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1.
An unidentified halophile isolated from plates of a complex agar medium containing 4.25 M NaCl showed optimum growth in broths containing 0.5-1.0 M NaCl but exhibited a wide range of growth from 0.045-4.5 M. The organism can be classified as a facultative halophile with wide salt tolerance. Logarithmic phase cells grown in media containing 0.5 M NaCl were rod-shaped in long chains which changed to smaller, single, or paired cells in stationary growth. The internal Na+ and K+ concentrations were 0.05 M and 0.34 M for logarithmic phase cells and 0.29 and 0.32 M for stationary phase cells. In 4.3 M NaCl media the cells were rod-shaped throughout the growth cycle, occurring primarily in pairs. The internal Na+ K" concentrations in cells in logarithmic phase growth were 0.62 M and 0.58 M while in stationary phase growth these values were 1.01 M and 0.66 M respectively. In contrast, logarithmic phase cells of the extreme halophile Halobacterium cutirubrum had internal Na+ and K+ concentrations of 0.80 M and 5.32 M when grown in 3.3 M NaCl. The internal Na+ and K+ concentrations, therefore, in the unidentified halophile do not resemble those found in H. cutirubrum but are much closer to those present in Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

2.
Eighteen gram-negative marine bacteria and two terrestrial species, Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, were examined for their sensitivity to lysis in distilled water after exposure to a salt solution containing a sea water concentration of Mg2+ (0.05 M) or to 0.5 M NaCl. A spectrum of lytic susceptibility was observed among the marine bacteria ranging from those organisms which lysed in distilled water after exposure to the Mg2+-containing solution, through organisms which could be sensitized to lysis by washing with the NaCl solution, to organisms which failed to lyse in distilled water even after having been washed with a solution of 0.5 M NaCl. Pseudomonas aeruginosa and E. coli fell within this spectrum, the former being capable of being induced to lyse in distilled water by washing with 0.5 M NaCl, while the latter failed to lyse in distilled water after this treatment. It was thus concluded that no overall distinction could be made between marine and terrestrial bacteria on the basis of the sensitivity of the two groups of organisms to lysis in freshwater. Quite large decreases in optical density and increases in the release of ultraviolet-absorbing material took place when cells preexposed to the Mg2+-containing solution or to 0.5 M NaCl were subsequently suspended in distilled water even though in some cases no loss of cell numbers could be detected. In most cases two to three times as much K+ as Na+ and 1/10 to 1/100 as much Mg2+ was required to prevent these changes. For three of the marine bacteria and P. aeruginosa grown in a terrestrial type medium little difference in the requirements for Na+ and K+ to prevent the optical density changes was noted. For P. aeruginosa grown in a marine type medium, cells required more K+ than Na+ to prevent these changes.  相似文献   

3.
T Yagi 《Microbios》1992,70(283):93-102
The accumulation of glycerol and inorganic ions as it related to osmotic pressure, and the regulation of intracellular osmotic pressure in a salt-tolerant yeast, Zygosaccharomyces rouxii, were examined for several hours after salt stress. Intracellular contents of glycerol increased for up to 6 h in media supplemented with 1 M and 2 M NaCl and did not increase in medium containing 3 M NaCl. Intracellular contents of Na+ and Cl- reached a maximum value within 1 and 3 h, respectively, in all NaCl-containing media and increases were proportional to the concentration of NaCl in the medium. As glycerol was accumulated in cells, the intracellular contents of Na+ and Cl- gradually decreased in media containing 1 M and 2 M NaCl. After salt stress, cell volume decreased within 1 h and the original volume was re-established for 3 to 6 h in media with 1 M and 2 M NaCl but not in medium with 3 M NaCl. Intracellular concentrations of solutes, which were calculated from the total contents of glycerol and inorganic ions and the cell volume, became almost equivalent to the external osmotic pressure within 1 h after salt stress. Experiments using various inhibitors showed that a large amount of ATP was required not only for the synthesis and accumulation of glycerol but also for the exclusion of Na+ and Cl- from cells under salt-stressed conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Halobacteroides acetoethylicus grew in media with 6 to 20% NaCl and displayed optimal growth at 10% NaCl. When grown in medium with an [NaCl] of 1.7 M, the internal cytoplasmic [Na+] and [Cl-] were 0.92 and 1.2 M, respectively, while K+ and Mg2+ concentrations in cells were 0.24 and 0.02 M, respectively. Intracellular [Na+] was fourfold higher than intracellular [K+]. Since Na+ and Cl- ions were not excluded from the cell, the influence of high salt concentrations on key enzyme activities was investigated in crude cell extracts. Activities greater than 60% of the maximal activity of the following key catabolic enzymes occurred at the following [NaCl] ranges: glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, 1 to 2 M; alcohol dehydrogenase (NAD linked), 2 to 4 M; pyruvate dehydrogenase, 0.5 to 1 M; and hydrogenase (methyl viologen linked), 0.5 to 3 M. These studies support the hypothesis that obligately halophilic, anaerobic eubacteria adapt to extreme salt concentrations differently than do halophilic, aerobic eubacteria, because they do not produce osmoregulants or exclude Cl-. This study also demonstrated that these halophilic, anaerobic eubacteria have a physiological similarity to archaebacterial halophiles, since Na+ and Cl- are present in high concentrations and are required for enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

