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1.
Summary A bacterium was isolated from soil which utilizes 2-hydroxypyridine as sole source of carbon and nitrogen. When grown on solid medium with this substrate massive amounts of green rectangular crystals are deposited extracellularly in the colony mass. The pigment producing organism proved to be a hitherto undescribed species to which the name Arthrobacter crystallopoietes was applied. The pigment formed is characterized qualitatively by the following properties: it is an oxidation product of 2-hydroxypyridine probably still containing a six-membered heterocyclic ring; it exists as an anion with an intense blue color in neutral or slightly alkaline solution and as a metal salt in the deposited crystals; it precipitates from acid solution as a red water-insoluble free acid; it can be reversible oxidized and reduced, being colorless in the reduced form; and in solution it is spontaneously oxidized by air, the reaction being very rapid at alkalineph. The ultraviolet, visible and infrared spectra of the blue and red forms are presented. The properties of the pigment show that it is a member of a chemically poorly defined group of compounds termed azaquinones and that it is related to but not identical with pigments produced by the bacterial oxidation of nicotine, nicotinic acid and isonicotinic acid.This investigation was supported in part by grants G9882 and GB736 from the National Science Foundation.  相似文献   

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Cell-free extracts prepared from spherical and rod-shaped cells of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes were assayed for enzymes during various periods of starvation. The level of NADH oxidase dropped to 20 and 30%, respectively, in spherical and rod-shaped cells during the first 1 to 2 days of starvation and then remained constant for 9 days. Catalase activity decreased continuously and reached a low level in 9 days. Enzymes involved in glucose metabolism and the tricarboxylic acid cycle were stable for the duration of the experiment (about 1 week). Succinic dehydrogenase, fumarase and aconitase were stable during 21 days of starvation, which is the longest time enzymes have been shown to be stable in any bacterium under conditions of total starvation.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Catabolic effects which exert control over the inducible synthesis of three enzymes in Arthrobacter crystallopoietes involve at least three different mechanisms: interference with inducer transport, severe catabolite repression, and transient repression. The rate of histidase induction by histidine is reduced by incubation of the cells with succinate or glucose. The maximum effect of succinate, 67% reduction in histidase production, occurs only after 100 min of incubation with succinate. At least 3h of incubation are required for the maximum effect of glucose (31% reduction in enzyme induction). Both succinate and glucose inhibit histidine transport. Cyclic adenosine 3,5-monophosphate (cyclic AMP), at 10-7 M, slightly stimulates the induction of histidase in cultures both with or without succinate. No conditions were found in which cyclic AMP abolishes the effect of succinate. Induction of l-serine dehydratase by glycine is severely and permanently repressed by glucose and to a lesser extent by citrate. Glucose does not affect glycine uptake. Succinate, fumarate, and aspartate, which are all better substrates than glucose or citrate for growth of A. crystallopoietes, have no effect on l-serine dehydratase induction. Induction and repression of l-serine dehydratase are not affected by cyclic AMP. Synthesis of isocitrate lyase after addition of acetate is unaffected by glucose but is severely repressed by succinate or fumarate. Aspartate and glutamate cause a transient repression of enzyme synthesis after which synthesis proceeds at the control rate. The ability to transport acetate is inducible. Development of this capacity in the presence of acetate is not affected by succinate or glutamate. Cyclic AMP has no effect on enzyme production or repression. A. crystallopoietes takes up radioactive cyclic AMP and has at least one of the enzymes of cyclic AMP metabolism, adenyl cyclase.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract Two pyridine-degrading microorganisms Arthrobacter crystallopoietes (VKM Ac-1334D) and Rhodococcus opacus (VKM Ac-1333D) were isolated from soil. The Gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy analysis showed that the former species formed 3-hydroxypyridine, 2,3- and 2,6-dihydroxypyridines during its growth in media containing pyridine, while the latter formed 2-hydroxy- and 2,6-dihydroxypyridines as degradation intermediates. Products of the pyridine ring cleavage (5-amino-2-oxo-4-pentenoic acid and 3-pentenoic acid monoamide) were also detected.  相似文献   

