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1.
Starved cells of Streptococcus lactis ML3 grown previously on lactose, galactose, or maltose were devoid of adenosine 5'-triphosphate contained only three glycolytic intermediates: 3-phosphoglycerate, 2-phosphoglycerate, and phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP). The three metabolites (total concentration, ca 40 mM) served as the intracellular PEP potential for sugar transport via PEP-dependent phosphotransferase systems. When accumulation of [14C]lactose by iodoacetate-inhibited starved cells was abolished within 1 s of commencement of transport, a phosphorylated disaccharide was identified by autoradiography. The compound was isolated by ion-exchange (borate) chromatography, and enzymatic analysis showed that the derivative was 6-phosphoryl-O-beta-D-galactopyranosyl (1 leads to 4')-alpha-D-glucopyranose (lactose 6-phosphate). After maximum lactose uptake (ca. 15 mM in 15 s) the cells were collected by membrane filtration and extracted with trichloroacetic acid. Neither free nor phosphorylated lactose was detected in cell extracts, but enzymatic analysis revealed high levels of galactose 6-phosphate and glucose 6-phosphate. The starved organisms rapidly accumulated glucose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose, methyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside, and o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside in phosphorylated form to intracellular concentrations of 32, 32, 42, and 38.5 mM, respectively. In contrast, maximum accumulation of lactose (ca. 15 mM) was only 40 to 50% that of the monosaccharides. From the stoichiometry of PEP-dependent lactose transport and the results of enzymatic analysis, it was concluded that (i) ca. 60% of the PEP potential was utilized via the lactose phosphotransferase system for phosphorylation of the galactosyl moiety of the disaccharide, and (ii) the residual potential (ca. 40%) was consumed during phosphorylation of the glucose moiety.  相似文献   

2.
Two novel procedures have been used to regulate, in vivo, the formation of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) from glycolysis in Streptococcus lactis ML3. In the first procedure, glucose metabolism was specifically inhibited by p-chloromercuribenzoate. Autoradiographic and enzymatic analyses showed that the cells contained glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, fructose-1,6-diphosphate, and triose phosphates.Dithiothreitol reversed the p-chloromercuribenzoate inhibition, and these intermediates were rapidly and quantitatively transformed into 3- and 2-phosphoglycerates plus PEP. The three intermediates were not further metabolized and constituted the intracellular PEP potential. The second procedure simply involved starvation of the organisms. The starved cells were devoid of glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, fructose- 1,6-diphosphate, and triose phosphates but contained high levels of 3- and 2-phosphoglycerates and PEP (ca. 40 mM in total). The capacity to regulate PEP formation in vivo permitted the characterization of glucose and lactose phosphotransferase systems in physiologically intact cells. Evidence has been obtained for "feed forward" activation of pyruvate kinase in vivo by phosphorylated intermediates formed before the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase reaction in the glycolytic sequence. The data suggest that pyruvate kinase (an allosteric enzyme) plays a key role in the regulation of glycolysis and phosphotransferase system functions in S. lactis ML3.  相似文献   

3.
Starved cells of Streptococcus lactis ML3 (grown previously on galactose, lactose, or maltose) accumulated methyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (TMG) by the lactose:phosphotransferase system. More than 98% of accumulated sugar was present as a phosphorylated derivative, TMG-6-phosphate (TMG-6P). When a phosphotransferase system sugar (glucose, mannose, 2-deoxyglucose, or lactose) was added to the medium simultaneously with TMG, the beta-galactoside was excluded from the cells. Galactose enhanced the accumulation of TMG-6P. Glucose, mannose, lactose, or maltose plus arginine, was added to a suspension of TMG-6P-loaded cells of S. lactis ML3, elicited rapid expulsion of intracellular solute. The material recovered in the medium was exclusively free TMG. Expulsion of galactoside required both entry and metabolism of an appropriate sugar, and intracellular dephosphorylation of TMG-6P preceded efflux of TMG. The rate of dephosphorylation of TMG-6P by permeabilized cells was increased two-to threefold by adenosine 5'-triphosphate but was strongly inhibited by fluoride. S. lactis ML3 (DGr) was derived from S. lactis ML3 by positive selection for resistance to 2-deoxy-D-glucose and was defective in the enzyme IIMan component of the glucose:phosphotransferase system. Neither glucose nor mannose excluded TMG from cells of S. lactic ML3 (DGr), and these two sugars failed to elicit TMG expulsion from preloaded cells of the mutant strain. Accumulation of TMG-6P by S. lactis ML3 can be regulation by two independent mechanisms whose activities promote exclusion or expulsion of galactoside from the cell.  相似文献   