5.
Simultaneous 23Na and 31P NMR spectra were obtained from a number of yeast suspensions. Prior to NMR spectroscopy, the yeast cells were Na-loaded: this replaced some of the intracellular K+ with Na+. These cells were also somewhat P-deficient in that they had no polyphosphate species visible in the 31P NMR spectrum. In the NMR experiments, the Na-loaded cells were suspended in media which contained inorganic phosphate, very low Na+, and a shift reagent for the Na+ NMR signal. The media differed as to whether dioxygen, glucose, or K+ was present individually or in combinations and as to whether the medium was buffered or not. The NMR spectra revealed that the cells always lost Na+ and gained phosphorus. However, the nature of the Na+ efflux time course and the P metabolism differed depending on the medium. The Na+ efflux usually proceeded linearly until the amount of Na+ extruded roughly equalled the amount of NH4+ and orthophosphate initially present in the medium (external phosphate was added as NH4H2PO4). Thus, we presume this first phase reflects a Na+ for NH4+ exchange. The Na+ efflux then entered a transition phase, either slowing, ceasing, or transiently reversing, before resuming at about the same value as that of the first phase. We presume that this last phase involves the simultaneous extrusion of intracellular anions as reported in the literature. The phosphorus metabolism was much more varied. In the absence of exogenous glucose, the P taken up accumulated first as intracellular inorganic phosphate; otherwise, it accumulated first in the "sugar phosphate" pool. In most cases, at least some of the P left the sugar phosphate pool and entered the polyphosphate reservoir in the vacuole. However, this never happened until the phase probably representing Na+ for NH4+ exchange was completed, and the P in the polyphosphate pool never remained there permanently but always eventually reverted back to the sugar phosphate pool. These changes are interpreted in terms of hierarchical energy demands on the cells under the different conditions. In particular, the energy for the Na+ for NH4+ exchange takes precedence over that required to produce and store polyphosphate. This conclusion is supported by the fact that when the cells are "forced" to exchange K+, as well as NH4+, for Na+ (by the addition of 5 times as much K+ to the NH4+-containing medium), polyphosphates are never significantly formed, and the initial linear Na+ efflux phase persists possibly 6 times as long.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum delta H and Marburg were adapted to grow in medium containing up to 0.65 M NaCl. From 0.01 to 0.5 M NaCl, there was a lag before cell growth which increased with increasing external NaCl. The effect of NaCl on methane production was not significant once the cells began to grow. Intracellular solutes were monitored by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy as a function of osmotic stress. In the delta H strain, the major intracellular small organic solutes, cyclic-2,3-diphosphoglycerate and glutamate, increased at most twofold between 0.01 and 0.4 M NaCl and decreased when the external NaCl was 0.5 M. M. thermoautotrophicum Marburg similarly showed a decrease in solute (cyclic-2,3-diphosphoglycerate, 1,3,4,6-tetracarboxyhexane, and L-alpha-glutamate) concentrations for cells grown in medium containing > 0.5 M NaCl. At 0.65 M NaCl, a new organic solute, which was visible in only trace amounts at the lower NaCl concentrations, became the dominant solute. Intracellular potassium in the delta H strain, detected by atomic absorption and 39K NMR, was roughly constant between 0.01 and 0.4 M and then decreased as the external NaCl increased further. The high intracellular K+ was balanced by the negative charges of the organic osmolytes. At the higher external salt concentrations, it is suggested that Na+ and possibly Cl- ions are internalized to provide osmotic balance. A striking difference of strain Marburg from strain delta H was that yeast extract facilitated growth in high-NaCl-containing medium. The yeast extract supplied only trace NMR-detectable solutes (e.g., betaine) but had a large effect on endogenous glutamate levels, which were significantly decreased. Exogenous choline and glycine, instead of yeast extract, also aided growth in NaCl-containing media. Both solutes were internalized with the choline converted to betaine; the contribution to osmotic balance of these species was 20 to 25% of the total small-molecule pool. These results indicate that M. thermoautotrophicum shows little changes in its internal solutes over a wide range of external NaCl. Furthermore, they illustrate the considerable differences in physiology in the delta H and Marburg strains of this organism.  相似文献   

