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1.
Proline accumulation in Escherichia coli is mediated by three proline porters. Proline catabolism is effected by proline porter I (PPI) and proline/delta 1-pyrroline carboxylate dehydrogenase. Proline did not accumulate cytoplasmically when E. coli was subjected to osmotic stress in minimal salts medium. Although PPI is induced when proline is provided as carbon or nitrogen source, its activity decreased following growth of the bacteria in minimal salts medium of high osmotic strength. Proline dehydrogenase was induced by proline in low or high osmotic strength media. Proline porter II (PPII) was both activated and induced in osmotically stressed bacteria, though the dependencies of the two responses on medium osmolarity differed. Osmotic downshift during the transport measurement decreased the uptake of proline, serine and glutamine by bacteria cultured in media of high osmotic strength. Thus, while osmotic upshift caused specific activation of PPII, osmotic downshift caused a non-specific reduction in amino acid uptake. Glycine betaine inhibited the uptake of [14C]proline via PPII and PPIII but not via PPI. The dependence of that inhibition on glycine betaine concentration was similar when PPII was uninduced, induced or activated by osmotic stress, or induced by amino acid limited growth. Thus PPII and PPIII, not PPI, contribute to the mechanism of osmoprotection by proline and glycine betaine. The tendency for exogenous proline to accumulate in the cytoplasm of bacteria exposed to osmotic stress would, however, be countered by increased proline catabolism.  相似文献   

2.
Mutation pro-220::Tn5, which increases the resistance of Escherichia coli to 3,4-dehydroproline (M. E. Stalmach, S. Grothe, and J. M. Wood, J. Bacteriol. 156:481-486, 1983), is not linked to putP, proP, or proU. It was located at 40.4 min on the E. coli chromosomal linkage map, by conjugational and transductional mapping, and is now denoted proQ220::Tn5. Proline porter II was not detectable when proQ220::Tn5 proP+ bacteria were cultivated under optimal conditions or with nutritional stress (amino acid limitation). Toxic proline analog sensitivity and proline porter II activity were partially restored to proQ220::Tn5 proP+ bacteria, but not to a proQ220::Tn5 proP219 strain, by a hyperosmotic shift and by growth under osmotic stress. Elevated expression of a proP::lacZ gene fusion, for bacteria grown under osmotic stress, was not influenced by the proQ220::Tn5 insertion. We propose that the proQ locus encodes a positive regulatory element which elevates proline porter II activity.  相似文献   

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Proline porter II is rapidly activated when nongrowing bacteria are subjected to a hyperosmotic shift (Grothe, S., Krogsrud, R. L., McClellan, D. J., Milner, J. L., and Wood, J. M. (1986) J. Bacteriol. 166, 253-259). Proline porter II was active in membrane vesicles prepared from bacteria grown under optimal conditions, nutritional stress, or osmotic stress. That activity was: (i) dependent on the presence of the energy sources phenazine methosulphate plus ascorbate or D-lactate; (ii) observed only when a hyperosmotic shift accompanied the transport measurement; (iii) inhibited by glycine betaine in a manner analogous to that observed in whole cells; and (iv) eliminated by lesions in proP. Membrane vesicles were able to transport serine but not glutamine and serine transport was reduced by the hyperosmotic shift. In whole cells, proline porter II activity was supported by glucose and by D-lactate in a strain defective for proline porters I and III and the F1F0-ATPase. Glucose energized proline uptake was eliminated by carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone and KCN as was serine uptake. These results suggested that proline porter II was respiration-dependent and probably ion-linked. Activation of proline porter II in whole cells by sucrose or NaCl was sustained over 30 min, whereas activation by glycerol was transient. Proline porter II was activated by NaCl and sucrose with a half-time of approximately 1 min in both whole cells and membrane vesicles. Thus, activation of proline porter II was reversible. It occurred at a rate comparable to that of K+ influx and much more rapid than the genetic regulatory responses that follow a hyperosmotic shift.  相似文献   

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Two proline porters in Escherichia coli K-12   总被引:12,自引:10,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Escherichia coli mutants defective at putP and putA lack proline transport via proline porter I and proline dehydrogenase activity, respectively. They retain a proline uptake system (proline porter II) that is induced during tryptophan-limited growth and are sensitive to the toxic L-proline analog, 3,4-dehydroproline. 3,4-Dehydroproline-resistant mutants derived from a putP putA mutant lack proline porter II. Auxotrophic derivatives derived from putP+ or putP bacteria can grow if provided with proline at low concentration (25 microM); those derived from the 3,4-dehydroproline-resistant mutants require high proline for growth (2.5 mM). We conclude that E. coli, like Salmonella typhimurium, possesses a second proline porter that is inactivated by mutations at the proP locus.  相似文献   

