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1.
A proton motive force-driven di-tripeptide carrier protein (DtpT) and an ATP-dependent oligopeptide transport system (Opp) have been described for Lactococcus lactis MG1363. Using genetically well-defined mutants in which dtpT and/or opp were inactivated, we have now established the presence of a third peptide transport system (DtpP) in L. lactis. The specificity of DtpP partially overlaps that of DtpT. DtpP transports preferentially di- and tripeptides that are composed of hydrophobic (branched-chain amino acid) residues, whereas DtpT has a higher specificity for more-hydrophilic and charged peptides. The toxic dipeptide L-phenylalanyl-beta-chloro-L-alanine has been used to select for a di-tripeptide transport-negative mutant with the delta dtpT strain as a genetic background. This mutant is unable to transport di- and tripeptides but still shows uptake of amino acids and oligopeptides. The DtpP system is induced in the presence of di- and tripeptides containing branched-chain amino acids. The use of ionophores and metabolic inhibitors suggests that, similar to Opp, DtpP-mediated peptide transport is driven by ATP or a related energy-rich phosphorylated intermediate.  相似文献   

2.
E J Smid  R Plapp    W N Konings 《Journal of bacteriology》1989,171(11):6135-6140
The chlorated dipeptide L-alanyl-beta-chloro-L-alanine (diACA) is very toxic for Lactococcus lactis. Spontaneous mutants resistant to the dipeptide were isolated from plates. The presence and activities of cell wall-associated proteinase, different peptidases in cell extracts, amino acid transport systems, and di- and oligopeptide transport systems were examined and compared in a diACA-resistant mutant and the wild type. Only the rates of di- and tripeptide transport were found to be significantly reduced in the diACA-resistant mutant of L. lactis ML3. Since all other characteristics of this mutant were comparable to those of the wild type, the diACA-resistant mutant is most likely deficient in di- and tripeptide transport. Uptake of di- and tripeptides by L. lactis ML3 was found to be mainly mediated by one peptide transport system. The peptide transport-deficient mutant was found to be unable to grow on a chemically defined medium supplemented with casein as the sole nitrogen source, whereas growth could be restored by the addition of amino acids. These results indicate that peptide transport in L. lactis ML3 is an essential component in the process of casein utilization during growth in milk.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
The gene encoding the di- and tripeptide transport protein (DtpT) of Lactobacillus helveticus (DtpTLH) was cloned with the aid of the inverse PCR technique and used to complement the dipeptide transport-deficient and proline-auxotrophic Escherichia coli E1772. Functional expression of the peptide transporter was shown by the uptake of prolyl-[14C] alanine in whole cells and membrane vesicles. Peptide transport via DtpT in membrane vesicles is driven by the proton motive force. The system has specificity for di- and tripeptides but not for amino acids or tetrapeptides. The dtpTLH gene consists of 1,491 bp, which translates into a 497-amino-acid polypeptide. DtpTLH shows 34% identity to the di- and tripeptide transport protein of Lactococcus lactis and is also homologous to various peptide transporters of eukaryotic origin, but the similarity between these proteins is confined mainly to the N-terminal halves.  相似文献   

5.
Three mutants of Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis MG1363, termed EthR, DauR, and RhoR, were selected for resistance to high concentrations of ethidium bromide, daunomycin, and rhodamine 6G, respectively. These mutants were found to be cross resistant to a number of structurally and functionally unrelated drugs, among which were typical substrates of the mammalian multidrug transporter (P-glycoprotein) such as daunomycin, quinine, actinomycin D, gramicidin D, and rhodamine 6G. The three multidrug-resistant strains showed an increased rate of energy-dependent ethidium and daunomycin efflux compared with that of the wild-type strain. This suggests that resistance to these toxic compounds is at least partly due to active efflux. Efflux of ethidium from the EthR strain could occur against a 37-fold inwardly directed concentration gradient. In all strains, ethidium efflux was inhibited by reserpine, a well-known inhibitor of P-glycoprotein. Ionophores which selectively dissipate the membrane potential or the pH gradient across the membrane inhibited ethidium and daunomycin efflux in the wild-type strain, corresponding with a proton motive force-driven efflux system. The ethidium efflux system in the EthR strain, on the other hand, was inhibited by ortho-vanadate and not upon dissipation of the proton motive force, which suggests the involvement of ATP in the energization of transport. The partial inhibition of ethidium efflux by ortho-vanadate and nigericin in the DauR and RhoR strains suggest that a proton motive force-dependent and an ATP-dependent system are expressed simultaneously. This is the first report of an ATP-dependent transport system in prokaryotes which confers multidrug resistance to the organism.  相似文献   