7.
Staphylococcus aureus MF31 can grow at 46 degrees C, 2 degrees C above its normal maximum temperature of growth if 1 M NaCl is added to the medium. In the present work we show that monosodium glutamate, proline, threonine, aspartic acid, and betaine (in order of decreasing effectiveness) also enabled cells to grow at 46 degrees C. Cells grown at 46 degrees C in he presence of salt (protected or P cells) accumulated glutamate more rapidly than cells grown at 37 degrees C without salt (normal or N cells) and contained an increased amino acid pool. The principal constituents of this pool were dicarboxylic amino acids and proline. Turbidimetric evidence suggests that NaCl caused plasmolysis in S. aureus. The P cells, although grown in 1 M NaCl, had about the same Cl- and K+ content as the N cells grown without added NaCl. P cells had increased heat resistance but high concentrations of CaCl2 in the heating menstruum reduced their D55 value from a maximum of 214 min to less than 30 s. We suggest that growth at 46 degrees C in 1 M NaCl can be explained, in part at least, by the increased amino acid pool internal to the cell and the external osmotic support given by Cl- anions excluded by the cell.  相似文献   

8.
Cellular Na+ transport was followed in vivo by 23Na nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) using anionic dysprosium-based shift reagents to resolve internal and external 23Na+ resonances. Proso millet (Panicum miliaceum) cell suspensions adapted for rapid growth on 130 mm NaCl had biphasic 23Na efflux kinetics when shifted to low Na+ medium, while nonadapted cells had little measurable Na+ efflux after preloading with 23NaCl. Uptake of 23Na was also observed using 23Na NMR. The resonance frequency of the external Na+-dysprosium (III) triphosphate, relative to that of the 23Na in the cells, was sensitive to pH, permitting the pH of the external medium to be followed during the course of in vivo experiments.  相似文献   

9.
Na+ movements in S. faecalis were studied by 23Na NMR. They proved to be dependent on phosphate concentration in the buffer during the de-energization step. K+ and H+ were also studied respectively by potentiometry and 31P NMR and were shown not to be implicated. For de-energized cells the internal phosphate concentration, on the contrary, was directly linked to the external phosphate contained in the buffer. The experiments showed a Na+/Pi dependence in this prokaryote so far known only in eukaryotes.  相似文献   

10.
In a low salt buffer (0.011 M Na+) stopped-flow kinetic results for the SDS driven dissociation of an ethidium-Poly d(G-C) X d(G-C) complex are 8.7, 23, and 58.5 s-1 at 20, 30, and 40 degrees C, respectively. These results predict that in NMR experiments at high field strengths, ethidium should be in slow exchange among polymer binding sites. This has been found to be the case for both 31P (109 MHz) and 1H (imino proton spectra in H2O at 270 MHz) experiments. At higher salt, and/or higher temperature, and/or lower field, the bound and free peaks are no longer resolved in the NMR spectra. Good agreement is obtained between the stopped-flow kinetic results and the coalescence temperature observed in NMR experiments. Imino protons in base pairs on both sides of the intercalated ethidium are shifted approximately one ppm upfield while only the phosphate groups at the intercalation site experience large chemical shifts.  相似文献   

