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1.
Two glucose-phosphorylating enzymes, a hexokinase phosphorylating both glucose and fructose, and a glucose-specific glucokinase were electrophoretically separated in the methylotrophic yeastHansenula polymorpha. Hexokinase-negative mutants were isolated inH. polymorpha by using mutagenesis, selection and genetic crosses. Regulation of synthesis of the sugar-repressed alcohol oxidase, catalase and maltase was studied in different hexose kinase mutants. In the wild type and in mutants possessing either hexokinase or glucokinase, glucose repressed the synthesis of maltase, alcohol oxidase and catalase. Glucose repression of alcohol oxidase and catalase was abolished in mutants lacking both glucose-phosphorylating enzymes (i.e. in double kinase-negative mutants). Thus, glucose repression inH. polymorpha cells requires a glucose-phosphorylating enzyme, either hexokinase or glucokinase. The presence of fructose-phosphorylating hexokinase in the cell was specifically needed for fructose repression of alcohol oxidase, catalase and maltase. Hence, glucose or fructose has to be phosphorylated in order to cause repression of the synthesis of these enzymes inH. polymorpha suggesting that sugar repression in this yeast therefore relies on the catalytic activity of hexose kinases.  相似文献   

2.
Here, focus is on Corynebacterium glutamicum mannose metabolic genes with the aim to improve this industrially important microorganism’s ability to ferment mannose present in mixed sugar substrates. cgR_0857 encodes C. glutamicum’s protein with 36% amino acid sequence identity to mannose 6-phosphate isomerase encoded by manA of Escherichia coli. Its deletion mutant did not grow on mannose and exhibited noticeably reduced growth on glucose as sole carbon sources. In effect, C. glutamicum manA is not only essential for growth on mannose but also important in glucose metabolism. A double deletion mutant of genes encoding glucose and fructose permeases (ptsG and ptsF, respectively) of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system (PTS) was not able to grow on mannose unlike the respective single deletion mutants with mannose utilization ability. A mutant deficient in ptsH, a general PTS gene, did not utilize mannose. These indicate that the glucose-PTS and fructose-PTS are responsible for mannose uptake in C. glutamicum. When cultured with a glucose and mannose mixture, mannose utilization of manA-overexpressing strain CRM1 was significantly higher than that of its wild-type counterpart, but with a strong preference for glucose. ptsF-overexpressing strain CRM2 co-utilized mannose and glucose, but at a total sugar consumption rate much lower than that of the wild-type strain and CRM1. Strain CRM3 overexpressing both manA and ptsF efficiently co-utilized mannose and glucose. Under oxygen-deprived conditions, high volumetric productivity of organic acids concomitant with the simultaneous consumption of the mixed sugars was achieved by the densely packed growth-arrested CRM3 cells.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Expression of the galactokinase gene in Tetrahymena thermophila can be repressed by glucose, glucose analogs, and epinephrine, each apparently acting through increased intracellular levels of adenosine 3′:5′-cyc lic monophosphate (cAMP) (1). To characterize further the initial steps in the control of galactokinase gene-expression by glucose, we have analyzed mutants which are defective in the metabolism of this sugar; these mutants were selected for their resistance to the glucose analog, 2-deoxyglucose (2). In one such mutant that is deficient in glucokinase, the synthesis of galactokinase is totally resistant to repression by glucose or its analogs, while repression by exogenous catecholamines or dibutyryl cAMP is unaffected. Radiochromatographic analyses of extracts of wild-type cells incubated with [14C]-deoxyglucose reveal intracellular conversio to several deoxyglucose metabolites, principally deoxyglucose-6-P and smaller amounts of deoxyglunose 1-P and 2-deoxygluconate; extracts of glucokinase-deficient cells prepared in a similar manner contain only trace amounts of deoxyglucose-6-P. The glucose analog 3-O-methylglucose, which is transported but not phosphorylated in wild-type cells, also cannot maintain repression of galactokinase. These results establish that the transport and subsequent phosphorylation of glucose are required for glucose-initiated repression of galactokinase gene expression, possibly acting by modulation of catecholamine or cyclic AMP levels. Additionally, we show unequivocally that: (a) cells containing derepressed levels of galactokinase are repressed upon the addition of glucose by inhibition of the synthesis of new enzyme and dilution of preformed enzyme concomitant with cell division, rather than through selective inactivation or degradation of galactokinase; and (b) glycerol kinase, glucokinase and fructokinase activities also are repressed by glucose in wild-type Tetrahymena, indicating that the glucose repression phenomenon is pleiotropic. Because the glucose repression of the synthesis of each of these enzymes is abolished in cells deficient in glucokinase, the regulatory mechanisms elucidated for repression of galactokinase synthesis are likely to be of wide significance.  相似文献   

