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1.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa PACI grows poorly on L-lysine as sole source of carbon but mutant derivatives which grow rapidly were readily isolated. Studies with one such mutant, P. aeruginosa PAC586, supported the existence of a route for L-lysine catabolism which differes from those reported previously in other species of Pseudomonas. The postulated route, the cadaverine or decarboxylase pathway, is initiated by the decarboxylation of L-lysine and involves the following steps: L-lysine leads to cadverine leads to I-piperideine leads 5-aminovalerate leads to glutarate semialdehyde leads glutarate. Evidence for this pathway is based on the characterization of the pathway reactions and the induction of the corresponding enzymes by growth on L-lysine. The first three enzymes were also induced by growth on cadaverine and to a lesser extent by 5-aminovalerate. No evidence was obtained for the presence of pathways involving L-lysine 2-monooxygenase or L-pipecolate dehydrogenase, but another potential route for L-lysine catabolism initiated by L-lysine 6-aminotransferase was detected. Studies with mutants unable to grow on L-lysine supported the existence of more than one catabolic pathway for L-lysine in this organism and indicated that all routes converge on a pathway for glutarate catabolism which generates acetyl-CoA. Pipecolate catabolism also appeared to converge on the glutarate pathway in P. AERUGINOSA. The results suggested that the growth rate of the parental strain is limited by the rate of transport and/or decarboxylation of L-lysine. The cadaverine pathway was present, but not so highly induced, in the parental strain P. aeruginosa PACI. Pseudomonas fluorescens contained enzymes of both the cadaverine (decarboxylase) and oxygenase pathways, strains of P. putida (biotypes A and B) contained enzymes of the oxygenase pathway but not the decarboxylase pathway and P. multivorans appeared deficient in both. All these species possessed L-lysine aminotransferase activity.  相似文献   

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In comparison to other pseudomonads, Pseudomonas aeruginosa grows poorly in l-lysine as a sole source of nutrient. In this study, the ldcA gene (lysine decarboxylase A; PA1818), previously identified as a member of the ArgR regulon of l-arginine metabolism, was found essential for l-lysine catabolism in this organism. LdcA was purified to homogeneity from a recombinant strain of Escherichia coli, and the results of enzyme characterization revealed that this pyridoxal-5-phosphate-dependent decarboxylase takes l-lysine, but not l-arginine, as a substrate. At an optimal pH of 8.5, cooperative substrate activation by l-lysine was depicted from kinetics studies, with calculated Km and Vmax values of 0.73 mM and 2.2 μmole/mg/min, respectively. Contrarily, the ldcA promoter was induced by exogenous l-arginine but not by l-lysine in the wild-type strain PAO1, and the binding of ArgR to this promoter region was demonstrated by electromobility shift assays. This peculiar arginine control on lysine utilization was also noted from uptake experiments in which incorporation of radioactively labeled l-lysine was enhanced in cells grown in the presence of l-arginine but not l-lysine. Rapid growth on l-lysine was detected in a mutant devoid of the main arginine catabolic pathway and with a higher basal level of the intracellular l-arginine pool and hence elevated ArgR-responsive regulons, including ldcA. Growth on l-lysine as a nitrogen source can also be enhanced when the aruH gene encoding an arginine/lysine:pyruvate transaminase was expressed constitutively from plasmids; however, no growth of the ldcA mutant on l-lysine suggests a minor role of this transaminase in l-lysine catabolism. In summary, this study reveals a tight connection of lysine catabolism to the arginine regulatory network, and the lack of lysine-responsive control on lysine uptake and decarboxylation provides an explanation of l-lysine as a poor nutrient for P. aeruginosa.Decarboxylation of amino acids, including lysine, arginine, and glutamate, is important for bacterial survival under low pH (2, 7, 19). Lysine is abundant in the rhizosphere where fluorescent Pseudomonas preferentially resides, and serves as a nitrogen and carbon source to these organisms (28). In microbes, lysine catabolism can be initiated either through monooxygenase, decarboxylase, or transaminase activities. The monooxygenase pathway has been considered the major route for l-lysine utilization in Pseudomonas putida, and davBATD encoding enzymes for the first four steps of the pathway have been characterized (25, 26). In contrast, Pseudomonas aeruginosa cannot use exogenous l-lysine efficiently for growth (5, 24). It has been reported that enzymatic activities for the first two steps of the monooxygenase pathway are not detectable in P. aeruginosa, and no davBA orthologs can be identified from this organism (24, 25).Mutants of P. aeruginosa with improved growth on l-lysine and a high level of lysine decarboxylase activity can be isolated by repeated subcultures in l-lysine (5). This suggests that in P. aeruginosa, l-lysine utilization might be mediated by the lysine decarboxylase pathway with cadaverine and 5-aminovalerate as intermediates (Fig. (Fig.1).1). Alternatively, conversion of l-lysine into 5-aminovalerate may also be accomplished by a coupled reaction catalyzed by AruH and AruI. The AruH and AruI enzymes were reported as arginine:pyruvate transaminase and 2-ketoarginine decarboxylase, respectively (36). Interestingly, transamination by AruH using l-lysine as an amino group donor can also be detected in vitro (35). The reaction product α-keto-ɛ-aminohexanonate can potentially be decarboxylated into 5-aminovalerate by AruI, providing an alternative route for lysine degradation.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Lysine catabolic pathways. l-lysine decarboxylase pathway is shown at center. Broken arrows represent lysine monooxygenase pathway from P. putida which is not present in P. aeruginosa.In this study, we showed that the lysine decarboxylase pathway is the main route for lysine utilization under arginine control. Expression of the ldcAB operon encoding l-lysine decarboxylase and a putative lysine/cadaverine antiporter was analyzed regarding its response to l-lysine, l-arginine, and the arginine-responsive regulator ArgR. Enzyme characterization was performed to verify the function of LdcA as l-lysine decarboxylase. Arginine control on lysine incorporation was also investigated by genetic studies and uptake experiments. The peculiar role of ArgR controlling arginine and lysine uptake and catabolism provides the explanation for poor growth in lysine, and it implies a higher level of complexity in metabolic networks of pseudomonads.  相似文献   