11.
The 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of the digestive gland-gonad complex (DGG) of the schistosome vector Biomphalaria glabrata was characterized and the effects of infection by Schistosoma mansoni noted. The in vivo spectrum was comprised of 11 peaks, 5 downfield and 6 upfield of an external 85% phosphoric acid standard. Based on a variety of analytical procedures, the upfield peaks from the standard were demonstrated to be composed of carbamoyl phosphate + a mixture of 3 phosphatides and sphingomyelin, the gamma + beta phosphorus resonances of nucleotide triphosphate (NTP) and nucleotide diphosphate (NDP), respectively, the alpha phosphorus resonances of NTP + NDP, NAD(H) + the phosphorus resonance of uridine phosphate from uridine diphosphoglucose (UDPG), the phosphorus resonance of glucose phosphate from UDPG and, last, the beta phosphorus resonance of NTP. The downfield peaks were assigned as glycerophosphoryl choline, intracellular inorganic phosphate (Pi), sugar phosphates + phosphoryl choline, aminoethyl phosphonate (AEP), and ceramide AEP. T1 values for the in vivo NMR components were determined by inversion recovery. Infection produced distinct alterations in the levels of nonnucleotide components of the in vivo 31P NMR spectrum and the spectra of tissue extracts. Specifically, the levels of phosphonate, phospholipids, and carbamoyl phosphate were markedly reduced, and the relative level of Pi was increased. The potential significance of these changes to the parasite-host relationship was discussed. In contrast, starvation resulted in a decreased level of phosphonate only. The pH of the intact DGG was estimated by titrating the inorganic phosphate component of tissue extracts. The mean pH was 6.9 for both control and infected material.  相似文献   

12.
Mid- to late logarithmic growth phase cells of Vibrio parahaemolyticus grown in tryptic soy broth (TSB) containing 0.5, 3.0, and 7.5% NaCl were heated for 8 min at 45 degrees C in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) containing 3% NaCl. Colony formation on thiosulfate-citrate-bile salts-sucrose agar (TCBS) containing 2% NaCl was greatest for unheated cells that had been grown in 7.5% NaCl-TSB; cells grown in 0.5% NaCl-TSB formed a greater number of colonies on 1.0% NaCl-TCBS. Thermal injury was evident in heated cells, regardless of the NaCl concentration in TSB growth medium. The effects of Mg2+, K+, and Li+ added as chlorides to 0.5% NaCl-TSB on the growth of nonheated and heated V. parahaemolyticus were studied. Lower levels of Mg2+ and slightly higher levels of K+ were required to replace Na+ in TSB inoculated with thermally injured cells that had been originally grown in 3.0 and 7.5% NaCl-TSB. LiCl had an inhibitory effect on both nonheated and heated cells when present in the recovery medium (0.5% NaCl-TSB) at concentrations as low as 0.5%. Increased numbers of colonies were formed by heated cells plated in MgCl2-supplemented TCBS, regardless of the NaCl concentration in the original growth medium. Potassium had little, if any, effect on colony formation by nonheated V. parahaemolyticus recovered on TCBS and may have had a detrimental effect on heat-injured cells.  相似文献   

13.
The intracellular phosphorus and carbon metabolites in the halotolerant alga Dunaliella salina adapted to different salinities were monitored in living cells by 31P- and 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The 13C-NMR studies showed that the composition of the visible intracellular carbon metabolites other than glycerol is not significantly affected by the salinity of the growth medium. The T1 relaxation rates of the 13C-glycerol signals in intact cells were enhanced with increasing salinity of the growth medium, in parallel to the expected increase in the intracellular viscosity due to the increase in intracellular glycerol. The 31P-NMR studies showed that cells adapted to the various salinities contained inorganic phosphate, phosphomonoesters, high energy phosphate compounds, and long chain polyphosphates. In addition, cells grown in media containing up to 1 molar NaCl contained tripolyphosphates. The tripolyphosphate content was also controlled by the availability of inorganic phosphate during cell growth. Phosphate-depleted D. salina contained no detectable tripolyphosphate signal. Excess phosphate, however, did not result in the appearance of tripolyphosphate in 31P-NMR spectra of cells adapted to high (>1.5 molar NaCl) salinites.  相似文献   