4.
Zymomonas mobilis is known to transport glucose by a facilitated diffusion process. A putative glucose facilitator gene (glf), closely related to a large family of glucose transporters, is located in a cluster of genes that code for enzymes of glucose metabolism. The Z. mobilis glf gene is able to complement glucose transport in an Escherichia coli strain that is defective in native glucose transport and glucokinase. In this study, the recombinant E coli was shown to be capable of influx counterflow when preloaded with glucose and had an apparent Km for glucose of approximately 1.1 - 2.9 mM, consistent with the function of Gif as a low-affinity glucose facilitator. The ability of glucokinase mutants expressing glf to transport glucose made it clear that glucokinase activity was not required for Glf-dependent glucose transport. The possibility that glucokinase can interact with Glf to improve the affinity for glucose was not supported since expression of the Z mobilis glucokinase gene, in addition to glf, did not affect the Km of Glf for glucose in recombinant E. coli The inability of various sugars to compete with glucose during glucose transport by recombinant E. coli expressing glf indicated that Glf is specific for glucose. While the results of fructose transport assays did not completely rule out the possibility of very low affinity for fructose, the apparent specificity of Gif for glucose makes it possible that Z. mobilis utilizes a different transporter(s) for fructose.  相似文献   

5.
The glucose kinase gene (glkA-ORF3) of Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) plays an essential role in glucose utilisation and in glucose repression of a variety of genes involved in the utilisation of alternative carbon sources. These genes include dagA, which encodes an extracellular agarase that permits agar utilisation. Suppressor mutants of glkA-ORF3 deletion strains capable of utilising glucose (Glc+) arise at a frequency of about 10–5 on prolonged incubation. The Glc+ phenotype of the mutants is reversible (at a frequency of about 10–3) and reflects either the activation of a normally silent glucose kinase gene or the modification of an existing sugar kinase. Although the level of glucose kinase activity in the Glc+ supressor mutants is similar to that in the glkA + parental strain, glucose repression of dagA remains defective. Expression of the glucose kinase gene of Zymomonas mobilis in glkA-ORF3 mutants restored glucose utilisation, but not glucose repression of dagA. Over-expression of glkA-ORF3 on a high-copy-number plasmid failed to restore glucose repression of dagA in glkA-ORF3 mutants and led to loss of glucose repression of dagA in a glkA + strain. These results suggest that glucose phosphorylation itself is not sufficient for glucose repression and that glkA-ORF3 plays a specific regulatory role in triggering glucose repression in S. coelicolor A3(2).  相似文献   

6.
It is demonstrated here that in Escherichia coli, the phosphorylated form of the glucose-specific phosphocarrier protein IIAGlc of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system is an activator of adenylyl cyclase and that unphosphorylated IIAGlc has no effect on the basal activity of adenylyl cyclase. To elucidate the specific role of IIAGlc phosphorylation in the regulation of adenylyl cyclase activity, both the phosphorylatable histidine (H90) and the interactive histidine (H75) of IIAGlc were mutated by site-directed mutagenesis to glutamine and glutamate. Wild-type IIAGlc and the H75Q mutant, in which the histidine in position 75 has been replaced by glutamine, were phosphorylated by the phosphohistidine-containing phosphocarrier protein (HPr~P) and were equally potent activators of adenylyl cyclase. Neither the H90Q nor the H90E mutant of IIAGlc was phosphorylated by HPr~P, and both failed to activate adenylyl cyclase. Furthermore, replacement of H75 by glutamate inhibited the appearance of a steady-state level of phosphorylation of H90 of this mutant protein by HPr~P, yet the H75E mutant of IIAGlc was a partial activator of adenylyl cyclase. The H75E H90A double mutant, which cannot be phosphorylated, did not activate adenylyl cyclase. This suggests that the H75E mutant was transiently phosphorylated by HPr~P but the steady-state level of the phosphorylated form of the mutant protein was decreased due to the repulsive forces of the negatively charged glutamate at position 75 in the catalytic pocket. These results are discussed in the context of the proximity of H75 and H90 in the IIAGlc structure and the disposition of the negative charge in the modeled glutamate mutants.  相似文献   