4.
Regulation of the beta-galactoside transport system in response to growth substrates in the extremely thermophilic anaerobic bacterium Thermotoga neapolitana was studied with the nonmetabolizable analog methyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (TMG) as the transport substrate. T. neapolitana cells grown on galactose or lactose accumulated TMG against a concentration gradient in an intracellular free sugar pool that was exchangeable with external galactose or lactose and showed induced levels of beta-galactosidase. Cells grown on glucose, maltose, or galactose plus glucose showed no capacity to accumulate TMG, though these cells carried out active transport of the nonmetabolizable glucose analog 2-deoxy-D-glucose. Glucose neither inhibited TMG uptake nor caused efflux of preaccumulated TMG; rather, glucose promoted TMG uptake by supplying metabolic energy. These data show that beta-D-galactosides are taken up by T. neapolitana via an active transport system that can be induced by galactose or lactose and repressed by glucose but which is not inhibited by glucose. Thus, the phenomenon of catabolite repression is present in T. neapolitana with respect to systems catalyzing both the transport and hydrolysis of beta-D-galactosides, but inducer exclusion and inducer expulsion, mechanisms that regulate permease activity, are not present. Regulation is manifest at the level of synthesis of the beta-galactoside transport system but not in the activity of the system.  相似文献   

5.
Growth of galactose-adapted cells of Streptococcus lactis ML(3) in a medium containing a mixture of glucose, galactose, and lactose was characterized initially by the simultaneous metabolism of glucose and lactose. Galactose was not significantly utilized until the latter sugars had been exhausted from the medium. The addition of glucose or lactose to a culture of S. lactis ML(3) growing exponentially on galactose caused immediate inhibition of galactose utilization and an increase in growth rate, concomitant with the preferential metabolism of the added sugar. Under nongrowing conditions, cells of S. lactis ML(3) grown previously on galactose metabolized the three separate sugars equally rapidly. However, cells suspended in buffer containing a mixture of glucose plus galactose or lactose plus galactose again consumed glucose or lactose preferentially. The rate of galactose metabolism was reduced by approximately 95% in the presence of the inhibitory sugar, but the maximum rate of metabolism was resumed upon exhaustion of glucose or lactose from the system. When presented with a mixture of glucose and lactose, the resting cells metabolized both sugars simultaneously. Lactose, glucose, and a non-metabolizable glucose analog (2-deoxy-d-glucose) prevented the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent uptake of thiomethyl-beta-d-galactopyranoside (TMG), but the accumulation of TMG, like galactose metabolism, commenced immediately upon exhaustion of the metabolizable sugars from the medium. Growth of galactose-adapted cells of the lactose-defective variant S. lactis 7962 in the triple-sugar medium was characterized by the sequential metabolism of glucose, galactose, and lactose. Growth of S. lactis ML(3) and 7962 in the triple-sugar medium occurred without apparent diauxie, and for each strain the patterns of sequential sugar metabolism under growing and nongrowing conditions were identical. Fine control of the activities of preexisting enzyme systems by catabolite inhibition may afford a satisfactory explanation for the observed sequential utilization of sugars by these two organisms.  相似文献   