14.
The moderately halophilic bacterium Vibrio costicola accumulates α-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB) by active transport. Substantial amounts of Na+ ions are needed for this transport. This is not due to an ionic requirement for respiration; cells respire as well as KCl as in NaCl but do not transport AIB in KCl. In cells grown in the presence of 1.0 or 2.0 M NaCl, AIB transport took place in higher NaCl concentrations than in cells grown in the presence of 0.5 M NaCl. The latter cells developed salt-resistant transport when they were exposed to 1.0 M NaCl in the presence of chloramphenicol and other antibiotics that inhibit protein synthesis. Two levels of salt-resistant transport were observed. One level (resistance to 3.0 M NaCl) developed in 1.0 M NaCl without the addition of nutrients, did not seem to require an increase in internal solute concentration, and was not lost when cells grown in 1.0 M NaCl were suspended in 0.5 M NaCl. The second level (resistance to 4.0 M NaCl) developed in 1.0 M NaCl only when nutrients were added, may have required an increased internal solute concentration, and was lost when 1.0 M NaCl-grown cells were suspended in 0.5 M NaCl or KCl. Among the substances that stimulated the development of salt-resistant AIB transport, betaine was especially active. Furthermore, direct addition of betaine permitted cells to transport AIB at higher NaCl concentrations. High salt concentrations inhibited endogenous respiration to a lesser extent than AIB transport, especially in 0.5 M NaCl-grown cells. Thus, these concentrations of salt did not inhibit AIB transport by inhibiting respiration. However, oxidation of glucose and oxidation of succinate were at least as sensitive to high salt concentrations as AIB transport, suggesting that a salt-sensitive transport step(s) is involved in the oxidation of these substrates.  相似文献   

15.
Phase-partitioning studies of the euryhaline bacterium Halomonas elongata demonstrated that the hydrophobic-hydrophilic nature of the cell surface changed as the bacterium grew in different NaCl concentrations. Mid-log-phase cells grown in a high (3.4 M) NaCl concentration were more hydrophilic than were cells grown in a low (0.05 M) NaCl concentration. Mid-log-phase cells from defined medium containing 3.4 M NaCl normally produced a hydrophobicity reading of only 14 (hexadecane hydrophobicity = 100), while corresponding cells from defined medium containing 0.05M NaCl gave a hydrophobicity reading of 90. Compared with cells grown in low salt concentrations, cells grown in high salt concentrations were more hydrophilic at all stages of growth. Rapid suspension of log-phase cells grown in 1.37 M NaCl into a 0.05 or 3.4 M NaCl solution produced no detectable rapid changes in surface hydrophobicity. These data suggest that as H. elongata adapts to different NaCl concentrations, it alters the affinity of its outermost cell surface to water.  相似文献   

16.
Slightly halophilic marine Vibrio alginolyticus grown in the range of NaCl from 0.2 to 1.5 M maintained the total internal solute concentration always higher than the external medium by about 0.25 osM. The concentrations of macromolecules such as DNA, RNA, and protein were little affected by the increase in medium NaCl. The internal K+ concentration was kept to about 400 mM in the range of medium NaCl from 0.4 to 0.8 M; it rose to 510 mM when the bacterium was grown in 1.5 M NaCl, indicating that K+ increased only slightly in response to the large increase in medium NaCl. Thus, in contrast to the case of nonhalophilic and extremely halophilic bacteria, K+ was unlikely to act as a major component to regulate the internal solute concentration of marine V. alginolyticus. The internal Na+ and Cl- concentrations were maintained always lower than those in the growth medium, but they increased in response to the increase in medium NaCl. The concentration of internal Na+ was close to that of K+ at the concentration of medium NaCl that supports the optimal growth of this organism. The total amino acid content of V. alginolyticus increased from 76 to 413 mM by the increase in medium NaCl from 0.2 to 1.5 M. The concentrations of glutamic acid and prolined were 254 and 72 mM, respectively, when grown in 1.5 M NaCl. These results indicated that Na+, Cl- and amino acids, especially glutamic acid and proline, contributed to the regulation of internal solute concentration of V. alginolyticus in response to the increased external NaCl.  相似文献   