7.
Factors affecting hexose phosphorylation in Acetobacter xylinum   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Fructose was oxidized and converted to cellulose by cells of Acetobacter xylinum grown on fructose or succinate, but not by cells grown on glucose. In resting fructose-grown cells, glucose strongly suppressed fructose utilization. Extracts obtained from fructose- or succinate-grown cells catalyzed the adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-dependent formation of the 6-phosphate esters of glucose and fructose, whereas glucose-grown cell extracts phosphorylated glucose but not fructose. Fructokinase and glucokinase activities were separated and partially purified from cells grown on glucose, fructose, or succinate. Whereas fructokinase phosphorylated fructose only, glucokinase was active towards glucose and less active towards mannose and glucosamine. The optimal pH for the fructokinase was 7.4 and for the glucokinase was 8.5. The K(m) values for the fructokinase were: fructose, 6.2 mm; and ATP, 0.83 mm. The K(m) values for the glucokinase were: glucose, 0.22 mm; and ATP, 4.2 mm. Fructokinase was inhibited by glucose, glucosamine, mannose, and deoxyglucose in a manner competitive with respect to fructose, with K(i) values of 0.1, 0.14, 0.5, and 7.5 mm, respectively. Adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and adenosine monophosphate (AMP) inhibited both kinases noncompetitively with respect to ATP. The K(i) values were: 1.8 mm (ADP) and 2.1 mm (AMP) for fructokinase, and 2.2 mm (ADP) and 9.6 mm (AMP) for glucokinase. Fructose metabolism in A. xylinum appears to be regulated by the synthesis and activity of fructokinase.  相似文献   

8.
A wild-type strain of Enterococcus faecalis and its mutants resistant to 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2DG) were examined for the presence of phosphoenolpyruvate:carbohydrate phosphotransferase systems (PTSs) with 12 carbohydrates, which were utilized by the organism, as the substrates. The wild-type strain possessed a constitutive mannose-PTS, which was reactive with glucose, mannose, glucosamine, 2DG and fructose. This activity was absent in the mutants. No independent glucose- or fructose-PTS was found in the mannose-PTS-defective mutants. The mutants, however, showed a low level of a constitutive PTS activity with maltose, suggesting the existence of an independent maltose-PTS in the organism. Both wild-type and mutant strains possessed inducible lactose-, mannitol-, and trehalose-PTSs. Lactose-PTS was induced by either lactose or galactose in the parent, but only by lactose in the mutants. The lactose-PTS was not reactive with galactose, and no separate galactose-PTS was present. These observations suggest that the inducer for lactose-PTS, probably being galactose 6-phosphate, may not be formed from galactose in the organism when the constitutive mannose-PTS is lost by mutation.  相似文献   

9.
Glucose-negative mutants of Mycoplasma capricolum were selected for growth on fructose in the presence of the toxic glucose analog alpha-methyl-D-glucopyranoside. The mutants are defective in the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system for glucose. One mutant, pts-4, was studied in detail. It lacks the glucose-specific, membrane-bound enzyme II, IIGlc, as well as the general, low-molecular-weight, phosphocarrier protein, HPr. In place of the latter, however, it has a fructose-specific protein, HPrFru. Consistent with these changes, the mutant lost the ability to grow on glucosamine and maltose but retained its ability to grow on sucrose. In the glucose-negative mutant, glucose did not regulate the intracellular concentration of cyclic AMP. The intracellular concentration of cyclic AMP in M. capricolum is regulated by the presence of metabolizable sugars. In the wild-type, both glucose and fructose reduced the intracellular concentration of cyclic AMP; however, in the glucose-negative mutant, glucose no longer regulated the intracellular level of cyclic AMP.  相似文献   

