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1.
Increased membrane fluidity, which causes cofactor leakage and loss of membrane potential, has long been documented as a cause for decreased cell growth during exposure to ethanol, butanol, and other alcohols. Reinforcement of the membrane with more complex lipid components is thus thought to be beneficial for the generation of more tolerant organisms. In this study, organisms with more complex membranes, namely, archaea, did not maintain high growth rates upon exposure to alcohols, indicating that more complex lipids do not necessarily fortify the membrane against the fluidizing effects of alcohols. In the presence of alcohols, shifts in lipid composition to more saturated and unbranched lipids were observed in most of the organisms tested, including archaea, yeasts, and bacteria. However, these shifts did not always result in a decrease in membrane fluidity or in greater tolerance of the organism to alcohol exposure. In general, organisms tolerating the highest concentrations of alcohols maintained membrane fluidity after alcohol exposure, whereas organisms that increased membrane rigidity were less tolerant. Altered lipid composition was a common response to alcohol exposure, with the most tolerant organisms maintaining a modestly fluid membrane. Our results demonstrate that increased membrane fluidity is not the sole cause of growth inhibition and that alcohols may also denature proteins within the membrane and cytosol, adversely affecting metabolism and decreasing cell growth.  相似文献   

2.
Mechanism of ethanol inhibition of fermentation in Zymomonas mobilis CP4.   总被引:15,自引:5,他引:10  
Accumulation of alcohol during fermentation is accompanied by a progressive decrease in the rate of sugar conversion to ethanol. In this study, we provided evidence that inhibition of fermentation by ethanol can be attributed to an indirect effect of ethanol on the enzymes of glycolysis involving the plasma membrane. Ethanol decreased the effectiveness of the plasma membrane as a semipermeable barrier, allowing leakage of essential cofactors and coenzymes. This leakage of cofactors and coenzymes, coupled with possible additional leakage of intermediary metabolites en route to ethanol formation, is sufficient to explain the inhibitory effects of ethanol on fermentation in Zymomonas mobilis.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of ethanol on the cytoplasmic membrane of Oenococcus oeni cells and the role of membrane changes in the acquired tolerance to ethanol were investigated. Membrane tolerance to ethanol was defined as the resistance to ethanol-induced leakage of preloaded carboxyfluorescein (cF) from cells. To probe the fluidity of the cytoplasmic membrane, intact cells were labeled with doxyl-stearic acids and analyzed by electron spin resonance spectroscopy. Although the effect of ethanol was noticeable across the width of the membrane, we focused on fluidity changes at the lipid-water interface. Fluidity increased with increasing concentrations of ethanol. Cells responded to growth in the presence of 8% (vol/vol) ethanol by decreasing fluidity. Upon exposure to a range of ethanol concentrations, these adapted cells had reduced fluidity and cF leakage compared with cells grown in the absence of ethanol. Analysis of the membrane composition revealed an increase in the degree of fatty acid unsaturation and a decrease in the total amount of lipids in the cells grown in the presence of 8% (vol/vol) ethanol. Preexposure for 2 h to 12% (vol/vol) ethanol also reduced membrane fluidity and cF leakage. This short-term adaptation was not prevented in the presence of chloramphenicol, suggesting that de novo protein synthesis was not involved. We found a strong correlation between fluidity and cF leakage for all treatments and alcohol concentrations tested. We propose that the protective effect of growth in the presence of ethanol is, to a large extent, based on modification of the physicochemical state of the membrane, i.e., cells adjust their membrane permeability by decreasing fluidity at the lipid-water interface.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of ethanol on the cytoplasmic membrane of Oenococcus oeni cells and the role of membrane changes in the acquired tolerance to ethanol were investigated. Membrane tolerance to ethanol was defined as the resistance to ethanol-induced leakage of preloaded carboxyfluorescein (cF) from cells. To probe the fluidity of the cytoplasmic membrane, intact cells were labeled with doxyl-stearic acids and analyzed by electron spin resonance spectroscopy. Although the effect of ethanol was noticeable across the width of the membrane, we focused on fluidity changes at the lipid-water interface. Fluidity increased with increasing concentrations of ethanol. Cells responded to growth in the presence of 8% (vol/vol) ethanol by decreasing fluidity. Upon exposure to a range of ethanol concentrations, these adapted cells had reduced fluidity and cF leakage compared with cells grown in the absence of ethanol. Analysis of the membrane composition revealed an increase in the degree of fatty acid unsaturation and a decrease in the total amount of lipids in the cells grown in the presence of 8% (vol/vol) ethanol. Preexposure for 2 h to 12% (vol/vol) ethanol also reduced membrane fluidity and cF leakage. This short-term adaptation was not prevented in the presence of chloramphenicol, suggesting that de novo protein synthesis was not involved. We found a strong correlation between fluidity and cF leakage for all treatments and alcohol concentrations tested. We propose that the protective effect of growth in the presence of ethanol is, to a large extent, based on modification of the physicochemical state of the membrane, i.e., cells adjust their membrane permeability by decreasing fluidity at the lipid-water interface.  相似文献   