6.
The gene specifying an endopeptidase of Lactococcus lactis, named pepO, was cloned from a genomic library of L. lactis subsp. cremoris P8-2-47 in lambda EMBL3 and was subsequently sequenced. pepO is probably the last gene of an operon encoding the binding-protein-dependent oligopeptide transport system of L. lactis. The inferred amino acid sequence of PepO showed that the lactococcal endopeptidase has a marked similarity to the mammalian neutral endopeptidase EC 3.4.24.11 (enkephalinase), whereas no obvious sequence similarity with any bacterial enzyme was found. By means of gene disruption, a pepO-negative mutant was constructed. Growth and acid production of the mutant strain in milk were not affected, indicating that the endopeptidase is not essential for growth of L. lactis in milk.  相似文献   

7.
Lactococcin A is a bacteriocin produced by Lactococcus lactis. Its structural gene has recently been cloned and sequenced (M. J. van Belkum, B. J. Hayema, R. E. Jeeninga, J. Kok, and G. Venema, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 57:492-498, 1991). Purified lactococcin A increased the permeability of the cytoplasmic membrane of L. lactis and dissipated the membrane potential. A significantly higher concentration of lactococcin A was needed to dissipate the membrane potential in an immune strain of L. lactis. Lactococcin A at low concentrations (0.029 microgram/mg of protein) inhibited secondary and phosphate-bond driven transport of amino acids in sensitive cells and caused efflux of preaccumulated amino acids. Accumulation of amino acids by immune cells was not affected by this concentration of lactococcin A. Lactococcin A also inhibited proton motive force-driven leucine uptake and leucine counterflow in membrane vesicles of the sensitive strain but not in membrane vesicles of the immune strain. These observations indicate that lactococcin A makes the membrane permeable for leucine in the presence or absence of a proton motive force and that the immunity factor(s) is membrane linked. Membrane vesicles of Clostridium acetobutylicum, Bacillus subtilis, and Escherichia coli were not affected by lactococcin A, nor were liposomes derived from phospholipids of L. lactis. These results indicate that lactococcin A acts on the cytoplasmic membrane and is very specific towards lactococci. The combined results obtained with cells, vesicles, and liposomes suggest that the specificity of lactococcin A may be mediated by a receptor protein associated with the cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

8.
Wild-type Streptomyces clavuligerus NRRL 3585 is unable to utilize glucose. A glucose-utilizing (gut-1) mutant of S. clavuligerus NRRL 3585 has been obtained by N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine mutagenesis. The gut-1 mutant is able to grow on glucose or galactose, while the wild type is unable to catabolize these hexoses. Similar binding affinities of glucose by cells of the wild type and the gut-1 mutant were found, but the wild type was unable to complete glucose transport. A soluble intracellular ATP-dependent (but not phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent) glucokinase activity was found both in the wild type and the gut-1 mutant. The gut-1 mutant has acquired a functional transport system that allows transport of glucose, 2-deoxyglucose, and galactose, as shown by hexose competition experiments. The gut-1 transport system concentrates glucose inside the cell at least 10- to 20-fold and is strongly inhibited by respiratory inhibitors, which prevent the establishment of a proton motive force, and by proton-conducting ionophores, suggesting that it is energized by a proton motive force. The new transport system is not completely sugar specific (transporting galactose and glucose through the same system), as opposed to the hexose-specific system reported in wild-type Streptomyces griseus.  相似文献   

9.
The kinetic properties of wild-type and mutant oligopeptide binding proteins of Lactococcus lactis were determined. To observe the properties of the mutant proteins in vivo, the oppA gene was deleted from the chromosome of L. lactis to produce a strain that was totally defective in oligopeptide transport. Amplified expression of the oppA gene resulted in an 8- to 12-fold increase in OppA protein relative to the wild-type level. The amplified expression was paralleled by increased bradykinin binding activity, but had relatively little effect on the overall transport of bradykinin via Opp. Several site-directed mutants were constructed on the basis of a comparison of the primary sequences of OppA from Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and L. lactis, taking into account the known structure of the serovar Typhimurium protein. Putative peptide binding-site residues were mutated. All the mutant OppA proteins exhibited a decreased binding affinity for the high-affinity peptide bradykinin. Except for OppA(D471R), the mutant OppA proteins displayed highly defective bradykinin uptake, whereas the transport of the low-affinity substrate KYGK was barely affected. Cells expressing OppA(D471R) had a similar K(m) for transport, whereas the V(max) was increased more than twofold as compared to the wild-type protein. The data are discussed in the light of a kinetic model and imply that the rate of transport is determined to a large extent by the donation of the peptide from the OppA protein to the translocator complex.  相似文献   