10.
Evidence is presented for isotopic flow between glucose and glucose-6P and between fructose-6P and fructose 1,6diP during gluconeogenesis. Inhibitors of glucokinase (glucosamine, 2-deoxyglucose) inhibit the isotopic counterflow. Transaldolase exchange is ruled out by using hexoses labeled in the top half of the molecule.  相似文献   

11.
A wild-type strain, Sp972 h, of Schizosaccharomyces pombe was mutagenized with ethylmethanesulfonate (EMS), and 2-deoxyglucose (2-DOG)-resistant mutants were isolated. Out of 300 independent 2-DOG-resistant mutants, 2 failed to grow on glucose and fructose (mutants 3/8 and 3/23); however, their hexokinase activity was normal. They have been characterized as defective in their sugar transport properties, and the mutations have been designated as std1-8 and std1-23 (sugar transport defective). The mutations are allelic and segregate as part of a single gene when the mutants carrying them are crossed to a wild-type strain. We confirmed the transport deficiency of these mutants by [14C]glucose uptake. They also fail to grow on other monosaccharides, such as fructose, mannose, and xylulose, as well as disaccharides, such as sucrose and maltose, unlike the wild-type strain. Lack of growth of the glucose transport-deficient mutants on maltose revealed the extracellular breakdown of maltose in S. pombe, unlike in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Both of the mutants are unable to grow on low concentrations of glucose (10 to 20 mM), while one of them, 3/23, grows on high concentrations (50 to 100 mM) as if altered in its affinity for glucose. This mutant (3/23) shows a lag period of 12 to 18 h when grown on high concentrations of glucose. The lag disappears when the culture is transferred from the log phase of its growth on high concentrations. These mutants complement phenotypically similar sugar transport mutants (YGS4 and YGS5) reported earlier by Milbradt and Hoefer (Microbiology 140:2617–2623, 1994), and the clone complementing YGS4 and YGS5 was identified as the only glucose transporter in fission yeast having 12 transmembrane domains. These mutants also demonstrate two other defects: lack of induction and repression of shunt pathway enzymes and defective mating.  相似文献   

12.
Uncoupled enzyme IIGlc of the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP): glucose phosphotransferase system (PTS) in Salmonella typhimurium is able to catalyze glucose transport in the absence of PEP-dependent phosphorylation. We have studied the energetics of glucose uptake catalyzed by this uncoupled enzyme IIGlc. The molar growth yields on glucose of two strains cultured anaerobically in glucose-limited chemostat-and batch cultures were compared. Strain PP 799 transported and phosphorylated glucose via an intact PTS, while strain PP 952 took up glucose exclusively via uncoupled enzyme IIGlc, followed by ATP-dependent phosphorylation by glucokinase. Thus the strains were isogenic except for the mode of uptake and phosphorylation of the growth substrate. PP 799 and PP 952 exhibited similar Y Glc values. Assuming equal Y ATP values for both strains this result indicated that there were no energetic demands for glucose uptake via uncoupled enzyme IIGlc.Abbreviations PTS phosphoenolpyruvate: carbohydrate phosphotransferase system - HPr histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein - GalP galactose permease  相似文献   

13.
The hyperthermophilic sulfate-reducing archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus strain 7324 has been shown to degrade starch via glucose using a modified Embden-Meyerhof pathway. The first enzyme of this pathway, ADP-dependent glucokinase, was purified 600-fold to homogeneity. The enzyme is a monomeric protein with an apparent molecular mass of 50 kDa. It had a temperature optimum at 83 °C and showed a significant thermostability up to 100 °C. The enzyme was highly specific for ADP and glucose as substrates; it did not use ATP, CDP, UDP, or GDP as phosphoryl donors, or mannose, fructose and fructose 6-phosphate as phosphoryl acceptors (at 80 °C). Only glucosamine was phosphorylated at significant rates. The apparent Km values for ADP and glucose (at 50 °C) were 0.07 mM and 0.78 mM, respectively; the apparent Vmax value was about 50 U/mg at 50 °C and 350 U/mg at 80 °C. Divalent cations were required for maximal activity; Mn2+, Mg2+ and Ca2+, which were most effective, could be replaced partially by Cu2+, Ni2+, Co2+ and Zn2+. The N-terminal amino acid sequence (42 amino acids) of ADP-dependent glucokinase was almost identical to that of ADP-dependent glucokinase from Thermococcus litoralis. In the genome of the closely related Archaeoglobus fulgidus strain VC16 a homologous gene for ADP-dependent glucokinase could not be identified.  相似文献   