6.
1. There was no apparent correlation between the rate of respiration and rate of accumulation of proline in Candida albicans cells. 2. In contrast to normal cells, the respiration in the starved cells became completely cyanide insensitive. The starvation of cells in the presence of cycloheximide prevented the cells from becoming cyanide insensitive. The addition of Fe(III), however, accelerated the process. 3. Oxidizable substrates e.g. NADH, acetate and glucose, when added to cyanide-insensitive starved cells, exhibited 40--280% stimulation in respiration rate. However, this enhancement in oxidation by various substrates was not coupled to a simultaneous increase in the proline uptake or in intracellular ATP levels. 4. There was 6-fold stimulation in proline uptake when cyanide-insensitive cells were preincubated with 50 mM glucose. The preincubation of starved cells resulted in a partial restoration of cyanide sensitivity and increased intracellular ATP levels. The preincubation of starved cells with other oxidizable substrates resulted in a partial restoration of cyanide sensitivity but had no stimulatory effect on intracellular ATP levels and proline accumulation. 5. Both the enhanced uptake and ATP levels in glucose preincubated cells were found to be completely abolished by iodoacetate. 6. It is proposed that the increased proline uptake in cells preincubated with glucose was mainly due to the production of glycolytic energy.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of sodium fluoride on lactose metabolism and o-nitrophenyl-beta-d-galactopyranoside (ONPG) hydrolysis by Streptococcus lactis strains 7962 and C(2)F suggested that different mechanisms of lactose utilization existed in the two strains. Sodium fluoride prevented lactose utilization and ONPG hydrolysis by whole cells of S. lactis C(2)F but had no effect on S. lactis 7962. Although hydrolysis of ONPG by toluene-treated cells of S. lactis 7962 occurred without addition of phospho-enolpyruvate (PEP), toluene-treated cells of S. lactis C(2)F required the presence of this cofactor. Concentrated cell extracts of S. lactis C(2)F hydrolyzed ONPG; this hydrolysis was inhibited by NaF, but the addition of PEP, in the presence of NaF, restored maximal activity. Addition of acetyl-phosphate, carbamyl-phosphate, adenosine-5'-triphosphate, guanosine-5'-triphosphate, or uridine-5'-triphosphate did not stimulate activity. The presence of cofactors did not stimulate and NaF did not inhibit the hydrolysis in extracts of S. lactis 7962. To confirm the operation of two mechanisms, S. lactis 7962 was shown to hydrolyze lactose to glucose and galactose, whereas S. lactis C(2)F was unable to split the disaccharide. In addition, whole cells of S. lactis C(2)F rapidly accumulated a phosphorylated derivative of thiomethyl-beta-d-galactoside (TMG) which behaved chromatographically and electrophoretically like TMG-PO(4). Unexpectedly, S. lactis 7962 also accumulated a TMG derivative, although the rate was extremely low. These data indicate that different mechanisms of lactose utilization exist in the two strains, with a phosphorylation step dependent on PEP involved in S. lactis C(2)F.  相似文献   

8.
Streptococcus lactis K1 has the capacity to grow on many sugars, including sucrose and lactose, in the presence of high levels (greater than 500 mM) of 2-deoxy-D-glucose. Initially, growth of the organism was transiently halted by the addition of comparatively low concentrations (less than 0.5 mM) of the glucose analog to the culture. Inhibition was coincident with (i) rapid accumulation of 2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate (ca. 120 mM) and preferential utilization of phosphoenolpyruvate via the mannose:phosphotransferase system, (ii) depletion of phosphorylated glycolytic intermediates, and (iii) a 60% reduction in intracellular ATP concentration. During the 5- to 10-min period of bacteriostasis the intracellular concentration of 2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate rapidly declined, and the concentrations of glycolytic intermediates were restored to near-normal levels. When growth resumed, the cell doubling time (Td) and the steady-state levels of 2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate maintained by the cells were dependent upon the medium concentration of 2-deoxy-D-glucose. Resistance of S. lactis K1 to the potentially toxic analog was a consequence of negative regulation of the mannose:phosphotransferase system by two independent mechanisms. The first, short-term response occurred immediately after the initial "overshoot" accumulation of 2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate, and this mechanism reduced the activity (fine control) of the mannose:phosphotransferase system. The second, long-term mechanism resulted in repression of synthesis (coarse control) of enzyme IImannose. The two regulatory mechanisms reduced the rate of 2-deoxy-D-glucose translocation via the mannose:phosphotransferase system and minimized the activity of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent futile cycle of the glucose analog (J. Thompson and B. M. Chassy, J. Bacteriol. 151:1454-1465, 1982). Phosphoenolpyruvate was thus conserved for transport of the growth sugar and for generation of ATP required for biosynthetic and work functions of the growing cell.  相似文献   

