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1.
2.
In contrast to wild-type cells, the Bacillus subtilis mutant SF109 that lacks the active 2-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase enzymatic complex is unable to increase the specific activity of two enzymes subject to glucose catabolite repression, aconitase and histidase, during limitation of growth by glucose. Examination of the intracellular metabolite pools in the mutant and wild-type cells grown in excess and limiting glucose medium showed that the complete derepression of aconitase and histidase could be correlated with the decrease in the intracellular concentration of 2-ketoglutarate. The complete repression of aconitase that occurred in wild-type and mutant cells could be correlated with a high intracellular concentration of 2-ketoglutarate.  相似文献   

3.
1. The specific role of the lac repressor (i-gene product) in transient catabolite repression evoked by the introduction of glucose into the medium has been investigated in Escherichia coli by using mutants of the i-gene. 2. A temperature-sensitive mutant (i(TL)) is normally inducible and demonstrates transient repression when grown at 32 degrees . At 42 degrees it is about 20% constitutive and transient catabolite repression is abolished. 3. A strain carrying an amber suppressor-sensitive mutation in the i-gene is phenotypically constitutive and also fails to show transient catabolite repression. 4. Insertion of Flaci(+) into this strain restores both inducibility and transient repression. 5. It is concluded that the i-gene product interacts with the catabolite co-repressor in such a way that its affinity for the operator is increased.  相似文献   

4.
Differences in expression of the Escherichia coli stress protein HtpG were found following exposure of exponentially growing cells to heat or chemical shock when cells were grown under different environmental conditions. With an htpG::lacZ reporter system, htpG expression increased in cells grown in a complex medium (Luria-Bertani [LB] broth) following a temperature shock at 45 degrees C. In contrast, no HtpG overexpression was detected in cells grown in a glucose minimal medium, despite a decrease in the growth rate. Similarly, in pyruvate-grown cells there was no heat shock induction of HtpG expression, eliminating the possibility that repression of HtpG in glucose-grown E. coli was due to catabolite repression. When 5 mM phenol was used as a chemical stress agent for cells growing in LB broth, expression of HtpG increased. However, when LB-grown cells were subjected to stress with 10 mM phenol and when both 5 and 10 mM phenol were added to glucose-grown cultures, repression of htpG expression was observed. 2-Chlorophenol stress resulted in overexpression of HtpG when cells were grown in complex medium but repression of HtpG synthesis when cells were grown in glucose. No induction of htpG expression was seen with 2, 4-dichlorophenol in cells grown with either complex medium or glucose. The results suggest that, when a large pool of amino acids and proteins is available, as in complex medium, a much stronger stress response is observed. In contrast, when cells are grown in a simple glucose mineral medium, htpG expression either is unaffected or is even repressed by imposition of a stress condition. The results demonstrate the importance of considering differences in growth environment in order to better understand the nature of the response to an imposed stress condition.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Escherichia coli cells grown to logarithmic phase in, and plated on, rich medium (yeast extract-nutrient broth) were more resistant to X rays, ultraviolet (uv) radiation, and methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) than cells grown in, and plated on, minimal medium. We have called this enhanced survival capability medium-dependent resistance (MDR). The magnitude of MDR observed after oxic X irradiation was greater than that observed after anoxic X irradiation, uv irradiation, or MMS treatment. MDR was not observed in stationary-phase cells with X or uv radiation. MDR was associated with an increased ability to repair X-ray-induced DNA single-strand breaks, and with reduced X-ray-induced DNA degradation and protein synthesis retardation. Postirradiation protein synthesis was concluded to be critical in allowing the high X-ray survival associated with MDR, because of the large radiosensitization caused by a postirradiation growth medium shift down or treatment with rifampicin (RIF), recA protein must be at least one of the proteins whose synthesis is critical to MDR, as judged by the absence of MDR or a RIF effect in X-irradiated recA and lexA mutants. The results with X-irradiated temperature-conditional recA cells suggest that it is only after cells have been damaged that the recA gene plays a role in MDR.  相似文献   