14.
SYNOPSIS Some carbohydrates inhibited glucose and fructose transport in Trypanosoma gambiense. Glucose transport was inhibited by glycerol, mannose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose, glucosamine and N-acetylglucosamine. Fructose transport was inhibited by glucose, glycerol, mannose, glucosamine and N-acetylglucosamine. Glucosamine transport appeared to be a mediated process and had a Km of 1.20 mM and a Vmax of 28.5 μM glucosamine/g dry wt/2 min. Glucosamine absorption was competitively inhibited by glucose, fructose and N-acetylglycosamine. N-Acetylglucosamine appeared to enter by passive diffusion. Reciprocal inhibition experiments suggested that glucosamine entered entirely via the “fructose site.” Specificity of sugar transport in T. gambiense differs from that of other organisms.  相似文献   

15.
Tunicamycin resistant mutants (TMR) were isolated and characterized from Chinese hamster ovary cells. One feature of this TMR mutants was a marked decrease in incorporation of radioactive glucosamine, both into membrane glycoproteins and G protein of vesicular stomatitis virus.

The cellular uptake and incorporation into acid insoluble materials of various radioactive substances, including glucosamine, galactosamine, mannose, 2-deoxyglucose and leucine, was examined for the purpose of determination whether the reduced incorporation of radioactive glucosamine into glycoproteins was due to a defect in the glycosylation step or decreased uptake of glucosamine by cells.

While incorporation of glucosamine and 2-deoxyglucose into acid insoluble fractions was reduced strikingly in the mutants, the incorporation of mannose and leucine were the same as in the parent cells.

The uptake of glucosamine in TMR cells was lower than that in the wild type cells, and the Km value for glucosamine uptake differed between the mutants and wild type cells. There was no obvious difference in the uptake of 2-deoxyglucose and mannose.  相似文献   

16.
The glucose kinase gene (glkA-ORF3) of Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) plays an essential role in glucose utilisation and in glucose repression of a variety of genes involved in the utilisation of alternative carbon sources. These genes include dagA, which encodes an extracellular agarase that permits agar utilisation. Suppressor mutants of glkA-ORF3 deletion strains capable of utilising glucose (Glc+) arise at a frequency of about 10?5 on prolonged incubation. The Glc+ phenotype of the mutants is reversible (at a frequency of about 10?3) and reflects either the activation of a normally silent glucose kinase gene or the modification of an existing sugar kinase. Although the level of glucose kinase activity in the Glc+ supressor mutants is similar to that in the glkA + parental strain, glucose repression of dagA remains defective. Expression of the glucose kinase gene of Zymomonas mobilis in glkA-ORF3 mutants restored glucose utilisation, but not glucose repression of dagA. Over-expression of glkA-ORF3 on a high-copy-number plasmid failed to restore glucose repression of dagA in glkA-ORF3 mutants and led to loss of glucose repression of dagA in a glkA + strain. These results suggest that glucose phosphorylation itself is not sufficient for glucose repression and that glkA-ORF3 plays a specific regulatory role in triggering glucose repression in S. coelicolor A3(2).  相似文献   