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Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 catabolized the aromatic amines tyramine and octopamine through 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (HPA). meta ring cleavage was mediated by 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetate 2,3-dioxygenase (HPADO), producing 2-hydroxy-5-carboxymethylmuconic semialdehyde (MSA). An NAD-dependent dehydrogenase caused the disappearance of the yellow MSA product, probably forming 2-hydroxy-5-carboxymethylmuconic acid. Induction studies with extracts from mutant cells indicated that the inducer of HPADO was HPA and/or MSA. Strains PAO1.221 (tynC1) and PAO1.303 (tynD1) have chromosomal mutations causing a deficiency in the activity necessary for conversion of 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid to HPA. Genetic analyses showed that the mutations were in different loci. Strains PAO1.197 (tynE1) and PAO1.185 (tynF1) are deficient in HPADO and the NAD-dependent dehydrogenase, respectively. Plasmid pRO1853 was constructed by cloning approximately 7.3 kilobases of PAO1 chromosomal DNA into the BamHI site of the vector plasmid pRO1614. This recombinant plasmid complemented the tynD1, tynE1, and tynF1 mutations. A putative repressor-binding site involved in the regulation of HPADO synthesis was observed for a subcloned fragment of pRO1853. This recombinant plasmid, pRO1863, failed to complement tynE1 or tynF1 but still complemented tynD1. Another construct, pRO1887, contained 9.2 kilobases of PAO1 chromosomal DNA inserted in the PstI site of the vector pRO1727. Plasmid pRO1887 complemented only the tynC1 mutation. Mapping experiments performed with the chromosome-mobilizing plasmid R68.45 located the mutations described above in a cluster at about 35 to 40 min of the PAO1 chromosome map. The mutations were linked to the proA, thr-48, lys-9015, argF10, and argG markers.  相似文献   

6.
Chemotaxis in Pseudomonas aeruginosa.   总被引:6,自引:5,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
A chemotaxis system for Pseudomonas aeruginosa was defined by using the method of Adler. Cells were attracted to compounds in the order ammonium chloride greater than amino acids greater than organic acids. Two sugars were assayed and elicited no response. Comparisons with other model systems are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Viability of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
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8.
Aging of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
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9.
Summary Pseudomonas sp. NCIB 10643 grew on a range of n-alkylbenzenes (C2-C7) and on several branched species within this chain size (isopropylbenzene, isobutylbenzene, sec-butylbenzene, tert-butylbenzene and tert-amylbenzene). All of the alkylbenzenes were catabolized via ring attack, rather than side-chain attack, proceeding via initial dioxygenase activity resulting in the corresponding 2,3-dihydro-2,3-dihydroxyalkylbenzene, which underwent reduction to the corresponding 2,3-dihydroxyl-intermediate (3-alkyl-substituted catechols). The 3-substituted catechols were ring-cleaved by an extra-diol type enzyme between C1 and C2 resulting in characteristic meta ring-fission products. Further catabolism was by hydrolytic attack to give alkyl-chain dependent carboxylic acids and, presumably, 2-oxopenta-4-enoate. Details of the intermediates and enzymes involved in alkylbenzene catabolism are given. This is the most versatile aromatic, ring-cleaving, alkylbenzene-utilizing bacterium thus far reported.Offprint requests to: C. Ratledge  相似文献   

