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1.
In Escherichia coli K-12, components of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase systems (PTSs) represent a signal transduction system involved in the global control of carbon catabolism through inducer exclusion mediated by phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent protein kinase enzyme IIA(Crr) (EIIA(Crr)) (= EIIA(Glc)) and catabolite repression mediated by the global regulator cyclic AMP (cAMP)-cAMP receptor protein (CRP). We measured in a systematic way the relation between cellular growth rates and the key parameters of catabolite repression, i.e., the phosphorylated EIIA(Crr) (EIIA(Crr) approximately P) level and the cAMP level, using in vitro and in vivo assays. Different growth rates were obtained by using either various carbon sources or by growing the cells with limited concentrations of glucose, sucrose, and mannitol in continuous bioreactor experiments. The ratio of EIIA(Crr) to EIIA(Crr) approximately P and the intracellular cAMP concentrations, deduced from the activity of a cAMP-CRP-dependent promoter, correlated well with specific growth rates between 0.3 h(-1) and 0.7 h(-1), corresponding to generation times of about 138 and 60 min, respectively. Below and above this range, these parameters were increasingly uncoupled from the growth rate, which perhaps indicates an increasing role executed by other global control systems, in particular the stringent-relaxed response system.  相似文献   

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3.
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   

4.
The enzyme adenylate cyclase plays a key role in mediating the phenomenon of catabolite repression in Escherichia coli. The mechanism by which one sugar prevents the expression of the gene for another catabolite depends on the capacity of the cell to take up the sugar. Sugars that are most effective in the repression mechanism are those that are transported by the phosphoenolpyruvate-energized phosphotransferase system. The hypothesis presented here is that one or more of the proteins associated with this sugar transport system interact with adenylate cyclase and, when they are in their phosphorylated form, activate the enzyme, provided other factors that permit this activation are present. Another essential activator of adenylate cyclase is inorganic orthophosphate. When E. coli are starved for sugars, the pool of total phosphate is accounted for primarily as inorganic orthophosphate, ATP, phosphoenolpyruvate, and transport proteins in their phospho-forms, a condition that promotes activation of adenylate cyclase. When cells are exposed to sugars, the phosphate pool becomes drastically redistributed, such that the level of inorganic orthophosphate and transport phosphoproteins decreases markedly while the pool of sugar phosphate increases. This translation of the extracellular availability of carbon sources into an intracellular phosphate redistribution is the immediate event that is responsible for catabolite repression.  相似文献   

5.
Three kinds of control mechanisms govern the expression of the members of the glp regulon for glycerol and sn-glycerol 3-phosphate (G3P) catabolism in Escherichia coli K-12: specific repression by the product of the glpR gene; catabolite repression; and respiratory repression (the effect exerted by exogenous hydrogen acceptors). The operons of the glp system show different patterns of response to each control. By growing in parallel a mutant strain with temperature-sensitive repressor (glpR(ts)) and an isogenic control with a deletion in the regulator gene at progressively higher temperatures, it was possible to show that the synthesis of aerobic G3P dehydrogenase (glpD product) is far more sensitive to specific repression than that of either glycerol kinase (glpK product) or G3P transport (glpT product). Conversely, in the strain with a deletion in the regulator gene, the syntheses of glycerol kinase and G3P transport are more sensitive to catabolite repression than that of the aerobic G3P dehydrogenase. The levels of the two flavoprotein G3P dehydrogenases vary in opposite directions in response to changes of exogenous hydrogen acceptors. For example, the ratio of the aerobic enzyme to the anaerobic enzyme (specified by glpA) is high when molecular oxygen or nitrate serves as the hydrogen acceptor and low when fumarate plays this role. This trend is not influenced by the addition of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate to the growth medium. Thus, respiratory repression most likely involves a third mechanism of control, independent of specific or catabolite repression.  相似文献   