6.
An Arthrobacter species, which utilized thiocyanate (SCN-) as a nitrogen source, was isolated from soil by the enrichment culture method. The organism tolerated SCN- concentrations up to 0.1 M. On addition of nitrate or ammonium ion to cultures of the isolate growing in the presence of SCN-, the organism continued to degrade SCN-. Degradation could be followed by release of 14CO2 from SCN-(14C). The SCN- -degrading activity diminished to low levels as the stationary phase of growth was appraoched.  相似文献   

7.
Environmental contamination by hexavalent chromium, Cr(VI), presents a serious public health problem. This study assessed the reduction of Cr(VI) by intact cells and a cell-free extract (CFE) of an actinomycete, Arthrobacter crystallopoietes (strain ES 32), isolated from soil contaminated with dichromate. Both intact cells and CFE of A. crystallopoietes, displayed substantial reduction of Cr(VI). Intact cells reduced about 90% of the Cr(VI) added within 12 h and Cr(VI) was almost completely reduced after 24 h. The K M and V max of Cr(VI) bioreduction by intact cells were 2.61 μM and 0.0142 μmol/min/mg protein, respectively. Cell-free chromate reductase of the A. crystallopoietes (ES 32) reduced hexavalent chromium at a K M of 1.78 μM and a V max of 0.096 μmol/min/mg protein. The rate constant (k) of chromate reduction was inversely related to Cr(VI) concentration and the half-life (t 1/2) of Cr(VI) reduction increased with increasing concentration. A. crystallopoietes produced a periplasmic chromate reductase that was stimulated by NADH. Results indicate that A. crystallopoietes ES 32 can be used to detoxify Cr(VI) in polluted sites, particularly in stressed environments.  相似文献   

8.
The ultrastructure of dividing rod-stage cells of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes was examined by electron microscopy. The cell walls consist of two layers. During cell division, the inner layer invaginates to form the septum. The outer layer does not participate in septum formation. After septum formation is completed, the two daughter cells remain attached by the outer layer of the cell wall. It appears that localized rupture of the outer layer during further wall growth is responsible for the phenomenon known as "snapping division" or "snapping postfission movement."  相似文献   

9.
A bacterium capable of degrading 2-methylpyridine was isolated by enrichment techniques from subsurface sediments collected from an aquifer located at an industrial site that had been contaminated with pyridine and pyridine derivatives. The isolate, identified as an Arthrobacter sp., was capable of utilizing 2-methylpyridine, 2-ethylpyridine, and 2-hydroxypyridine as primary C, N, and energy sources. The isolate was also able to utilize 2-, 3-, and 4-hydroxybenzoate, gentisic acid, protocatechuic acid and catechol, suggesting that it possesses a number of enzymatic pathways for the degradation of aromatic compounds. Degradation of 2-methylpyridine, 2-ethylpyridine, and 2-hydroxypyridine was accompanied by growth of the isolate and release of ammonium into the medium. Degradation of 2-methylpyridine was accompanied by overproduction of riboflavin. A soluble blue pigment was produced by the isolate during the degradation of 2-hydroxypyridine, and may be related to the diazadiphenoquinones reportedly produced by other Arthrobacter spp. when grown on 2-hydroxypyridine. When provided with 2-methylpyridine, 2-ethylpyridine, and 2-hydroxypyridine simultaneously, 2-hydroxypyridine was rapidly and preferentially degraded; however there was no apparent biodegradation of either 2-methylpyridine or 2-ethylpyridine until after a seven day lag. The data suggest that there are differences between the pathway for 2-hydroxypyridine degradation and the pathway(s) for 2-methylpyridine and 2-ethylpyridine.  相似文献   

