential signal molecules in the process. To set a framework for such a study, the repression produced by xylose, glycerol and dihydroxyacetone upon genes belonging to different repressible circuits was tested, using an engineered strain of S. cerevisiae able to metabolize xylose. Xylose decreased the derepression of various enzymes in the presence of ethanol by at least 10-fold; the corresponding mRNAs were not detected in these conditions. Xylose also impaired the derepression of galactokinase and invertase. Glycerol and dihydroxyacetone decreased 2- to 3-fold the derepression observed in ethanol or galactose but did not affect invertase derepression. For yeast cells grown in media with different carbon sources, no correlation was found between repression of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and intracellular levels of glucose 6-phosphate or fructose 1,6-bisphosphate.  相似文献   

13.
Acetohydroxy acid synthetase, which is sensitive to catabolite repression in wild-type Escherichia coli B, was relatively resistant to this control in a streptomycin-dependent mutant. The streptomycin-dependent mutant was found to be inducible for beta-galactosidase in the presence of glucose, although repression of beta-galactosidase by glucose occurred under experimental conditions where growth of the streptomycin-dependent mutant was limited. Additional glucose-sensitive enzymes of wild-type E. coli B (citrate synthase, fumarase, aconitase and isocitrate dehydrogenase) were found to be insensitive to the carbon source in streptomycin-dependent mutants: these enzymes were formed by streptomycin-dependent E. coli B in equivalent quantities when either glucose or glycerol was the carbon source. Two enzymes, glucokinase and glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase, that are glucose-insensitive in wild-type E. coli B were formed in equivalent quantity on glucose or glycerol in both streptomycin-sensitive and streptomycin-dependent E. coli B. The results indicate a general decrease or relaxation of catabolite repression in the streptomycin-dependent mutant. The yield of streptomycin-dependent cells from glucose was one-third less than that of the streptomycin-sensitive strain. We conclude that the decreased efficiency of glucose utilization in streptomycin-dependent E. coli B is responsible for the relaxation of catabolite repression in this mutant.  相似文献   

14.
The main mechanism causing catabolite repression by glucose and other carbon sources transported by the phosphotransferase system (PTS) in Escherichia coli involves dephosphorylation of enzyme IIAGlc as a result of transport and phosphorylation of PTS carbohydrates. Dephosphorylation of enzyme IIAGlc leads to 'inducer exclusion': inhibition of transport of a number of non-PTS carbon sources (e.g. lactose, glycerol), and reduced adenylate cyclase activity. In this paper, we show that the non-PTS carbon source glucose 6-phosphate can also cause inducer exclusion. Glucose 6-phosphate was shown to cause inhibition of transport of lactose and the non-metabolizable lactose analogue methyl-β- D -thiogalactoside (TMG). Inhibition was absent in mutants that lacked enzyme IIAGlc or were insensitive to inducer exclusion because enzyme IIAGlc could not bind to the lactose carrier. Furthermore, we showed that glucose 6-phosphate caused dephosphorylation of enzyme IIAGlc. In a mutant insensitive to enzyme IIAGlc-mediated inducer exclusion, catabolite repression by glucose 6-phosphate in lactose-induced cells was much weaker than that in the wild-type strain, showing that inducer exclusion is the most important mechanism contributing to catabolite repression in lactose-induced cells. We discuss an expanded model of enzyme IIAGlc-mediated catabolite repression which embodies repression by non- PTS carbon sources.  相似文献   

15.
In order to investigate the mechanism of glucose repression of the N-acetylglucosamine metabolic enzymes in Candidaalbicans, an obligatory aerobic yeast, the activities of the following inducible enzymes were assayed: the N-acetylglucosamine uptake, N-acetylglucosamine kinase and glucosamine-6-phosphate deaminase. In the presence of glucose or other sugars e.g. succinate and glycerol, synthesis of these enzymes took place at a normal rate, suggesting that the hexose produces no catabolite repression in this organism. On the contrary, strong inhibition by glucose was observed on the activities of N-acetylglucosamine uptake and deaminase in N-acetylglucosamine-grown cells of Saccharomycescerevisiae, a facultative aerobe. From the results, it is concluded that “glucose effect” or catabolite repression is absent in Candidaalbicans, a pathogenic strain of yeast.  相似文献   

16.
Cell-free preparations of Chlorella pyrenoidosa Chick, van Niel's strain, were assayed for oxidative enzymes, utilizing isotopic and spectrophotometric techniques. The enzyme activity of heterotrophic and autotrophic cells was compared. The study was divided into categories, one concerned with the spectrophotometric detection of enzymes involved in the initial reactions of glycolysis and the hexose monophosphate shunt, and the other with the direct oxidation of glucose as compared with that oxidized via glycolysis. The reduction of pyridine nucleotides in crude extracts was studied with glucose, glucose-6-phosphate, 6-phosphogluconate, and fructose-1-6-diphosphate as substrates. Enzymes detected in both heterotrophic and autotrophic cells were hexokinase, fructose-diphosphate-aldolase, NAD-linked 3-phosphoglyceraldchyde dehydrogenase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, and a NADP-linked 3-phosphoglyceraldchyde dehydrogenase. In addition to isotopic studies designed to make an appraisal of the hexose monophosphate shunt, a comparison of the rate of reduction of NADP by glucose-6-phosphate and 6-phosphogluconate in relation to the reduction of NAD by 3-phosphoglyceraldehyde was made in light- and dark-grown cells. The rate of reduction of NADP appeared to be lowered in the light-grown cells, suggesting, as did also the isotopic studies, that the hexose monophosphate shunt is less active in autotrophic metabolism than in heterotrophic metabolism.  相似文献   

17.
18.
When Saccharomyces cerevisiae are grown on a mixture of glucose and another fermentable sugar such as sucrose, maltose or galactose, the metabolism is diauxic, i.e. glucose is metabolized first, whereas the other sugars are metabolized when glucose is exhausted. This phenomenon is a consequence of glucose repression, or more generally, catabolite repression. Besides glucose, the hexoses fructose and mannose are generally also believed to trigger catabolite repression. In this study, batch fermentations of S. cerevisiae in mixtures of sucrose and either glucose, fructose or mannose were performed. It was found that the utilization of sucrose is inhibited by concentrations of either glucose or fructose higher than 5 g/l, and thus that glucose and fructose are equally capable of exerting catabolite repression. However, sucrose was found to be hydrolyzed to glucose and fructose, even when the mannose concentration was as high as 17 g/l, indicating, that mannose is not a repressing sugar. It is suggested that the capability to trigger catabolite repression is connected to hexokinase PII, which is involved in the in vivo phosphorylation of glucose and fructose. Received: 5 May 1998 / Received revision: 3 August 1998 / Accepted: 8 August 1998  相似文献   

19.
A glucose kinase (glkA) mutant of Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) M145 was selected by the ability to grow in the presence of the nonmetabolizable glucose analog 2-deoxyglucose. In this glkA mutant, carbon catabolite repression of glycerol kinase and agarase was relieved on several carbon sources tested, even though most of these carbon sources are not metabolized via glucose kinase. This suggests that catabolite repression is not regulated by the flux through glucose kinase and that the protein itself has a regulatory role in carbon catabolite repression. A 10-fold overproduction of glucose kinase also results in relief of catabolite repression, suggesting that excess glucose kinase can titrate the repressing signal away. This could be achieved directly by competition of excess glucose kinase with its repressing form for binding sites on DNA promoter regions or indirectly by competition for binding of another regulatory protein.  相似文献   

20.
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