7.
The symbiotic, nitrogen-fixing bacterium Sinorhizobium meliloti favors succinate and related dicarboxylic acids as carbon sources. As a preferred carbon source, succinate can exert catabolite repression upon genes needed for the utilization of many secondary carbon sources, including the alpha-galactosides raffinose and stachyose. We isolated lacR mutants in a genetic screen designed to find S. meliloti mutants that had abnormal succinate-mediated catabolite repression of the melA-agp genes, which are required for the utilization of raffinose and other alpha-galactosides. The loss of catabolite repression in lacR mutants was seen in cells grown in minimal medium containing succinate and raffinose and grown in succinate and lactose. For succinate and lactose, the loss of catabolite repression could be attributed to the constitutive expression of beta-galactoside utilization genes in lacR mutants. However, the inactivation of lacR did not cause the constitutive expression of alpha-galactoside utilization genes but caused the aberrant expression of these genes only when succinate was present. To explain the loss of diauxie in succinate and raffinose, we propose a model in which lacR mutants overproduce beta-galactoside transporters, thereby overwhelming the inducer exclusion mechanisms of succinate-mediated catabolite repression. Thus, some raffinose could be transported by the overproduced beta-galactoside transporters and cause the induction of alpha-galactoside utilization genes in the presence of both succinate and raffinose. This model is supported by the restoration of diauxie in a lacF lacR double mutant (lacF encodes a beta-galactoside transport protein) grown in medium containing succinate and raffinose. Biochemical support for the idea that succinate-mediated repression operates by preventing inducer accumulation also comes from uptake assays, which showed that cells grown in raffinose and exposed to succinate have a decreased rate of raffinose transport compared to control cells not exposed to succinate.  相似文献   

8.
When bakers' yeast cells which had been grown anaerobically in galactose were aerated in the presence of 10% glucose, they showed a 40% decrease in invivo [14C]-leucine incorporation into a washed mitochondrial membrane fraction compared with cells which had been aerated in a low glucose medium. The observed catabolite repression of membrane protein synthesis was primarily due to a decrease in cytoplasmic translational activity, but this repression was entirely dependent upon concomitant mitochondrial translation. The inductions of reduced coenzyme Q cytochrome c reductase (complex III) and of cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV) activities were repressed 30 and 60%, respectively, by aeration of the cells for 8 hours in 10% glucose. The catabolite repression of the formation of these two inner membrane complexes was again shown to be dependent upon concomitant mitochondrial translation. Both the amino acid incorporation and enzyme induction data suggest that catabolite repression of both cytoplasmically and mitochondrially translated mitochondrial membrane proteins is mediated through a mitochondrially translated repressor.  相似文献   

9.
The differential rates of formation of total extracellular protein and alpha-toxin by Staphylococcus aureus (Wood 46) were determined during aerobic growth, at 37 degrees C, in a complex medium containing 0.0, 0.25 or 1.0% (wt/vol) glucose. Different inocula were employed from 1% (vol/vol) of an overnight culture to 100% where bacterial cells were washed and resuspended in fresh medium without change in density. It was shown that under all conditions examined the differential rates of total extracellular protein formation exhibited a biphasic pattern characteristic of regulation based on 'competition'. This biphasic pattern was maintained even in the presence of a large inoculum and a high glucose concentration, conditions considered to favour the onset of catabolite repression. However, a lowering of the initial rate was observed with increasing glucose suggesting the superimposition of catabolite repression as a modulating effect under extreme conditions. In the case of the specific extracellular protein component, alpha-toxin, its differential rate of formation paralleled total exoprotein in all except the condition most favourable for catabolite accumulation when a deviation consistent with a pronounced catabolite repression of this component was demonstrated which was not pH-dependent.  相似文献   

10.
The role of systems for glucose transport in the manifestation of carbon catabolite repression of glucoamylase synthesis was studied in the yeast Endomycopsis fibuligera. Experimentas were conducted with its mutant AB-192 defective in the system of transport universal for glucose and 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DG). The nature of the mutation was established from the following data: (1) transport of labeled glucose into the mutant cells was twice as low in comparison with the parent culture 20-9; (2) transport of labeled 2-DG was suppressed almost entirely; (3) no competition was found between glucose and 2-DG for penetration into the mutant cells. Glucoamylase synthesis in the mutant AB-192 was not sensitive to catabolite repression by glucose. This was confirmed by the resistance of the AB-192 cells to the inhibition by glucose and their complete resistance to the repression by 2-DG. Moreover, an addition of cAMP did not stimulate glucoamylase synthesis by the mutant culture in the presence of glucose and 2-DG. It can be concluded therefore that the resistance of the yeast to catabolite repression by the glucose is caused by the mutation in the system for carbohydrate transport. The results suggest that the system of glucose transport plays an important role in the manifestation of carbon catabolite repression in the yeast Endomycopsis fibuligera.  相似文献   

11.
The enzymes in the arginine breakdown pathway (arginase, ornithine-delta-transaminase, and Delta'-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase) were found to be present in Bacillus licheniformis cells during exponential growth on glutamate. These enzymes could be coincidentally induced by arginine or ornithine to a very high level and their synthesis could be repressed by the addition of glucose, clearly demonstrating catabolite repression control of the arginine degradative pathway. The strongest catabolite repression control of arginase occurred when cells were grown on glucose and this control decreased when cells were grown on glycerol, acetate, pyruvate, or glutamate. The proline catabolite pathway was present in B. licheniformis during exponential growth on glutamate. The proline oxidation and the Delta'-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase in this breakdown pathway were induced by l-proline to a high level. The Delta'-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase was found to be under catabolite repression control. Arginase could be induced by proline and arginine addition induced proline oxidation, suggesting a common in vivo inducer for these convergent pathways.  相似文献   