6.
The signal-transducing protein EIIA(Glc), a component of the phosphoenolpyruvate-glucose phosphotransferase system, plays a key role in carbon regulation in enteric bacteria, such as Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium. The phosphorylation state of EIIA(Glc) governs transport and metabolism of a number of carbohydrates. When glucose as preferred carbon source is transported, EIIA(Glc) becomes predominantly unphosphorylated and allosterically inhibits several permeases, including the maltose ATP-binding cassette transport system (MalFGK2) in a process termed "inducer exclusion." We have mapped the binding surface of EIIA(Glc) that interacts with the MalK subunits by using synthetic cellulose-bound peptide arrays like pep scan- and substitutional analyses. Three regions constituting two binding sites were identified encompassing residues 69-79 (I), 87-91 (II), and 118-127 (III). Region III is MalK-specific, whereas residues from regions I and II partly overlap but are not identical to the binding interfaces for interaction with glycerol kinase and lactose permease. These results were fully verified by studying the inhibitory effect of purified EIIA(Glc) variants carrying mutations at positions representative of each of the three regions on the ATPase activity of the purified maltose transport complex reconstituted into proteoliposomes. Moreover, a synthetic peptide encompassing residues 69-91 was demonstrated to partially inhibit ATPase activity. We also show for the first time that the N-terminal domain of EIIA(Glc) is essential for inducer exclusion.  相似文献   

7.
A Roy  C Haziza    A Danchin 《The EMBO journal》1983,2(5):791-797
The regulatory region of the cya gene from Escherichia coli has been characterized by nucleotide sequence analysis and genetic approaches. Two promoters, P1 and P2, organized in that order with respect to the beginning of the cya open reading frame, were identified. Using cya-lac operon and protein fusions, it was possible to show that both promoters are active in vivo. P1 activity seemed sensitive to catabolite repression whereas activity of the stronger promoter, P2, did not respond to inhibition by glucose. No effect of cAMP or its receptor, catabolite activator protein (CAP), could be found although the DNA sequence reveals a consensus CAP site downstream of P2. The 548 nucleotides situated at the 3' end of the sequence carry an open reading frame which can tentatively be assigned to the beginning of adenylate cyclase. Among noteworthy features of the corresponding sequence are an UUG codon as the putative start site of cyclase, and a long hydrophobic stretch of amino acids resembling leader peptides in secreted or membrane proteins.  相似文献   

8.
An Escherichia coli strain which overproduces the lactose permease was used to investigate the mechanism of allosteric regulation of this permease and those specific for melibiose, glycerol, and maltose by the phosphoenolpyruvate-sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS). Thio-beta-digalactoside, a high affinity substrate of the lactose permease, released the glycerol and maltose permeases from inhibition by methyl-alpha-d-glucoside. Resumption of glycerol uptake occurred immediately upon addition of the galactoside. The effect was not observed in a strain which lacked or contained normal levels of the lactose permease, but growth of wild-type E. coli in the presence of isopropyl-beta-thiogalactoside plus cyclic AMP resulted in enhanced synthesis of the lactose permease so that galactosides relieved inhibition of glycerol uptake. Thiodigalactoside also relieved the inhibition of glycerol uptake caused by the presence of other PTS substrates such as fructose, mannitol, glucose, 2-deoxyglucose, and 5-thioglucose. Inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity by methyl-alpha-glucoside was also relieved by thiodigalactoside in E. coli T52RT provided that the lactose permease protein was induced to high levels. Cooperative binding of sugar and enzyme III(Glc) to the melibiose permease in Salmonella typhimurium was demonstrated, but no cooperativity was noted with the glycerol and maltose permeases. These results are consistent with a mechanism of PTS-mediated regulation of the lactose and melibiose permeases involving a fixed number of allosteric regulatory proteins (enzyme III(Glc)) which may be titrated by the increased number of substrate-activated permease proteins. This work suggests that the cooperativity in the binding of sugar substrate and enzyme III(Glc) to the permease, demonstrated previously in in vitro experiments, has mechanistic significance in vivo. It substantiates the conclusion that PTS-mediated regulation of non-PTS permease activities involves direct allosteric interaction between the permeases and enzyme III(Glc), the postulated regulatory protein of the PTS.  相似文献   