9.
High-resolution 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and 14C fluorography have been used to identify and quantitate intermediates of the Embden-Meyerhof pathway in intact cells and cell extracts of Streptococcus lactis. Glycolysing cells contained high levels of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (a positive effector of pyruvate kinase) but comparatively low concentrations of other glycolytic metabolites. By contrast, starved organisms contained only high levels of 3-phosphoglycerate, 2-phosphoglycerate, and phosphoenolpyruvate. The concentration of Pi (a negative effector of pyruvate kinase) in starved cells was fourfold greater than that maintained by glycolysing cells. The following result suggest that retention of the phosphoenolpyruvate pool by starved cells is a consequence of Pi-mediated inhibition of pyruvate kinase: the increase in the phosphoenolpyruvate pool (and Pi) preceded depletion of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, and reduction in intracellular Pi (by a maltose-plus-arginine phosphate trap) caused the restoration of pyruvate kinase activity in starved cells. Time course studies showed that Pi was conserved by formation of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate during glycolysis. Conversely, during starvation high levels of Pi were generated concomitant with depletion of intracellular fructose 1,6-bisphosphate. The concentrations of Pi and fructose 1,6-bisphosphate present in starved and glycolysing cells of S. lactis varied inversely. The activity of pyruvate kinase in the growing cell may be modulated by the relative concentrations of the two antagonistic effectors.  相似文献   

10.
The mechanism of methyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside-phosphate (TMG-P) expulsion from Streptococcus pyogenes was studied. The expulsion elicited by glucose was not due to exchange vectorial transphosphorylation between the expelled TMG and the incoming glucose since more beta-galactoside was displaced than glucose taken up, and the stoichiometry between TMG and glucose transport was inconstant. Instead, two distinct and sequential reactions, intracellular dephosphorylation of TMG-P followed by efflux of free TMG, mediated the expulsion. This was shown by temporary accumulation of free TMG effected by competitive inhibition of its efflux and by the aid of arsenate, which arrested dephosphorylation of TMG-P but did not affect efflux of free TMG formed intracellularly before arsenate addition. The competitive inhibition of TMG efflux by its structural analogs suggests that a transport protein facilitates the expulsion. Iodoacetate or fluoride prevented TMG-P dephosphorylation and its expulsion. However, provision of ATP via the arginine deiminase pathway restored these activities in the presence of the glycolytic inhibitors and stimulated expulsion in their absence. Other amino acids tested did not promote this restoration, and canavanine or norvaline severely inhibited it. Arginine without glucose neither elicited the dephosphorylation nor evoked the expulsion of TMG-P. Ionophores or ATPase inhibitors did not prevent the expulsion as elicited by glucose or its restoration by arginine. The results suggest that activation of the dephosphorylation-expulsion mechanism occurs independently of a functional glycolytic pathway, requires ATP provision, and is possibly due to protein phosphorylation controlled by a yet unknown metabolite. The in vivo phosphorylation of a protein (approximate molecular weight - 10,000) under the conditions of expulsion was demonstrated.  相似文献   

11.
Galactose-grown cells of the heterofermentative lactic acid bacteria Lactobacillus brevis and Lactobacillus buchneri transported methyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (TMG) by an active transport mechanism and accumulated intracellular free TMG when provided with an exogenous source of energy, such as arginine. The intracellular concentration of TMG resultant under these conditions was approximately 20-fold higher than that in the medium. In contrast, the provision of energy by metabolism of glucose, gluconate, or glucosamine promoted a rapid but transient uptake of TMG followed by efflux that established a low cellular concentration of the galactoside, i.e., only two- to fourfold higher than that in the medium. Furthermore, the addition of glucose to cells preloaded with TMG in the presence of arginine elicited a rapid efflux of the intracellular galactoside. The extent of cellular TMG displacement and the duration of the transient effect of glucose on TMG transport were related to the initial concentration of glucose in the medium. Exhaustion of glucose from the medium restored uptake and accumulation of TMG, providing arginine was available for ATP generation. The nonmetabolizable sugar 2-deoxyglucose elicited efflux of TMG from preloaded cells of L. buchneri but not from those of L. brevis. Phosphorylation of this glucose analog was catalyzed by cell extracts of L. buchneri but not by those of L. brevis. Iodoacetate, at a concentration that inhibits growth and ATP production from glucose, did not prevent efflux of cellular TMG elicited by glucose. The results suggested that a phosphorylated metabolite(s) at or above the level of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate was required to evoke displacement of intracellular TMG from the cells. Counterflow experiments suggested that glucose converted the active uptake of TMG in L. brevis to a facilitated diffusion mechanism that allowed equilibrium of TMG between the extra- and intracellular milieux. The means by which glucose metabolites elicited this vectorial regulation is not known, but similarities to the inducer expulsion that has been described for homofermentative Streptococcus and Lactobacillus species suggested the involvement of HPr, a protein that functions as a phosphocarrier protein in the phosphotransferase system, as well as a presumptive regulator of sugar transport. Indeed, complementation assays wit extracts of Staphylococcus aureus ptsH mutant revealed the presence of HPr in L. brevis, although this lactobacillus lacked a functional phaosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphortransferase system for glucose, 2-deoxyglucose, or TMG.  相似文献   