5.
The ethanol tolerance mechanism in yeasts is not very well understood. This may result from the complex inhibitory mechanisms of ethanol, the lack of a universally accepted definition and method to measure ethanol tolerance, and its complex polygenic characteristic. Recently, there has been some progress in understanding ethanol tolerance. Plasma membrane phospholipids have been shown to play an important role in the ethanol tolerance mechanism. Increases in membrane unsaturated fatty acids result in increased yeast ethanol tolerance. Supplementation of growth media with combinations of unsaturated fatty acids, vitamins and proteins also enhance ethanol tolerance. Physiological factors such as mode of substrate feeding, intracellular ethanol accumulation, temperature and osmotic pressure all contribute to the ethanol tolerance of yeast. The complex nature of ethanol toxicity suggests that a number of different genes are likely to be involved in the ethanol tolerance mechanism. Genetic approaches such as spheroplast or protoplast fusion, hybridization and continuous culture selection have been used to obtain ethanol tolerant yeasts. Isolation and characterization of such strains may provide a better understanding of ethanol tolerance.  相似文献   

6.
Oenococcus oeni is the dominant species able to cope with a hostile environment of wines, comprising cumulative effects of low pH, high ethanol and SO2 content, nonoptimal growth temperatures and growth inhibitory compounds. Ethanol tolerance is a crucial feature for the activity of O. oeni cells in wine because ethanol acts as a disordering agent of its cell membrane and negatively affects metabolic activity; it damages the membrane integrity, decreases cell viability and, as other stress conditions, delays the start of malolactic fermentation with a consequent alteration of wine quality. The cell wall, cytoplasmic membrane and metabolic pathways are the main sites involved in physiological changes aimed to ensure an adequate adaptive response to ethanol stress and to face the oxidative damage caused by increasing production of reactive oxygen species. Improving our understanding of the cellular impact of ethanol toxicity and how the cell responds to ethanol stress can facilitate the development of strategies to enhance microbial ethanol tolerance; this allows to perform a multidisciplinary endeavour requiring not only an ecological study of the spontaneous process but also the characterization of useful technological and physiological features of the predominant strains in order to select those with the highest potential for industrial applications.  相似文献   

7.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae is often stressed by the ethanol which accumulates during the production of bioethanol by the fermentation process. The study of ethanol-adapted S. cerevisiae strains provide an opportunity to clarify the molecular mechanism underlying the adaptation or tolerance of S. cerevisiae to ethanol stress. The aim of this study was to clarify this molecular mechanism by investigating the ethanol adaptation-associated intracellular metabolic changes in S. cerevisiae using a gas chromatography–mass spectrometry-based metabolomics strategy. A partial least-squares-discriminant analysis between the parental strain and ethanol-adapted strains identified 12 differential metabolites of variable importance with a projection value of >1. The ethanol-adapted strains had a more activated glycolysis pathway and higher energy production than the parental strain, suggesting the possibility that an increased energy production and energy requirement might be partly responsible for an increased ethanol tolerance. An increased glycine content also partly contributed to the higher ethanol tolerance of the ethanol-adapted strains. The decreased oleic acid content may be a self-protection mechanism of ethanol-adapted strains to maintain membrane integrity through decreasing membrane fluidity. We suggest that while being exposed to ethanol stress, ethanol-adapted S. cerevisiae cells may remodel their metabolic phenotype and the composition of their cell membrane to adapt to ethanol stress and acquire higher ethanol tolerance.  相似文献   