9.
When carrying out a proteome analysis with a ptsH3 mutant of Lactobacillus casei, we found that the cold shock protein CspA was significantly overproduced compared to the wild-type strain. We also noticed that CspA and CspB of L. casei and CSPs from other organisms exhibit significant sequence similarity to the C-terminal part of EIIA(Glc), a glucose-specific component of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system. This similarity suggested a direct interaction of HPr with CSPs, as histidyl-phosphorylated HPr has been shown to phosphorylate EIIA(Glc) in its C-terminal part. We therefore compared the cold shock response of several carbon catabolite repression mutants to that of the wild-type strain. Following a shift from 37 degrees C to lower temperatures (20, 15 or 10 degrees C), all mutants showed significantly reduced growth rates. Moreover, glucose-grown mutants unable to form P-Ser-HPr (ptsH1, hprK) exhibited drastically increased sensitivity to freeze/thaw cycles. However, when the same mutants were grown on ribose or maltose, they were similarly resistant to freezing and thawing as the wild-type strain. Although subsequent biochemical and genetic studies did not allow to identify the form of HPr implicated in the resistance to cold and freezing conditions, they strongly suggested a direct interaction of HPr or one of its phospho-derivatives with CspA and/or another, hitherto undetected cold shock protein in L. casei.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Carbon catabolite repression (CCR) of the Bacillus megateriumxyl operon is dependent on the catabolite responsive element cre, the catabolite control protein (CcpA) and the histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein phosphorylated at the serine 46 residue (HPrSer46P). The latter is formed in the presence of glucose and mediates CCR via CcpA. We present evidence for the presence of HPrSer46P in a ternary complex with CcpA and cre. We also demonstrate increased stability of this complex compared to the CcpA-cre complex by electrophoretic mobility shift analysis (EMSA). This stabilization by HPrSer46P is the same for the xyl cre and an improved cre. Thus, HPrSer46P is a co-repressor for CcpA. In addition, surface plasmon resonance (SPR) experiments yielded binding constants of CcpA and the CcpA-HPrSer46P complex with cre. HPrSer46P stimulated CcpA binding to cre 50-fold. The binding constant is 4.9(+/- 0.5) x 10(6) M(-1). Non-phosphorylated HPr did not affect the complex formation between CcpA and cre. Previously proposed effects by glucose-6-phosphate, fructose-1,6-diphosphate and NADP on CcpA-cre or CcpA-HPrSer46P-cre formation were not found in EMSA and SPR experiments.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanism of catabolite repression caused by sugar transported via the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) and stipulated by the decrease of the adenylate cyclase activity was studied. It was demonstrated that the sensitivity of the adenylate cyclase and beta-galactosidase synthesis to methyl-L-D-glucoside (MeGlc) or sorbitol is correlated with the content and activity of glucose (EIIGlc) or mannitol enzyme II of the PTS, correspondingly. Under anaerobic conditions the cells become insensitive to catabolic repression caused by MeGlc and the adenylate cyclase activity does not decrease in the presence of the sugar despite the increased rate of MeGlc transport. The adenylate cyclase activity of the mutant with the Tn5 transposone inserted into the ptsG gene does not change in the presence of MeGlc, while the activity of adenylate cyclase and the differential rate of beta-galactosidase synthesis increase in these bacteria. The data obtained confirm the hypothesis on the "catabolite signal" which is generated when the substrate binds to its transporter, i. e. adenylate cyclase reacts to the conformational changes in the transporter being complexed with it. The strength of this complex depends on the affinity of adenylate cyclase for the transporter and on the value of the membrane potential, delta mu H+ A model is proposed, which explains the necessity of factor IIIGlc for EIIGlc binding to adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

13.
14.
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   

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16.
Sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) can prevent endothelial cell apoptosis. We investigated the molecular mechanisms and signaling pathways by which S1P protects endothelial cells from serum deprivation-induced apoptosis. We show here that human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) undergo apoptosis associated with increased DEVDase activity, caspase-3 activation, cytochrome c release, and DNA fragmentation after 24 h of serum deprivation. These apoptotic markers were suppressed by the addition of S1P, the NO donor S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (100 micrometer), or caspase-3 inhibitor z-VAD-fmk. The protective effects of S1P were reversed by the nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor N-monomethyl-l-arginine, but not by the soluble guanylyl cyclase inhibitor 1H-(1,2,4)oxadiazolo[4,3-a]-quanoxaline-1-one, suggesting that NO, but not cGMP, is responsible for S1P protection from apoptosis. Furthermore, S1P increased NO production by enhancing Ca(2+)-sensitive NOS activity without changes in the eNOS protein level. S1P-mediated cell survival and NO production were suppressed significantly by pretreatment with antisense oligonucleotide of EDG-1 and partially by EDG-3 antisense. S1P-mediated NO production was suppressed by the addition of pertussis toxin, an inhibitor of G(i) proteins, the specific inhibitor of phospholipase C (PLC), and the Ca(2+) chelator BAPTA-AM. These findings indicate that S1P protects HUVECs from apoptosis through the activation of eNOS activity mainly through an EDG-1 and -3/G(i)/PLC/Ca(2+) signaling pathway.  相似文献   