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9.
Adaptation to osmotic stress alters the amounts of several specific proteins in the Escherichia coli K-12 envelope. The most striking feature of the response to elevated osmolarity was the strong induction of a periplasmic protein with an Mr of 31,000. This protein was absent in mutants with lambda plac Mu insertions in an osmotically inducible locus mapping near 58 min. The insertions are likely to be in proU, a locus encoding a transport activity for the osmoprotectants glycine betaine and proline. Factors affecting the extent of proU induction were identified by direct examination of periplasmic proteins on sodium dodecyl sulfate gels and by measuring beta-galactosidase activity from proU-lac fusions. Expression was stimulated by increasing additions of salt or sucrose to minimal medium, up to a maximum at 0.5 M NaCl. Exogenous glycine betaine acted as an osmoregulatory signal; its addition to the high-osmolarity medium substantially repressed the expression of the 31,000-dalton periplasmic protein and the proU-lac+ fusions. Elevated osmolarity also caused the appearance of a second periplasmic protein (Mr = 16,000), and severe reduction in the amounts of two others. In the outer membrane, the well-characterized repression of OmpF by high osmolarity was observed and was reversed by glycine betaine. Additional changes in membrane composition were also responsive to glycine betaine regulation.  相似文献   

10.
Glycine betaine transport in Escherichia coli: osmotic modulation.   总被引:58,自引:36,他引:22  
Exogenous glycine betaine highly stimulates the growth rate of various members of the Enterobacteriaceae, including Escherichia coli, in media with high salt concentrations (D. Le Rudulier and L. Bouillard, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 46:152-159, 1983). In a nitrogen- and carbon-free medium, glycine betaine did not support the growth of E. coli either on low-salt or high-salt media. This molecule was taken up by the cells but was not catabolized. High levels of glycine betaine transport occurred when the cells were grown in media of elevated osmotic strength, whereas relatively low activity was found when the cells were grown in minimal medium. A variety of electrolytes, such as NaCl, KCl, NaH2PO4, K2HPO4, K2SO4, and nonelectrolytes like sucrose, raffinose, and inositol triggered the uptake of glycine betaine. Furthermore, in cells subjected to a sudden osmotic upshock, glycine betaine uptake showed a sixfold stimulation 30 min after the addition of NaCl. Part of this stimulation might be a consequence of protein synthesis. The transport of glycine betaine was energy dependent and occurred against a concentration gradient. 2,4-Dinitrophenol almost totally abolished the glycine betaine uptake. Azide and arsenate exerted only a small inhibition. In addition, N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide had a very low inhibitory effect at 1 mM. These results indicated that glycine betaine transport is driven by the electrochemical proton gradient. The kinetics of glycine betaine entry followed the Michaelis-Menten relationship, yielding a Km of 35 microM and a Vmax of 42 nmol min-1 mg of protein-1. Glycine betaine transport showed considerable structural specificity. The only potent competitor was proline betaine when added to the assay mixtures at 20-fold the glycine betaine concentration. From these results, it is proposed that E. coli possesses an active and specific glycine betaine transport system which is regulated by the osmotic strength of the growth medium.  相似文献   

11.
Hybridization to a PCR product derived from conserved betaine choline carnitine transporter (BCCT) sequences led to the identification of a 3.4-kb Sinorhizobium meliloti DNA segment encoding a protein (BetS) that displays significant sequence identities to the choline transporter BetT of Escherichia coli (34%) and to the glycine betaine transporter OpuD of Bacillus subtilis (30%). Although the BetS protein shows a common structure with BCCT systems, it possesses an unusually long hydrophilic C-terminal extension (169 amino acids). After heterologous expression of betS in E. coli mutant strain MKH13, which lacks choline, glycine betaine, and proline transport systems, both glycine betaine and proline betaine uptake were restored, but only in cells grown at high osmolarity or subjected to a sudden osmotic upshock. Competition experiments demonstrated that choline, ectoine, carnitine, and proline were not effective competitors for BetS-mediated betaine transport. Kinetic analysis revealed that BetS has a high affinity for betaines, with K(m)s of 16 +/- 2 microM and 56 +/- 6 microM for glycine betaine and proline betaine, respectively, in cells grown in minimal medium with 0.3 M NaCl. BetS activity appears to be Na(+) driven. In an S. meliloti betS mutant, glycine betaine and proline betaine uptake was reduced by about 60%, suggesting that BetS represents a major component of the overall betaine uptake activities in response to salt stress. beta-Galactosidase activities of a betS-lacZ strain grown in various conditions showed that betS is constitutively expressed. Osmotic upshock experiments performed with wild-type and betS mutant cells, treated or not with chloramphenicol, indicated that BetS-mediated betaine uptake is the consequence of immediate activation of existing proteins by high osmolarity, most likely through posttranslational activation. Growth experiments underscored the crucial role of BetS as an emerging system involved in the rapid acquisition of betaines by S. meliloti subjected to osmotic upshock.  相似文献   