8.
Optimizing ethanol yield during fermentation is important for efficient production of fuel alcohol, as well as wine and other alcoholic beverages. However, increasing ethanol concentrations during fermentation can create problems that result in arrested or sluggish sugar-to-ethanol conversion. The fundamental cellular basis for these problem fermentations, however, is not well understood. Small-scale fermentations were performed in a synthetic grape must using 22 industrial Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains (primarily wine strains) with various degrees of ethanol tolerance to assess the correlation between lipid composition and fermentation kinetic parameters. Lipids were extracted at several fermentation time points representing different growth phases of the yeast to quantitatively analyze phospholipids and ergosterol utilizing atmospheric pressure ionization-mass spectrometry methods. Lipid profiling of individual fermentations indicated that yeast lipid class profiles do not shift dramatically in composition over the course of fermentation. Multivariate statistical analysis of the data was performed using partial least-squares linear regression modeling to correlate lipid composition data with fermentation kinetic data. The results indicate a strong correlation (R2 = 0.91) between the overall lipid composition and the final ethanol concentration (wt/wt), an indicator of strain ethanol tolerance. One potential component of ethanol tolerance, the maximum yeast cell concentration, was also found to be a strong function of lipid composition (R2 = 0.97). Specifically, strains unable to complete fermentation were associated with high phosphatidylinositol levels early in fermentation. Yeast strains that achieved the highest cell densities and ethanol concentrations were positively correlated with phosphatidylcholine species similar to those known to decrease the perturbing effects of ethanol in model membrane systems.  相似文献   

9.
During the fermentation process, Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells are often inhibited by the accumulated ethanol, and the mechanism of the S. cerevisiae response to ethanol is not fully understood. In the current study, a systematic analytical approach was used to investigate the changes in the S. cerevisiae cell metabolome that were elicited by treatment with various concentrations of ethanol. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and a multivariate analysis were employed to investigate the ethanol-associated intracellular biochemical changes in S. cerevisiae. The intracellular metabolite profiles that were found upon treatment of the cells with different concentrations of ethanol were unique and could be distinguished with the aid of principal component analysis. Furthermore, partial least-squares-discriminant analysis revealed a group classification and pairwise discrimination between the control without ethanol and ethanol treated groups, and 29 differential metabolites with variable importance in the projection value greater than 1 were identified, which was also confirmed by the subsequent hierarchical cluster analysis. The metabolic relevance of these compounds in the response of S. cerevisiae to ethanol stress was investigated. Under ethanol stress, the glycolysis was inhibited and the use of carbon sources for fermentation was diminished, which might account for the growth inhibition of S. cerevisiae cells. It was suggested that S. cerevisiae cells change the levels of fatty acids, e.g., hexadecanoic, octadecanoic and palmitelaidic acids, to maintain the integrity of their plasma membrane through decreasing membrane fluidity in the medium containing ethanol. Moreover, the increased levels of some amino acids idemtified in the cells of ethanol-treated experimental group might also confer ethanol tolerance to S. cerevisiae. These results reveal that the metabolomics strategy is a powerful tool to gain insight into the molecular mechanism of a microorganism's cellular response to environmental stress factors.  相似文献   

10.
外加肌醇和钙离子对酿酒酵母乙醇发酵的影响   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
赵宝华  张莉 《微生物学报》1999,39(2):174-177
酒精发酵是重要的发酵工业之一,在传统的酒精发酵过程中,菌种的酒精发酵浓度低,原料的利用率和酒精的转化率也低,能量消耗大,导致生产效率较差[1]。近年来国内外许多研究者致力于筛选和构建能产高浓度酒精和耐高浓度酒精的菌种,并把这些酿酒酵母应用于浓醪发酵生...  相似文献   

11.
The arginine deiminase system was found to function in protecting bacterial cells against the damaging effects of acid environments. For example, as little as 2.9 mM arginine added to acidified suspensions of Streptococcus sanguis at a pH of 4.0 resulted in ammonia production and protection against killing. The arginine deiminase system was found to have unusual acid tolerance in a variety of lactic acid bacteria. For example, for Streptococcus rattus FA-1, the pH at which arginolysis was reduced to 10% of the maximum was between 2.1 and 2.6, or more than 1 full pH unit below the minimum for glycolysis (pH 3.7), and more than 2 units below the minimum for growth in complex medium (pH 4.7). The acid tolerance of the arginine deiminase system appeared to be primarily molecular and to depend on the tolerance of individual enzymes rather than on the membrane physiology of the bacteria; pH profiles for the activities of arginine deiminase, ornithine carbamoyltransferase, and carbamate kinase in permeabilized cells showed that the enzymes were active at pHs of 3.1 or somewhat lower. Overall, it appeared that ammonia could be produced from arginine at low pH values, even by cells with damaged membranes, and that the ammonia could then protect the cells against acid damage until the environmental pH value rose sufficiently to allow for the reestablishment of a difference in pH (delta pH) across the cell membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae is an excellent ethanol producer, but is rather sensitive to high concentration of ethanol. Here, influences of ethanol on cellular membrane integrity and carbon metabolism of S.?cerevisiae were investigated to rationalize mechanism involved in ethanol toxicity. Addition of 5% (v/v) ethanol did neither significantly change the permeability of the cytoplasmic membrane of the reference strain S.?cerevisiae BY4741 nor of the ethanol-tolerant strain iETS3. However, the addition of ethanol resulted in a marked decrease in the mitochondrial membrane potential and in increased concentrations of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS). The carbon flux was redistributed under these conditions from mainly ethanol production to the TCA cycle. This redistribution was possibly a result of increased energy demand for cell maintenance that increased from about zero to 20-40?mmol?ATP?(g(CDW) h)(-1) . This increase in maintenance energy might be explained by the ethanol-induced reduction of the proton motive force and the required removal of ROS. Thus, the stability of the mitochondrial membrane and subsequently the capacity to keep ROS levels low could be important factors to improve tolerance of S.?cerevisiae against ethanol.  相似文献   