17.
Regulation of prostaglandin (PG) E2 receptors was investigated in a 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate-solubilized fraction from the synaptic membrane of porcine temporal cortex. The fraction was preincubated with exogenous protein kinases, and then the binding of PGE2 was measured. PGE2 binding was increased approximately twofold by pretreatment with the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (A kinase) or calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II but not by that with protein kinase C. The increase was dependent on the ATP concentration, with ED50 values being close to the Km values of these protein kinases. Protein kinase inhibitors specific for A kinase and for calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II abolished the effect in a dose-dependent manner, with IC50 values being similar to those reported. Further study using the catalytic subunit of A kinase revealed that the maximal binding capacity apparently increased without affecting the affinity and the rate constants for association and dissociation. On the other hand, acid phosphatase treatment reduced the binding activity to the level of nonspecific binding. In addition, treatment by A kinase did not affect the binding of guanosine 5'-(3-thiotriphosphate) by the GTP-binding proteins and the activation of adenylate cyclase mediated by stimulatory guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein, and therefore the phosphorylation is believed to occur on the receptor protein. The results suggest that the PGE2 receptor can take active phosphorylated and inactive dephosphorylated forms, of which only the phosphorylated one can bind PGE2.  相似文献   

18.
S Iuchi  S T Cole    E C Lin 《Journal of bacteriology》1990,172(1):179-184
In Escherichia coli, sn-glycerol-3-phosphate can be oxidized by two different flavo-dehydrogenases, an anaerobic enzyme encoded by the glpACB operon and an aerobic enzyme encoded by the glpD operon. These two operons belong to the glp regulon specifying the utilization of glycerol, sn-glycerol-3-phosphate, and glycerophosphodiesters. In glpR mutant cells grown under conditions of low catabolite repression, the glpA operon is best expressed anaerobically with fumarate as the exogenous electron acceptor, whereas the glpD operon is best expressed aerobically. Increased anaerobic expression of glpA is dependent on the fnr product, a pleiotropic activator of genes involved in anaerobic respiration. In this study we found that the expression of a glpA1(Oxr) (oxygen-resistant) mutant operon, selected for increased aerobic expression, became less dependent on the FNR protein but more dependent on the cyclic AMP-catabolite gene activator protein complex mediating catabolite repression. Despite the increased aerobic expression of glpA1(Oxr), a twofold aerobic repressibility persisted. Moreover, anaerobic repression by nitrate respiration remained normal. Thus, there seems to exist a redox control apart from the FNR-mediated one. We also showed that the anaerobic repression of the glpD operon was fully relieved by mutations in either arcA (encoding a presumptive DNA recognition protein) or arcB (encoding a presumptive redox sensor protein). The arc system is known to mediate pleiotropic control of genes of aerobic function.  相似文献   

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A modified Gilman assay was used to determine the concentrations of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) in rapidly filtered cells and in the culture filtrates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli K-12, and Bacteroides fragilis. In P. aeruginosa cultures, levels of cAMP in the filtrate increased with the culture absorbance (3.5 to 19.8 X 10(-9) M) but did not vary significantly with the carbon source used to support growth. Intracellular concentrations (0.8 to 3.2 X 10(-5) M) were substantially higher and did not vary appreciably during growth or with carbon source. Sodium cAMP (5 mM) failed to reverse the catabolite repression of inducible glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49) synthesis caused by the addition of 10 mM succinate. Exogenous cAMP also had no discernible effect on the catabolite repression control of inducible mannitol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.67). P. aeruginosa was found to contain both soluble cAMP phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.17) and membrane-associated adenylate cyclase (EC 4.6.1.1) activity, and these were compared to the activities detected in crude extracts of E. coli. B. fragilis crude cell extracts contain neither of these enzyme activities, and little or no cAMP was detected in cells or culture filtrates of this anaerobic bacterium.  相似文献   

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