10.
Biogenic amines (BAs; 2-phenylethylamine, tyramine, dopamine, epinephrine, norepinephrine, octopamine, histamine, tryptamine, serotonin, agmatine, cadaverine, putrescine, spermidine, spermine and certain aliphatic amines) are widely distributed organic molecules that play basic physiological functions in animals, plants and microorganisms. Pseudomonas species can grow in media containing different BAs as carbon and energy sources, a reason why these bacteria are excellent models for studying such catabolic pathways. In this review, we analyse most of the routes used by different species of Pseudomonas (P. putida, P. aeruginosa, P. entomophila and P. fluorescens) to degrade BAs. Analysis of these pathways has led to the identification of a huge number of genes, catabolic enzymes, transport systems and regulators, as well as to understanding of their hierarchy and functional evolution. Knowledge of these pathways has allowed the design and collection of genetically manipulated microbes useful for eliminating BAs from different sources, highlighting the biotechnological applications of these studies.  相似文献   

11.
J Kato  A Ito  T Nikata    H Ohtake 《Journal of bacteriology》1992,174(15):5149-5151
Pseudomonas aeruginosa was shown to be attracted to phosphate. The chemotactic response was induced by phosphate starvation. The specificity of chemoreceptors for phosphate was high so that no other tested phosphorus compounds elicited a chemotactic response as strong as that elicited by phosphate. Competition experiments showed that the chemoreceptors for phosphate appeared to be different from those for the common amino acids. Mutants constitutive for alkaline phosphatase showed the chemotactic response to phosphate regardless of whether the cells were starved for phosphate.  相似文献   

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Suppressor mutations were identified in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and a comparison was made with Escherichia coli suppressor systems. A suppressor-sensitive (sus) derivative of a plasmid, RP4 trp, and several Sus mutants of IncP1 plasmid-specific phages, were isolated by using E. coli. Plasmid RP4 trp (sus) was transferred to P. aeruginosa strains carrying trp markers which did not complement RP4 trp(sus), and Trp+ variants were selected. Some, but not all such revertants, could propagate PRD1 Sus phages, and these mutants were found to be supressor positive. Plating efficiencies of various Sus phages on these strains were compared with on E. coli strains carrying known suppressor genes. The results suggested that the Pseudomonas suppressors were probably amber suppressors. In iddition, some Sus phages (PRD1sus-55, PRD1sus-56) were obtained which, although apparently of the amber type for E. coli, were able to propagate equally well on sup+ or sup strains of P. aeruginosa. On the other hand, several mutants of phage PRR1 which were suppressed in E. coli were not suppressed by the P. aeruginosa suppressor. Suppressor-sensitive mutants were also isolated with P. aeruginosa bacteriophages E79 and D3.  相似文献   

14.
A high-affinity (Km = 2.7 x 10(-7) M) energy-requiring methionine-transport system has been characterized in RM 46 and RM 48, two different PAO methionine auxotrophs of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. After 8 s of transport 40--60% of the methionine label in the alcohol extract appears in S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) with the remaining activity in free methionine. Methionine transport required a high degree of structural specificity for transport. Stimulation of transport occurred by addition of glucose or organic acids. The ability of a given substrate to stimulate transport was related to the type of carbon source used for growth. Transport was sensitive to sulfhydryl reagents and required oxidative phosphorylation, as indicated by the inhibitory effects of anaerobiosis, cyanide, and arsenate. The degree of inhibition by arsenate correlated with the level of ATP in the cell. Rapid transport in a SAM-deficient mutant (TM 1) and inhibition by arsenate of transport in this mutant suggested that SAM formation was not directly linked to transport and that ATP supplied energy for transport. Inhibition by arsenate was more severe in glucose- compared to citrate-stimulated cells. This result was also observed with proline transport indicating that this was not a peculiarity of the methionine-transport system. These data emphasize the close link between glucose metabolism, ATP levels, and transport. This ATP level is not so critical for transport in cells metabolizing citrate.  相似文献   