13.
The arginine deiminase system was found to function in protecting bacterial cells against the damaging effects of acid environments. For example, as little as 2.9 mM arginine added to acidified suspensions of Streptococcus sanguis at a pH of 4.0 resulted in ammonia production and protection against killing. The arginine deiminase system was found to have unusual acid tolerance in a variety of lactic acid bacteria. For example, for Streptococcus rattus FA-1, the pH at which arginolysis was reduced to 10% of the maximum was between 2.1 and 2.6, or more than 1 full pH unit below the minimum for glycolysis (pH 3.7), and more than 2 units below the minimum for growth in complex medium (pH 4.7). The acid tolerance of the arginine deiminase system appeared to be primarily molecular and to depend on the tolerance of individual enzymes rather than on the membrane physiology of the bacteria; pH profiles for the activities of arginine deiminase, ornithine carbamoyltransferase, and carbamate kinase in permeabilized cells showed that the enzymes were active at pHs of 3.1 or somewhat lower. Overall, it appeared that ammonia could be produced from arginine at low pH values, even by cells with damaged membranes, and that the ammonia could then protect the cells against acid damage until the environmental pH value rose sufficiently to allow for the reestablishment of a difference in pH (delta pH) across the cell membrane.  相似文献   

14.
Cytotoxic effects of menadione on normal and cytochrome c-deficient yeast cells were examined on the basis of the cell growth rate, NAD(P)H concentration, reactive oxygen production, plasma membrane H+-ATPase activity, and ethanol production. In aerobically or anaerobically cultured yeast cells, NAD(P)H concentration decreased with increasing concentration of menadione, and the recovery of NAD(P)H concentration was proportional to the cell growth rate. However, there was no relationship among the inhibition of the cell growth and reactive oxygen production, plasma membrane H+-ATPase activity, and ethanol production. Among them, ethanol production showed resistance to the cytotoxicity of menadione, suggesting the resistance of glycolysis to menadione. The growth inhibitory effect of menadione depended on the rapid decrease and the recovery of NAD(P)H rather than production of reactive oxygen species regardless of aerobic culture or anaerobic culture and presence or absence of mitochondrial function. The recovery of NAD(P)H concentration after the addition of menadione might depend on menadione-resistant glycolytic enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
One of the adaptive responses of cell membranes to chronic ethanol consumption is the acquisition of a resistance to fluidization or disordering of the lipids by ethanol in vitro and a reduced partitioning of ethanol into the membrane (membrane tolerance). The degree to which the effects on partitioning and lipid disordering share common features has not previously been explored and in addition the relevance of the value of lipid order in the absence of added ethanol (baseline lipid order) to membrane tolerance has not been established. The location in the bilayer and the nature of the modification underlying these effects is also unknown. The effect of chronic ethanol treatment was examined using 5-doxyl decane as a model hydrophobic compound. Its partitioning into the membranes was determined by utilizing its ability to quench fluorophores (1,6-diphenyl-2,3,5-hexatriene and 3- and 12-anthroyl stearates) by collisional quenching. The partition coefficient of 5-doxyl decane into the bilayer central region was reduced as a result of the chronic ethanol treatment. The effect could also be demonstrated in vesicles of phospholipids and was lost 4 days after withdrawal of the ethanol from the diet. These results closely parallel those relating to resistance to lipid disordering and suggest that both techniques detect a common modification. Lipid order was assessed using fluorescence anisotropy measurements of a range of fluorophores, including those used to determine the partitioning properties of the membrane. No effect of chronic ethanol treatment on lipid order was found, either in the intact membranes or in vesicles of extracted phospholipids. This suggests that changes in baseline order are not critical features of membrane tolerance in liver microsomes. In addition it appears that the altered partitioning of the 5-doxyl decane into the central region of the membrane is not related to lipid order changes in this region. The reduced partitioning of 5-doxyl decane may be a reflection of a redistribution in the lipid bilayer, perhaps due to modifications in other locations in the membrane, such as the lipid head group region.  相似文献   