12.
Bacillus cereus F4430/73 produced the highest levels of hemolysin BL (HBL) when grown under anaerobiosis in MOD medium. Anaerobic cells grown in a chemostat at low specific growth rate (0.1–0.2 h–1) expressed up to sevenfold more HBL than did cells held at a faster growth rate. At 0.2 h–1, the presence of 90 mM glucose resulted in inhibition of HBL production. Glucose was found to repress HBL induction at the mRNA level, indicating the potential involvement of catabolite repression in the regulation of HBL. Based on these data, it is suggested that growth rate could be an effector of catabolite regulation of HBL.  相似文献   

13.
In Gram-positive bacteria, catabolite control protein A (CcpA)-mediated catabolite repression or activation regulates not only the expression of a great number of catabolic operons, but also the synthesis of enzymes of central metabolic pathways. We found that a constituent of the Bacillus subtilis respiratory chain, the small cytochrome c550 encoded by the cccA gene, was also submitted to catabolite repression. Similar to most catabolite-repressed genes and operons, the Bacillus subtilis cccA gene contains a potential catabolite response element cre, an operator site recognized by CcpA. The presumed cre overlaps the -35 region of the cccA promoter. Strains carrying a cccA'-IacZ fusion formed blue colonies when grown on rich solid medium, whereas white colonies were obtained when glucose was present. beta-Galactosidase assays with cells grown in rich medium confirmed the repressive effect of glucose on cccA'-lacZ expression. Introduction of a ccpA or hprK mutation or of a mutation affecting the presumed cccA cre relieved the repressive effect of glucose during late log phase. An additional glucose repression mechanism was activated during stationary phase, which was not relieved by the ccpA, hprK or cre mutations. An interaction of the repressor/corepressor complex (CcpA/seryl-phosphorylated HPr (P-Ser-HPr)) with the cccA cre could be demonstrated by gel shift experiments. By contrast, a DNA fragment carrying mutations in the presumed cccA cre was barely shifted by the CcpA/P-Ser-HPr complex. In footprinting experiments, the region corresponding to the presumed cccA cre was specifically protected in the presence of the CcpA/P-Ser-HPr complex.  相似文献   

14.
Regulation of transport of D-glucose and D-fructose was studied in Kluyveromyces marxianus grown in continuous culture. Both substrates could be transported by at least two different transport systems, low-affinity transport and high-affinity proton-sugar symport. The low-affinity transporter, specific for both glucose and fructose, was constitutively present and was apparently not regulated by carbon catabolite repression. Regulation of the activity of the glucose- and fructose-specific proton symport systems appeared to proceed mainly through catabolite repression. Activation of symport did not need the presence of specific inductor molecules in the medium. Nevertheless, the capacities of the proton-sugar symporters varied in cells grown on a wide variety of carbon sources. The possibility that the control of proton symport activity is related to the presence of specific intracellular metabolites is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Derepressed synthesis of cellulase by Cellulomonas.   总被引:15,自引:4,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
A Cellulomonas sp. was isolated from the soil which hydrolyzed cellulose, as shown by clear-zone formation on cellulose agar medium. Catabolite repression of cellulase synthesis occurred when moderate levels of glucose were added to the medium. A stable mutant that no longer exhibits catabolite repression was produced through treatment of the wild-type organism with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine. Both enzyme concentration and specific activity, as determined by the rate of hydrolysis of carboxymethylcellulose, were greater with the mutant than with the wild-type organism under various test conditions. The wild type had no measurable cellulase activity when grown in the presence of either 1.0% glucose or cellobiose. Cellobiose, but not glucose, inhibited enzyme activity towards both cellulose and carboxymethylcellulose. Cellobiose, cellulose, and sophorose at low concentrations induced cellulase synthesis in both the wild-type and the mutant organism. Cellulase regulation appears to depend upon a complex relationship involving catabolite repression, inhibition, and induction.  相似文献   