15.
Protein secretion in Pseudomonas aeruginosa.   总被引:24,自引:0,他引:24  
The Gram-negative bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa secretes many proteins into the extracellular medium. At least two distinct secretion pathways can be discerned. The majority of the exoproteins are secreted via a two-step mechanism. These proteins are first translocated across the inner membrane in a signal sequence-dependent fashion. The subsequent translocation across the outer membrane requires the products of at least 12 distinct xcp genes. The exact role of one of these proteins, the XcpA protein, has been resolved. It is a peptidase that is required for the processing of the precursors of four other Xcp proteins, thus allowing their assembly into the secretion apparatus. This peptidase is also required for the processing of the precursors of type IV pili subunits. Two other Xcp proteins, XcpR and XcpS, display extensive homology to proteins involved in pili biogenesis, which suggests that the assembly of the secretion apparatus and the biogenesis of type IV pili are related processes. The secretion of alkaline protease does not require the xcp gene products. This enzyme, which is encoded by the aprA gene, is not synthesized in a precursor form with an N-terminal signal sequence. Secretion across the two membranes probably takes place in one step at adhesion zones that may be constituted by three accessory proteins, designated AprD, AprE and AprF. The two secretion pathways found in P. aeruginosa appear to have disseminated widely among Gram-negative bacteria.  相似文献   

16.
Codon usage in Pseudomonas aeruginosa.   总被引:81,自引:2,他引:81       下载免费PDF全文
We have generated a codon usage table for Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Codon usage in P. aeruginosa is extremely biased. In contrast to E. coli and yeast, P. aeruginosa preferentially uses those codons within a synonymous codon group with the strongest predicted codon-anticodon interaction. We were unable to correlate a particular codon usage pattern with predicted levels of mRNA expressivity. The choice of a third base reflects the high guanine plus cytosine content of the P. aeruginosa genome (67.2%) and cytosine is the preferred nucleotide for the third codon position.  相似文献   

17.
1. Adenine, hypoxanthine, xanthine and guanine are broken down in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Pseudomonas testosteroni to allantoin by the concerted action of the enzymes adenine deaminase, guanine deaminase, NAD+-dependent xanthine dehydrogenase and uricase. 2. Uric acid is broken down by an unstable, membrane-bound uricase with an unusually low pH optimum. 3. In both strains adenine inhibits growth and xanthine dehydrogenase. A second type of inhibition is manifest only in Ps. testosteroni and concerns the regulation of the biosynthesis of amino acids of the aspartate family. Enzymic studies showed that in this strain aspartate kinase is inhibited by AMP.  相似文献   

18.
Geranyl-coenzyme A (CoA)-carboxylase (GCase; AtuC/AtuF) and methylcrotonyl-CoA-carboxylase (MCase; LiuB/LiuD) are characteristic enzymes of the catabolic pathway of acyclic terpenes (citronellol and geraniol) and of saturated methyl-branched compounds, such as leucine or isovalerate, respectively. Proteins encoded by two gene clusters (atuABCDEFGH and liuRABCDE) of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 were essential for acyclic terpene utilization (Atu) and for leucine and isovalerate utilization (Liu), respectively, as revealed by phenotype analysis of 10 insertion mutants, two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, determination of GCase and MCase activities, and Western blot analysis of wild-type and mutant strains. Analysis of the genome sequences of other pseudomonads (P. putida KT2440 and P. fluorescens Pf-5) revealed candidate genes for Liu proteins for both species and candidate genes for Atu proteins in P. fluorescens. This result concurred with the finding that P. fluorescens, but not P. putida, could grow on acyclic terpenes (citronellol and citronellate), while both species were able to utilize leucine and isovalerate. A regulatory gene, atuR, was identified upstream of atuABCDEFGH and negatively regulated expression of the atu gene cluster.  相似文献   

19.
Chemotaxis by Pseudomonas aeruginosa.   总被引:11,自引:3,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
Chemotaxis by Pseudomonas aeruginosa RM46 has been studied, and conditions required for chemotaxis have been defined, by using the Adler capillary assay technique. Several amino acids, organic acids, and glucose were shown to be attractants of varying effectiveness for this organism. Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid was absolutely required for chemotaxis, and magnesium was also necessary for a maximum response. Serine taxis was greatest when the chemotaxis medium contained 1.5 X 10(-5) M ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid and 0.005 M magnesium chloride. It was not necessary to include methionine in the chemotaxis medium. The strength of the chemotactic responses to glucose and to citrate was dependent on prior growth of the bacteria on glucose and citrate, respectively. Accumulation in response to serine was inhibited by the addition of succinate, citrate, malate, glucose, pyruvate, or methionine to the chemotaxis medium. Inhibition by succinate was not dependent on the concentration of attractant in the capillary. However, the degree to which glucose and citrate inhibited serine taxis was dependent on the carbon source utilized for growth. Further investigation of this inhibition may provide information about the mechanisms of chemotaxis in P. aeruginosa.  相似文献   

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