16.
Potato aspartic proteases (StAPs) and their swaposin domain (StAsp-PSI) are proteins with cytotoxic activity which involves plasma membrane destabilization. The ability of these proteins to produce cell death varies with the cellular type. Therefore, StAPs and StAsp-PSI selective cytotoxicity could be attributed to the different membrane lipid compositions of target cells. In this work we investigate the possible mechanism by which StAPs and StAsp-PSI produce selective membrane destabilization. Results obtained from leakage assays show that StAsp-PSI is a potent inducer of the leakage of LUVs containing anionic phospholipids, especially those containing phosphatidylglycerol. Based in these results, we suggest that the cytotoxic activity of StAsp-PSI on pathogenic microorganisms could be mediated by the attraction between the exposed positive domains of StAsp-PSI and the negatively charged microorganism membrane. On the other hand, our circular dichroism spectroscopic measurements and analysis by size exclusion chromatography and followed by electrophoresis, indicate that hydrophobic environment is necessary to StAsp-PSI oligomerization and both StAsp-PSI disulfide bounds and membrane with negative charged phospholipids are required by StAsp-PSI to produce membrane destabilization and then induce cell death in tumors and microorganism cell targets. Additionally, we demonstrate that the presence of cholesterol into the LUV membranes strongly diminishes the capacity of StAsp-PSI to produce leakage. This result suggests that the lack of hemolytic and cytotoxic activities on human lymphocytes of StAsp-PSI/StAPs may be partly due by the presence of cholesterol in these cell membrane types.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The effects of heat shock and ethanol stress on the viability of a lager brewing yeast strain during fermentation of high gravity wort were studied. These stress effects resulted in reduced cell viability and inhibition of cell growth during fermentation. Cells were observed to be less tolerant to heat shock during the fermentation of 25°P (degree Plato) wort than cells fermenting 16°P wort. Degree Plato (oP) is the weight of extract (sugar) equivalent to the weight of sucrose in a 100 g solution at 20°C. Relieving the stress effects of ethanol by washing the cells free of culture medium, improved their tolerance to heat shock. Cellular changes in yeast protein composition were observed after 24 h of fermentation at which time more than 2% (v/v) ethanol was present in the growth medium. The synthesis of these proteins was either induced by ethanol or was the result of the transition of cells from exponential phase to stationary phase of growth. No differences were observed in the protein composition of cells fermenting 16°P wort compared to those fermenting 25°P wort. Thus, the differences in the tolerance of these cells to heat shock may be due to the higher ethanol concentration produced in 25°P wort which enhanced their sensitivity to heat shock.  相似文献   

18.
31P NMR studies of intact cells and perchloric acid extracts are used to investigate the effect of ethanol on the bioenergetics and glycolysis of Clostridium thermocellum, an anaerobic bacterium potentially useful for the single step conversion of biomass to ethanol. Whole cells suspended in phosphate buffer and given a carbon source (cellobiose) at 60 degrees C rapidly establish a pH gradient across the membrane that can be monitored by the chemical shifts of inorganic phosphate in the exterior buffer and in the cytoplasm. Peak intensities can be related to phosphate active transport rates. Wild type bacteria and cells grown in inhibiting concentrations of ethanol establish similar pH gradients, but with slower kinetics and slower phosphate transport rates for the cells adapted to growth in ethanol. Direct addition of ethanol does not affect the rate of pH gradient formation or phosphate transport. Thus, while ethanol does not directly affect processes for energy conservation carried out by the membrane, adaptation to ethanol does alter membrane functions such as phosphate transport. 31P NMR spectra of perchloric acid extracts show that when wild type cells are adapted to grow in inhibiting concentrations of ethanol and then energized with cellobiose, sugar phosphate content is increased and the steady state distribution of glycolytic intermediates is altered. Nucleotide triphosphate/nucleotide diphosphate ratios are unaltered in these cells. These results strongly indicate that in C. thermocellum growth inhibition by ethanol is related to a blockage in glycolysis.  相似文献   

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