17.
Mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae resistant to carbon catabolite repression.   总被引:26,自引:0,他引:26  
Summary Mutants with defective carbon catabolite repression have been isolated in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae using a selective procedure. This was based on the fact that invertase is a glucose repressible cell wall enzyme which slowly hydrolyses raffinose to yield fructose and that the inhibitory effects of 2-deoxyglucose can be counteracted by fructose. Repressed cells were plated on a raffinose-2-deoxyglucose medium and the resistant cells growing up into colonies were tested for glucose non-repressible invertase and maltase. The yield of regulatory mutants was very high. All were equally derepressed for invertase and maltase, no mutants were obtained with only non-repressible invertase synthesis which was the selected function. A total of 61 mutants isolated in different strains were allele tested and could be attributed to three genes. They were all recessive. Mutants in one gene had reduced hexokinase activities, the other class, located in a centromere linked gene, had elevated hexokinase levels and was inhibited by maltose. Mutants in a third gene were isolated on a 2-deoxyglucose galactose medium and had normal hexokinase levels. A partial derepression was observed for malate dehydrogenase in all mutants. Isocitrate lyase, however, was still fully repressible.  相似文献   

18.
Summary According to the biosynthetic pathway of pristinamycin, a rational selection procedure with u.v. mutation was performed to obtain a high pristinamycin-producing strain. Aminoacetic acid-resistant mutants (AAr), valine hydroxamate-resistant mutants (VHr), kitasamycin-resistant mutants (KTMr) and 2-deoxy-D-glucose-resistant mutants (DOGr) were selected, successively. A strain Streptomyces pristinaespiralis 12–55 with AAr, Valr, KTMr, and DOGr was obtained, and its production of pristinamycin reached 3000 u/ml which is 100 times higher than that of the parent strain S. pristinaespiralis ATCC 25486. It is inferred that S. pristinaespiralis 12–55 can alleviate catabolite repression caused by carbon sources, provide more acetic acid and valine for pristinamycin biosynthesis and increase its resistance to pristinamycin produced by itself, all of which are favorable for pristinamycin production. The subculture experiments indicated that the hereditary character of high productivity of S. pristinaespiralis 12–55 is stable. The pristinamycin production of S. pristinaespiralis 12–55 in a 15-l fermentor could reach 3010 u/ml after a 56 h batch fermentation.  相似文献   

19.
Glucose-dehydrogenase-deficient (Gcd) strains ofPseudomonas cepacia 249 compensated for loss of operation of the direct oxidative pathway by expanding the phosphorylative pathway. When grown on glucose, they had between two- and fourfold higher than normal levels of glucokinase and NAD-linked glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity and a comparable increase in capacity to transport glucose. Similar expansion of the phosphorylative pathway was noted when the wild type was grown on cellobiose or trehalose. Gcd strains grew normally on cellobiose and trehalose, but not if also deficient in glucokinase; this indicates that the disaccharides were converted to glucose and metabolized via the phosphorylative pathway. The expansion of the phosphorylative pathway during growth of the wild type on disaccharides or of Gcd mutants on glucose was a consequence of hyperinduction of pathway enzymes. Other compounds that promoted such hyperinduction included aromatic conjugates of glucose such as arbutin and salicin, and mannose. Under conditions leading to expansion of the phosphorylative pathway, enzymes related to the direct oxidative pathway, such as gluconate dehydrogenase and the 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase active with NAD, were not formed. The results indicate that intracellular glucose and extracellular glucose are metabolized to 6-phosphogluconate via different routes.  相似文献   

20.
We have isolated a mutant of Tetrahymena thermophila that is resistant to inhibition of growth by the glucose analog 2-deoxyglucose. The mutant exhibits a deficiency in a cytoplasmic glucokinase. This enzymatic defect and the attendant inability to convert 2-deoxyglucose to toxic phosphorylated derivatives is apparently the sole basis for the mutant phenotype since transport of glucose and 2-deoxyglucose is unimpaired; there is no elevation of glucose-6-phosphatase activity, which could decrease the level of toxic 2-deoxyglucose metabolites. Genetic analyses have shown that the mutant allele is recessive and inherited as a single Mendelian mutation. The glucokinase-deficient strain described here is useful for the selection of other mutants in this organism and for the investigation of various cellular processes initiated or modulated by glucose and its analogs. We have exploited the molecular defect in this strain to investigate the initial steps in the cyclic AMP-mediated repression of galactokinase gene expression which is caused by glucose.  相似文献   

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