12.
J J Ye  J W Neal  X Cui  J Reizer    M H Saier  Jr 《Journal of bacteriology》1994,176(12):3484-3492
Lactobacillus brevis takes up glucose and the nonmetabolizable glucose analog 2-deoxyglucose (2DG), as well as lactose and the nonmetabolizable lactose analoge thiomethyl beta-galactoside (TMG), via proton symport. Our earlier studies showed that TMG, previously accumulated in L. brevis cells via the lactose:H+ symporter, rapidly effluxes from L. brevis cells or vesicles upon addition of glucose and that glucose inhibits further accumulation of TMG. This regulation was shown to be mediated by a metabolite-activated protein kinase that phosphorylase serine 46 in the HPr protein. We have now analyzed the regulation of 2DG uptake and efflux and compared it with that of TMG. Uptake of 2DG was dependent on an energy source, effectively provided by intravesicular ATP or by extravesicular arginine which provides ATP via an ATP-generating system involving the arginine deiminase pathway. 2DG uptake into these vesicles was not inhibited, and preaccumulated 2DG did not efflux from them upon electroporation of fructose 1,6-diphosphate or gluconate 6-phosphate into the vesicles. Intravesicular but not extravesicular wild-type or H15A mutant HPr of Bacillus subtilis promoted inhibition (53 and 46%, respectively) of the permease in the presence of these metabolites. Counterflow experiments indicated that inhibition of 2DG uptake is due to the partial uncoupling of proton symport from sugar transport. Intravesicular S46A mutant HPr could not promote regulation of glucose permease activity when electroporated into the vesicles with or without the phosphorylated metabolites, but the S46D mutant protein promoted regulation, even in the absence of a metabolite. The Vmax but not the Km values for both TMG and 2DG uptake were affected. Uptake of the natural, metabolizable substrates of the lactose, glucose, mannose, and ribose permeases was inhibited by wild-type HPr in the presence of fructose 1,6-diphosphate or by S46D mutant HPr. These results establish that HPr serine phosphorylation by the ATP-dependent, metabolite-activated HPr kinase regulates glucose and lactose permease activities in L. brevis and suggest that other permeases may also be subject to this mode of regulation.  相似文献   

13.
In contrast to previous investigations at 25 degrees C, glucose was shown to support 45Ca2+ uptake at 37 degrees C in intact ELD ascites tumor cells. Intact ascites tumor cells in vitro accumulated up to 5.0 micromol of 45Ca2+ per g cells dry wt. within 20 min. In the presence of 10.0 mM glucose, intracellular P(i) levels fell from 40.0 micromol x g(-1) cells dry wt. to 20.0 micromol x g(-1) cells dry wt. in 5 min. Intracellular P(i) levels were maintained by 20.0 mM extracellular Tris-P(i). 45Ca2+ uptake was inhibited in P(i)-depleted cells, even though the metabolic rate (as measured by Q(lactate)) and energy state (as measured by ATP levels) were at acceptable levels. Evidence has been presented suggesting that previous reports of glucose inhibition of calcium uptake can be attributed to a competition for available intracellular P(i) between glycolytic processes and the mitochondrial calcium uptake mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Alanyl-alpha-glutamate transport has been studied in Lactococcus lactis ML3 cells and in membrane vesicles fused with liposomes containing beefheart cytochrome c oxidase as a proton-motive-force-generating system. The uptake of Ala-Glu observed in de-energized cells can be stimulated 26-fold upon addition of lactose. No intracellular dipeptide pool could be detected in intact cells. In fused membranes, a 40-fold accumulation of Ala-Glu was observed in response to a proton motive force. Addition of ionophores and uncouplers resulted in a rapid efflux of the accumulated dipeptide, indicating that Ala-Glu accumulation is directly coupled to the proton motive force as a driving force. Ala-Glu uptake is an electrogenic process and the dipeptide is transported in symport with two protons. In both fused membranes and intact cells the same affinity constant (0.70 mM) for Ala-Glu uptake was found. Accumulated Ala-Glu is exchangeable with externally added alanyl-glutamate, glutamyl-glutamate, and leucyl-leucine, while no exchange occurred upon addition of the amino acid glutamate or alanine. These results indicate that the Ala-Glu transport system has a broad substrate specificity.  相似文献   