10.
Mutants of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes that exhibited altered ability to undergo the normal sphere-to-rod-to-sphere morphogenetic cycle were isolated. The procedure used to isolate these mutants involved velocity sedimentation in a sterile sucrose gradient to separate morphogenesis-deficient spherical cells from rod-shaped cells capable of normal morphogenesis. Three classes of mutants were obtained: (i) those that cannot form rods, (ii) those that cannot form long rods, and (iii) those that form long rods but exhibit more extensive rudimentary branching than the wild type. The isolation and characterization of these mutants are described, and the use of these mutants in the study of the morphogenetic cycle of arthrobacters is discussed.  相似文献   

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The lipid composition of growing and starving cells of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes was compared. Although the lipid composition of the two cell types was similar, the amount of total lipids recovered from the starving cells was 30.4% less than that recovered from the growing cells. The loss of lipids, as compared to the loss of total cell mass during starvation, was (i) proportional to the loss of the cell mass (phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylglycerol-2, and cardiolipin), (ii) greater than the loss in cell mass (neutral lipids, "glycophospholipids," and phosphatidic acid), or (iii) less than the loss in cell mass (coenzyme Q, glycolipids, and phosphatidylglycerol-1).  相似文献   

13.
Microbiology - The composition and structure of the cell wall glycopolymers from Arthrobacter crystallopoietes VKM Ac-1107T (family Micrococcaceae, phylum Actinobacteria), previously assigned to...  相似文献   

14.
Cell walls of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes grown as spheres and as rods were solubilized by treatment with the B enzyme from Chalaropsis, an N-acetylmuramidase. The neutral glycopeptides were then isolated by chromatography on ECTEOLA cellulose. The glycopeptides, consisting of disaccharide-peptide units interlinked by peptide cross-bridges, were fractionated by gel filtration on Sephadex columns into oligomers of various sizes. The size distribution ranged from monomers with no cross-bridges to polymers with a high degree of polymerization, but did not differ significantly between cell walls from cells grown as spheres or rods. Some small differences in the distribution of C- and N-terminal amino acids were found. Analyses revealed that all the peptide bridges in the glycopeptide fractions from rod cell walls were formed by one l-alanine residue. In sphere cell walls, l-alanine was also found, but, in addition, higher oligomers of the glycopeptide contained glycine in their cross-bridges. These results were confirmed by determinations of C- and N-terminal amino acids released after lysostaphin and AL-1 enzyme digestions and by Edman degradations. Models representing the structures of the sphere and rod cell walls are presented. These structures indicate that the sphere cell wall is probably a more loosely knit macromolecule than is the rod cell wall.  相似文献   

15.
The sphere-rod-sphere morphology cycle of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes was accompanied by changes in the rate of growth and the rates of DNA, RNA and protein synthesis. The patterns of macromolecule synthesis resembled those found in other bacteria during a step-up followed by a step-down in growth rate. During the step-up in growth spherical cells grew into rods and macromolecules were synthesized in the absence of cell division. During stepdown, successive rounds of septation produced progressively smaller cells which did not separate and remained in chains. The morphology of the cells was dependent on the growth rate and could be altered by changing the dilution rate in a malate-limited chemostat. Gradual transitions in morphology and gradual increases in macromolecule content of the cells occurred as the growth rate was increased in the chemostat. Sphere to rod morphogenesis occurred when DNA synthesis was inhibited by treatment with mitomycin C or by thymine starvation. The DNA-deficient rods did not divide and eventually lysed. DNA, RNA and protein synthesis were continuously required for the reductive division of rods to spheres.Abbreviations MS mineral salts - GS mineral salts plus glucose - CA casamino acids - GSCA mineral salts plus glucose plus casamino acids - cAMP cyclic adenosine-3,5-monophosphate - RNA ribonucleic acid - DNA deoxyribonucleic acid  相似文献   