16.
Catabolite repression of tryptophanase in Escherichia coli   总被引:16,自引:14,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Catabolite repression of tryptophanase was studied in detail under various conditions in several strains of Escherichia coli and was compared with catabolite repression of beta-glactosidase. Induction of tryptophanase and beta-galactosidase in cultures grown with various carbon sources including succinate, glycerol, pyruvate, glucose, gluconate, and arabinose is affected differently by the various carbon sources. The extent of induction does not seem to be related to the growth rate of the culture permitted by the carbon source during the course of the experiment. In cultures grown with glycerol as carbon source, preinduced for beta-galactosidase or tryptophanase and made permeable by ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) treatment, catabolite repression of tryptophanase was not affected markedly by the addition of cAMP (3',5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate). Catabolite repression by glucose was only partially relieved by the addition of cAMP. In contrast, under the same conditions, cAMP completely relieved catabolite repression of beta-galactosidase by either pyruvate or glucose. Under conditions of limited oxygen, induction of tryptophanase is sensitive to catabolite repression; under the same conditions, beta-galactosidase induction is not sensitive to catabolite repression. Induction of tryptophanase in cells grown with succinate as carbon source is sensitive to catabolite repression by glycerol and pyruvate as well as by glucose. Studies with a glycerol kinaseless mutant indicate that glycerol must be metabolized before it can cause catabolite repression. The EDTA treatment used to make the cells permeable to cAMP was found to affect subsequent growth and induction of either beta-galactosidase or tryptophanase much more adversely in E. coli strain BB than in E. coli strain K-12. Inducation of tryptophanase was reduced by the EDTA treatment significantly more than induction of beta-galactosidase in both strains. Addition of 2.5 x 10(-3)m cAMP appeared partially to reverse the inhibitory effect of the EDTA treatment on enzyme induction but did not restore normal growth.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Glycolytic parameters were determined in recessive yeast mutants with partial defects in carbon catabolite repression. Specific activities of pyruvate kinase and pyruvate decarboxylase in glucose grown cells of all mutant and wild type stains were 4–5 times higher than in ethanol grown cells. Mutants of gene HEX1 had a reduced hexose phosphorylating activity on allmedia wheras those of gene HEX2 had elevated levels but only in glucose grown cells. Mutants of gene CAT80 were normal in this respect. All other glycolytic enzymes were normal in all mutants. This was also true for glycolytic intermediates. Only hexlmutants showed a reduced fermentation of repressing sugars. The three genes appear to be involved in catabolite repression of several but not of all repressible enzymes. Even though all three types of mutants show a limited overlap in their effects on certain enzymes, they still are distinctly different in their action spectra. Carbon catabolite repression apparently does not depend on the sole accumulation of glycolytic intermediales. The activity of the products of the three genes HEX1, HEX2 and CAT80 are required directly or indirectly for triggering carbon catabolite repression. Even a small segment of carbon catabolite repression is controlled by several genes with regulatory functions indicating that the entire regulatory circuit is highly complex.  相似文献   

18.
In Bacillus subtilis, CcpA-dependent carbon catabolite repression (CCR) mediated at several cis-acting carbon repression elements (cre) requires the seryl-phosphorylated form of both the HPr (ptsH) and Crh (crh) proteins. During growth in minimal medium, the ptsH1 mutation, which prevents seryl phosphorylation of HPr, partially relieves CCR of several genes regulated by CCR. Examination of the CCR of the histidine utilization (hut) enzymes in cells grown in minimal medium showed that neither the ptsH1 nor the crh mutation individually had any affect on hut CCR but that hut CCR was abolished in a ptsH1 crh double mutant. In contrast, the ptsH1 mutation completely relieved hut CCR in cells grown in Luria-Bertani medium. The ptsH1 crh double mutant exhibited several growth defects in glucose minimal medium, including reduced rates of growth and growth inhibition by high levels of glycerol or histidine. CCR is partially relieved in B. subtilis mutants which synthesize low levels of active glutamine synthetase (glnA). In addition, these glnA mutants grow more slowly than wild-type cells in glucose minimal medium. The defects in growth and CCR seen in these mutants are suppressed by mutational inactivation of TnrA, a global nitrogen regulatory protein. The inappropriate expression of TnrA-regulated genes in this class of glnA mutants may deplete intracellular pools of carbon metabolites and thereby result in the reduction of the growth rate and partial relief of CCR.  相似文献   

19.
As with other inducible enzymes, the induced synthesis of l-arabinose isomerase (l-arabinose ketol isomerase, EC 5.3.1.4) in Salmonella typhimurium is subject to catabolite repression. Of the three catabolite repressors tested, glucose produces maximum repression. Analogues of catabolite repressors like 2-deoxy-d-glucose and d-fucose also inhibit the synthesis of the enzyme. The catabolite repression is completely reversed in the presence of 1.5 x 10(-3)m cyclic 3',5'-adenosine monophosphate (AMP). The maximum repression is produced in glucose-grown cells in glucose-containing induction medium. Cyclic 3',5-AMP reverses this repression provided that the cells are treated with ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA). In normal cells, cyclic 3',5'-AMP has no effect on the induction but in EDTA-treated cells the cyclic nucleotide enhances synthesis of the enzyme. The inhibition produced by d-fucose cannot be reversed by cyclic 3',5'-AMP. d-Fucose competes with the inducer l-arabinose in some step(s) involved in the process of induction.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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