15.
K Abe  K Uchida 《Journal of bacteriology》1989,171(4):1793-1800
Pediococcus halophilus X-160 which lacks catabolite control by glucose was isolated from nature (soy moromi mash). Wild-type strains, in xylose-glucose medium, utilized glucose preferentially over xylose and showed diauxic growth. With wild-type strain I-13, xylose isomerase activity was not induced until glucose was consumed from the medium. Strain X-160, however, utilized xylose concurrently with glucose and did not show diauxic growth. In this strain, xylose isomerase was induced even in the presence of glucose. Glucose transport activity in intact cells of strain X-160 was less than 10% of that assayed in strain I-13. Determinations of glycolytic enzymes did not show any difference responsible for the unique behavior of strain X-160, but the rate of glucose-6-phosphate formation with phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) as a phosphoryl donor in permeabilized cells was less than 10% of that observed in the wild type. Starved P. halophilus I-13 cells contained the glycolytic intermediates 3-phosphoglycerate, 2-phosphoglycerate, and PEP (PEP pool). These were consumed concomitantly with glucose or 2-deoxyglucose uptake but were not consumed with xylose uptake. The glucose transport system in P. halophilus was identified as a PEP:mannose phosphotransferase system on the basis of the substrate specificity of PEP pool-starved cells. It is concluded that, in P. halophilus, this system is functional as a main glucose transport system and that defects in this system may be responsible for the depression of glucose-mediated catabolite control.  相似文献   

16.
An intracellular hexose 6-phosphate:phosphohydrolase (EC 3.1.3.2) has been purified from Streptococcus lactis K1. Polyacrylamide disc gel electrophoresis of the purified enzyme revealed one major activity staining protein and one minor inactive band. The Mr determined by gel permeation chromatography was 36,500, but sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed a single polypeptide of apparent Mr 60,000. The enzyme exhibited a marked preference for hexose 6-phosphates, and the rate of substrate hydrolysis (at 5 mM concentration) decreased in the order, galactose 6-phosphate greater than 2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate greater than fructose 6-phosphate greater than mannose 6-phosphate greater than glucose 6-phosphate. Hexose 1-phosphates, p-nitrophenylphosphate, pyrophosphate, and nucleotides were not hydrolyzed at a significant rate. In addition, the glycolytic intermediates comprising the intracellular phosphoenolpyruvate potential in the starved cells (phosphoenolpyruvate and 2- and 3-phosphoglyceric acids) were not substrates for the phosphatase. Throughout the isolation, the hexose 6-phosphate:phosphohydrolase was stabilized by Mn2+ ion, and the purified enzyme was dependent upon Mn2+, Mg2+, Fe2+, or Co2+ for activation. Other divalent metal ions including Pb2+, Cu2+, Zn2+, Cd2+, Ca2+, Ba2+, Sr2+, and Ni2+ were unable to activate the enzyme, and the first four cations were potent inhibitors. Enzymatic hydrolysis of 2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate was inhibited by fluoride when Mg2+ was included in the assay, but only slight inhibition occurred in the presence of Mn2+, Fe2+, or Co2+. The inhibitory effect of Mg2+ plus fluoride was specifically and completely reversed by Fe2+ ion. The hexose 6-phosphate:phosphohydrolase catalyzes the in vivo hydrolysis of 2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate in stage II of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent futile cycle in S. lactis (J. Thompson and B. M. Chassy, J. Bacteriol. 151:1454-1465, 1982).  相似文献   

17.
The goal of this work was to obtain rapid sampling technique to measure transient metabolites in vivo. First, a pulse of glucose was added to a culture of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae growing aerobically under glucose limitation. Next, samples were removed at 2 to 5 s intervals and quenched using methods that depend on the metabolite measured. Extracellular glucose, excreted products, as well as glycolytic intermediates (G6P, F6P, FBP, GAP, 3-PG, PEP, Pyr) and cometabolites (ATP, ADP, AMP, NAD(+), NADH) were measured using enzymatic or HPLC methods. Significant differences between the adenine nucleotide concentrations in the cytoplasm and mitochondria indicated the importance of compartmentation for the regulation of the glycolysis. Changes in the intra- and extracellular levels of metabolites confirmed that glycolysis is regulated on a time scale of seconds. (c) 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biotechnol Bioeng 55: 305-316, 1997.  相似文献   