12.
Exogenous proline specifically stimulates the growth rate of enteric bacteria in media of inhibitory osmotic strength (J. H. B. Christian, Aust. J. Biol. Sci. 8:490-497, 1955). I observed that Salmonella typhimurium mutants which lack both of the previously known proline permeases (putP proP) are stimulated by proline in media of inhibitory osmolarity. I propose that there is a third proline permease which functions only in media of elevated osmolarity. This conclusion is based on the observations that, in media of elevated osmolarity, (i) the sensitivity of putP proP mutants to toxic proline analogs increases, (ii) proline requirements for maximal growth of proline auxotrophic putP proP mutants decreases, and (iii) the specific rate of incorporation of radioactive proline into protein of growing cells increases. I obtained a Tn10-induced mutation in a gene (proU) required for the functioning of the third proline permease and determined the map location to be at 59 map units of the chromosome, between srlA and tct, 66% linked to nalB in P22 transduction. My results suggest that the function of the third, osmotically stimulated permease might be to accumulate high intracellular proline levels during osmotic stress. Possible mechanisms by which proline might cause growth stimulation are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The proU locus of Salmonella typhimurium encodes an osmotically induced betaine transport system. We have identified a 31 kDa periplasmic protein, encoded by proU, whose synthesis is induced by osmotic stress. A specific betaine-binding activity with a KD of about 1 microM is also present in the periplasm of osmotically induced cells. This activity is absent in those proU mutants which lack the 31 kDa periplasmic protein. Thus, ProU is a periplasmic binding-protein-dependent transport system.  相似文献   

15.
The ability to respond to osmotic stress by osmoregulation is common to virtually all living cells. Gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium can achieve osmotolerance by import of osmoprotectants such as proline and glycine betaine by an import system encoded in an operon called proU with genes for proteins ProV, ProW, and ProX. In this report, we describe the discovery of a proU-type locus in the gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis. It contains four open reading frames (ProV, ProW, ProX, and ProZ) with homology to the gram-negative ProU proteins, with the B. subtilis ProV, ProW, and ProX proteins having sequence homologies of 35, 29, and 17%, respectively, to the E. coli proteins. The B. subtilis ProZ protein is similar to the ProW protein but is smaller and, accordingly, may fulfill a novel role in osmoprotection. The B. subtilis proU locus was discovered while exploring the chromosomal sequence upstream from the spa operon in B. subtilis LH45, which is a subtilin-producing mutant of B. subtilis 168. B. subtilis LH45 had been previously constructed by transformation of strain 168 with linear DNA from B. subtilis ATCC 6633 (W. Liu and J. N. Hansen, J. Bacteriol. 173:7387-7390, 1991). Hybridization experiments showed that LH45 resulted from recombination in a region of homology in the proV gene, so that the proU locus in LH45 is a chimera between strains 168 and 6633. Despite being a chimera, this proU locus was fully functional in its ability to confer osmotolerance when glycine betaine was available in the medium. Conversely, a mutant (LH45 deltaproU) in which most of the proU locus had been deleted grew poorly at high osmolarity in the presence of glycine betaine. We conclude that the proU-like locus in B. subtilis LH45 is a gram-positive counterpart of the proU locus in gram-negative bacteria and probably evolved prior to the evolutionary split of prokaryotes into gram-positive and gram-negative forms.  相似文献   

16.
The proU locus, which encodes a high-affinity betaine transport system, and the kdp operon, which encodes a potassium transport system, are the principal osmoresponsive genes in Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium. The kdp operon is known to be induced in response to changes in cell turgor. We have investigated the control of proU expression and shown that it differs from that of kdp in a number of fundamental ways. Rather than responding to changes in turgor, proU expression is principally determined by the intracellular accumulation of potassium ions. Potassium and betaine were shown to play distinct osmoprotective roles. Potassium serves as the principal osmoprotectant and is accumulated in response to low-level osmotic stress to restore turgor. As external osmolarity is increased to a level at which the corresponding increase in internal potassium concentrations is potentially deleterious to enzyme function, betaine (when available) is accumulated in preference to potassium. The different mechanisms of proU and kdp regulation reflect the different physiological roles of these two osmoprotectants.  相似文献   