16.
The extracellular levels of cyclic AMP (cAMP), cAMP phosphodiesterase activity, and adenylate cyclase activity were measured at various intervals during growth and morphogenesis of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes. There was a significant rise in the extracellular cAMP level at the onset of stationary phase, and this rise coincided with a decrease in intracellular cAMP. The phosphodiesterase activity measured in vitro increased in the early exponential phase of growth as intracellular cAMP decreased, and, conversely, prior to the onset of stationary phase the phosphodiesterase activity decreased as the intracellular cAMP levels increased. Adenylate cyclase activity was greater in cell extracts prepared from cells grown in a medium where morphogenesis was observed. Pyruvate stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in vitro. A morphogenetic mutant, able to grow only as spheres in all media tested, was shown to have altered adenylated cyclase activity, whereas no significant difference compared to the parent strain was detectable in either the phosphodiesterase activity or the levels of extracellular cAMP. The roles of the two enzymes, adenylate cyclase and phosphodiesterase, and excretion of cAMP are discussed with regard to regulation of intracellular cAMP levels and morphogenesis.  相似文献   

17.
Cells of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes mixed in sand and air-dried have survived for up to 6 months after an initial period in which approximately half the cells lost their viability. Comparative survival curves have been obtained from inoculated sands maintained under CaSO(4) or P(2)O(5). Selections for more desiccation-resistant progeny capable of surviving the initial period were unsuccessful. Both the coccoid and rod-shaped forms are equally resistant to several months of desiccation. Desiccated spherical cells converted 0.0005% of their cell carbon to carbon dioxide per hr, which corresponds to a half-life for self-consumption of approximately 12 years.  相似文献   

18.
Spherical and rod-shaped cells of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes, harvested during exponential growth, were subjected to total starvation for periods of time as long as 80 days. Viability measurements were made by plate count and slide culture procedures. Both cell forms remained 100% viable for 30 days. Thereafter, viability of rods and spheres decreased equally at a slow rate. After 60 days of starvation, more than 65% of both cell forms were viable. No significant cell lysis occurred as evidenced by microscopic examination, the small amount of 260-nm absorbing material found in the starvation buffer, and stability of radioactively labeled deoxyribonucleic acid in the cells. Endogenous respiration decreased 80-fold during the first 2 days of starvation, accompanied by a 30% decrease in dry weight of the cells. Thereafter, cellular carbon was oxidized to CO(2) at the constant level of 0.03%/hr over the remaining 78-day starvation period.  相似文献   

19.
Arthrobacter crystallopoietes growing exponentially as cocci were changed to rods by adding succinate to the medium. Cells were sampled before, during, and after this transition for Gram-staining and ultrastructural studies. Cells were Gram stained by the standardized method of Bartholomew, and all samples were fixed and prepared for thin sectioning in an identical manner. Cocci were gram positive, and thin sections demonstrated a gram-positive type of cell wall having an average thickness of 31 nm. Cells sampled during morphogenesis appeared as cocci with most having a single rodlike projection. The coccus portion of these transition cells was gram positive and bound by a gram-positive type of wall having an average thickness of 29 nm. The rodlike projection of the transition cells appeared to be gram negative; it was also surrounded by a gram-positive type of wall, but its average thickness was only 22 nm. Gram-negative rods of the type species, Arthrobacter globiformis, were also examined and found to produce a gram-positive type of wall with a 19-nm average thickness. Evidence for the trilaminar region, characteristic of most gram-negative bacterial cell walls, was totally lacking in both species. These results suggest that variations in cell wall thickness may be an important contributing factor to the variable Gram-staining characteristics of this genus.  相似文献   

20.
Cell walls of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes were prepared from cells grown as spheres and from peptone- and succinate-induced rod stage cells. Undegraded polysaccharide backbones of the peptidoglycans were isolated from myxobacter AL-1 protease digests by ECTEOLA cellulose and Sephadex G-50 chromatography. The polysaccharide backbones of the sphere cell wall peptidoglycan are heterogeneous in their size, and average less than 40 hexosamines per chain. Those of the rod cell walls are homogeneous in size and average 114 to 135 hexosamines per chain.  相似文献   

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