18.
Thiomethyl-beta-galactoside (TMG) accumulation via the melibiose transport system was studied in lactose transport-negative strains of Escherichia coli. TMG uptake by either intact cells or membrane vesicles was markedly stimulated by Na+ or Li+ between pH 5.5 and 8. The Km for uptake of TMG was approximately 0.2 mM at an external Na+ concentration of 5 mM (pH 7). The alpha-galactosides, melibiose, methyl-alpha-galactoside, and o-nitrophenyl-alpha-galactoside had a high affinity for this system whereas lactose, maltose and glucose had none. Evidence is presented for Li+-TMG or Na+-TMG cotransport.  相似文献   

19.
All of the lactic streptococci examined except Streptococcus lactis ML8 fermented galactose to lactate, formate, acetate, and ethanol. The levels of pyruvate-formate lyase and lactate dehydrogenase were elevated and reduced, respectively, in galactose-grown cells compared with glucose- or lactose-grown cells. Reduced intracellular levels of both the lactate dehydrogenase activator (fructose, 1,6-diphosphate) and pyruvate-formate lyase inhibitors (triose phosphates) appeared to be the main factors involved in the diversion of lactate to the other products. S. lactis ML8 produced only lactate from galactose, apparently due to the maintenance of high intracellular levels of fructose 1,6-diphosphate and triose phosphates. The growth rates of all 10 Streptococcus cremoris strains examined decreased markedly with galactose concentrations below about 30 mM. This effect appeared to be correlated with uptake predominantly by the low-affinity galactose phosphotransferase system and initial metabolism via the D-tagatose 6-phosphate pathway. In contrast, with four of the five S. lactis strains examined, galactose uptake and initial metabolism involved more extensive use of the high-affinity galactose permease and Leloir pathway. With these strains the relative flux of galactose through the alternate pathways would depend on the exogenous galactose concentration.  相似文献   

20.
Changes were measured in the rates of respiration and in the levels of glycolytic intermediates during the first 5 min after addition of 1.6 mM glucose to a suspension (5%, v/v) of respiring Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells incubated in an isotonic 50 mM tris(hydroxymethyl)methylglycine buffer (pH 7.4) at 38 °C. The rates of accumulation of lactate and glycolytic intermediates were used to calculate the in vitro velocities of glycolytic enzymes.The initial velocities of hexokinase (EC 2.7.1.1), fructose-6-phosphate kinase (EC 2.7.1.11) and lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27) in μmoles glucose equivalents/ ml cells per min were 14, 11 and 4, respectively. The velocities of the two kinases fell sharply to less than 5 between 5 and 10 s, while the velocity of the dehydrogenase declined gradually over the first minute. The initial burst of activity in the kinases, which lasted for about 8 s, was associated with a rapid accumulation of phosphate ester and a negative net ATP generation by glycolysis. The accumulation of phosphate ester is almost exactly matched by the generation of ATP by the “tail end” of glycolysis (triose-P to lactate) in this period. After this time (10–25 s) the rate of oxidative phosphorylation calculated as six times the rate of O2 consumption, is nearly identical to the combined rate of ATP utilization by hexokinase and fructose-6-phosphate kinase. As observed previously, oxamate (42 mM) blocked lactate dehydrogenase but did not depress the rate of phosphate ester accumulation.These various observations and correlations can be interpreted in terms of a dual glycolytic system. The accumulation of phosphate ester during the first 8 s is attributed to the operation of a partial glycolytic system, System B, which includes only the first three or four enzymes of glycolysis, and which draws upon an ATP pool (Pool I) previously employed in assorted cytoplasmic phosphorylations. The ADP generated by System B is rephosphorylated by and regulates the rate of a complete glycolytic system A, which converts glucose to lactate with little intermediate accumulation. The tail end of System A generates a new pool of ATP (Pool II) and controls the rate of glucose input through its head end, which is supplied by ATP being produced by oxidative phosphorylation. This scheme of interlocking controls is transient and alters after 8 s, when System B slows to a stop.  相似文献   

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