17.
To cope with life in hypersaline environments, halophilic archaeal proteins are enriched in acidic amino acids. This strategy does not, however, offer a response to transient changes in salinity, as would post-translational modifications. To test this hypothesis, N-glycosylation of the Haloferax volcanii S-layer glycoprotein was compared in cells grown in high (3.4 M NaCl) and low (1.75 M NaCl) salt, as was the glycan bound to dolichol phosphate, the lipid upon which the N-linked glycan is assembled. In high salt, S-layer glycoprotein Asn-13 and Asn-83 are modified by a pentasaccharide, while dolichol phosphate is modified by a tetrasaccharide comprising the first four pentasaccharide residues. When the same targets were considered from cells grown in low salt, substantially less pentasaccharide was detected. At the same time, cells grown at low salinity contain dolichol phosphate modified by a distinct tetrasaccharide absent in cells grown at high salinity. The same tetrasaccharide modified S-layer glycoprotein Asn-498 in cells grown in low salt, whereas no glycan decorated this residue in cells grown in the high-salt medium. Thus, in response to changes in environmental salinity, Hfx. volcanii not only modulates the N-linked glycans decorating the S-layer glycoprotein but also the sites of such post-translational modification.  相似文献   

18.
The concentrations of nucleoside triphosphate, inorganic phosphate and the yolk proteins, phosvitin and lipovitellin, have been monitored in living embryos of Xenopus laevis by 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The nucleoside triphosphate levels remain relatively constant at about 3.5-4.5 nmol/embryo at least until the 'spontaneous movement' stage of development. By the swimming tadpole stage an inorganic phosphate resonance representing about 30 nmol/embryo becomes evident in the NMR spectrum. Computer manipulation also shows such a resonance, although smaller, to be present at a somewhat earlier developmental stage; these findings are confirmed biochemically. The major contribution to the NMR spectrum of oocytes, unfertilized eggs and early embryos is the yolk phosphoprotein resonance. On isolation of the yolk from the embryos it is possible to quantify the contribution to the NMR spectrum from the lipid-phosphate and protein-phosphate moieties of the yolk proteins. During development, as the yolk is used up, it is found that the protein-phosphate resonance disappears at a greater rate than the lipid-phosphate peak. The total phosphorus content of the embryo (approximately 200 nmol/embryo) is shown biochemically to remain constant during development; however, the total amount of phosphorus observed by NMR decreases by about 40% during development. From the resonance positions of their alpha, beta and gamma phosphate groups it is deduced that the nucleoside triphosphate molecules are liganded in vivo to a divalent cation which is not manganese, but could be either magnesium or calcium. From the position of the inorganic phosphate resonance it is deduced that the internal pH of embryos where this resonance is evident is 6.8 +/- 0.2.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Vibrio costicola grown in the presence of different NaCl concentrations contains cell-associated Na+ and K+ ions whose sum is equal to or greater than the external Na+ concentration. In the presence of 0.5 M NaCl, virtually no in vitro protein is synthesized in extracts of cells grown in 1.0 M NaCl. However, we report here that active in vitro protein synthesis occurred in 0.6 M or higher concentrations of Na2SO4, sodium formate, sodium acetate, sodium aspartate, or sodium glutamate, whereas 0.6 M NaF, NaCl, or NaBr completely inhibited protein synthesis as measured by polyuridylic acid-directed incorporation of [14C]phenylalanine. Sodium glutamate, sodium aspartate, and betaine (0.3 M) counteracted the inhibitory action of 0.6 M NaCl. The cell-associated Cl- concentration was 0.22 mol/kg in cells grown in 1.0 M NaCl. Of this, the free intracellular Cl- concentration was only 0.02 mol/kg. Cells contained 0.11 mol of glutamate per kg and small concentrations of other amino acids. All of the negative counterions for cell-associated Na+ and K+ have not yet been determined. In vitro protein synthesis by Escherichia coli was inhibited by sodium glutamate. Hybridization experiments with ribosomes and the soluble (S-100) fractions from extracts of E. coli and V. costicola showed that the glutamate-sensitive fraction was found in the soluble, not the ribosomal, part of the system. The phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase of V. costicola was not inhibited by 0.5 M or higher concentrations of NaCl; it was slightly more sensitive to high concentrations of sodium glutamate. Therefore, this enzyme was not responsible for the salt response of the V. costicola in vitro protein-synthesizing system.  相似文献   

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