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18.
Bacteria respond to changes in medium osmolarity by varying the concentrations of specific solutes in order to maintain constant turgor pressure. The cytoplasmic pools of K+, proline, glutamate, alanine, and glycine of Lactobacillus plantarum ATCC 14917 increased when the osmolarity of the growth media was raised from 0.20 to 1.51 osmol/kg by KCL. When glycine-betaine was present in a high-osmolarity chemically defined medium, it was accumulated to a high cytoplasmic concentration, while the concentrations of most other osmotically important solutes decreased. These observations, together with the effects of glycine-betaine on the specific growth rate under high-osmolarity conditions, suggest that glycine-betaine is preferentially accumulated in L. plantarum. Uptake of glycine-betaine, proline, glutamate, and alanine was studied in cells that were alternately exposed to hyper- and hypo-osmotic stresses. The rate of uptake of proline and glycine-betaine increased instantaneously upon increasing the osmolarity, whereas that of other amino acids did not. This activation occurred also under conditions in which protein synthesis was inhibited was most pronounced when cells were pregrown at high osmolarity. The duration of net transport was a function of the osmotic strength of the assay medium. Glutamate uptake was not activated by an osmotic upshock, and the uptake of alanine was low under all conditions tested. When cells were subjected to osmotic downshock, a rapid efflux of accumulated glycine-betaine, proline, and alanine occurred whereas the pools of other amin acids remained unaffected. The results indicate that osmolyte efflux is, at least to some extent, mediated via specific osmotically regulated efflux systems and not via nonspecific mechanisms as has been suggested previously.  相似文献   

19.
L-Proline, which is accumulated by Escherichia coli during growth in media of high osmolality, also induces the synthesis of the enzyme degrading it to glutamate. To determine if proline catabolism is inhibited during osmotic stress, proline utilization and the formation of proline dehydrogenase were examined in varying concentrations of NaCl and sucrose. Although the specific growth rate of E. coli with proline as the sole nitrogen source diminished as the solute osmolality increased, a comparable reduction in growth rate occurred with ammonium as the primary nitrogen source. Proline catabolism, as measured in whole cells by the conversion of [14C]proline to [14C]glutamate, was only slightly inhibited by solute osmolalities up to 1.0 osmol/kg; more than 50% of the initial activity was still found at 2.0 osmol/kg. By contrast, the specific activity of proline dehydrogenase in bacteria grown in the presence of added solutes decreased to less than 20% of the control level. This reduction was related to a lower rate of synthesis, but was independent of genes currently known to be involved in osmoregulation or proline metabolism. The specific activities of tryptophanase, beta-galactosidase, and histidinol dehydrogenase were also reduced under similar growth conditions. These results indicate that while proline catabolism is not directly inhibited by high solute concentrations, prolonged exposure to osmotic stress leads to its reduction as part of a more general metabolic response.  相似文献   

20.
Osmoregulation, the adaptation of cells to changes in the external osmolarity, is an important aspect of the bacterial stress response, in particular for a soil bacterium like Corynebacterium glutamicum. Consequently, this organism is equipped with several redundant systems for coping with both hyper- and hypoosmotic stress. For the adaptation to hypoosmotic stress C. glutamicum possesses at least three different mechanosensitive (MS) channels. To overcome hyperosmotic stress C. glutamicum accumulates so-called compatible solutes either by means of biosynthesis or by uptake. Uptake of compatible solutes is in general preferred to de novo synthesis because of lower energy costs. Noticeable, only secondary transporters belonging to the MHS (ProP) or the BCCT-family (BetP, EctP and LcoP) are involved in the uptake of proline, betaine and ectoine. In contrast to Escherichia coli or Bacillus subtilis no ABC-transporters were found catalyzing uptake of compatible solutes. BetP was one of the first examples of the growing group of osmosensory proteins to be analyzed in detail. This transporter is characterized, besides the catalytic activity of betaine uptake, by the ability to sense osmotic changes (osmosensing) and to respond to the extent of osmotic stress by adaptation of transport activity (osmoregulation). BetP detects hyperosmotic stress via an increase in the internal K(+) concentration following a hyperosmotic shift, and thus acts as a chemosensor.  相似文献   

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