10.
Citrate metabolism in resting cells of Lactococcus lactis IL1403(pFL3) results in the formation of two end products from the intermediate pyruvate, acetoin and acetate (A. M. Pudlik and J. S. Lolkema, J. Bacteriol. 193:706-714, 2011). Pyruvate is formed from citrate following uptake by the transporter CitP through the subsequent actions of citrate lyase and oxaloacetate decarboxylase. The present study describes the metabolic response of L. lactis when oxaloacetate accumulates in the cytoplasm. The oxaloacetate decarboxylase-deficient mutant ILCitM(pFL3) showed nearly identical rates of citrate consumption, but the end product profile in the presence of glucose shifted from mainly acetoin to only acetate. In addition, in contrast to the parental strain, the mutant strain did not generate proton motive force. Citrate consumption by the mutant strain was coupled to the excretion of oxaloacetate, with a yield of 80 to 85%. Following citrate consumption, oxaloacetate was slowly taken up by the cells and converted to pyruvate by a cryptic decarboxylase and, subsequently, to acetate. The transport of oxaloacetate is catalyzed by CitP. The parental strain IL1403(pFL3) containing CitP consumed oxaloacetate, while the original strain, IL1403, not containing CitP, did not. Moreover, oxaloacetate consumption was enhanced in the presence of L-lactate, indicating exchange between oxaloacetate and L-lactate catalyzed by CitP. Hence, when oxaloacetate inadvertently accumulates in the cytoplasm, the physiological response of L. lactis is to excrete oxaloacetate in exchange with citrate by an electroneutral mechanism catalyzed by CitP. Subsequently, in a second step, oxaloacetate is taken up by CitP and metabolized to pyruvate and acetate.  相似文献   

11.
The mechanism of metabolic energy production by malolactic fermentation in Lactococcus lactis has been investigated. In the presence of L-malate, a proton motive force composed of a membrane potential and pH gradient is generated which has about the same magnitude as the proton motive force generated by the metabolism of a glycolytic substrate. Malolactic fermentation results in the synthesis of ATP which is inhibited by the ionophore nigericin and the F0F1-ATPase inhibitor N,N-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. Since substrate-level phosphorylation does not occur during malolactic fermentation, the generation of metabolic energy must originate from the uptake of L-malate and/or excretion of L-lactate. The initiation of malolactic fermentation is stimulated by the presence of L-lactate intracellularly, suggesting that L-malate is exchanged for L-lactate. Direct evidence for heterologous L-malate/L-lactate (and homologous L-malate/L-malate) antiport has been obtained with membrane vesicles of an L. lactis mutant deficient in malolactic enzyme. In membrane vesicles fused with liposomes, L-malate efflux and L-malate/L-lactate antiport are stimulated by a membrane potential (inside negative), indicating that net negative charge is moved to the outside in the efflux and antiport reaction. In membrane vesicles fused with liposomes in which cytochrome c oxidase was incorporated as a proton motive force-generating mechanism, transport of L-malate can be driven by a pH gradient alone, i.e., in the absence of L-lactate as countersubstrate. A membrane potential (inside negative) inhibits uptake of L-malate, indicating that L-malate is transported an an electronegative monoanionic species (or dianionic species together with a proton). The experiments described suggest that the generation of metabolic energy during malolactic fermentation arises from electrogenic malate/lactate antiport and electrogenic malate uptake (in combination with outward diffusion of lactic acid), together with proton consumption as result of decarboxylation of L-malate. The net energy gain would be equivalent to one proton translocated form the inside to the outside per L-malate metabolized.  相似文献   

12.
Many bacteria, both gram positive and gram negative, extrude in an energy-dependent manner the fluorescent pH indicator 2',7'-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5[and -6]-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF) (D. Molenaar, T. Abee, and W. N. Konings, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1115:75-83, 1991). This efflux was studied in detail in Lactococcus lactis, and several indications that a transport system is involved were found. This transport system is most likely driven by ATP or a related compound. The evidence is that BCECF extrusion (i) occurs against a BCECF gradient, (ii) is strictly correlated with ATP concentration and not with the proton motive force, and (iii) is inhibited by vanadate and to a lesser extent by N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. Most convincingly, a UV mutant with a strongly reduced efflux rate was isolated. Such a mutant was isolated from a BCECF-loaded and lactose-energized population by selection of highly fluorescent cells in a flow cytometer-cell sorter. The physiological function of this extrusion system is unknown, but its characteristics classify it among the traffic ATPases.  相似文献   

13.
Uptake of phosphate by Streptococcus lactis ML3 proceeds in the absence of a proton motive force, but requires the synthesis of ATP by either arginine or lactose metabolism. The appearance of free Pi internally in arginine-metabolizing cells corresponded quantitatively with the disappearance of extracellular phosphate. Phosphate transport was essentially unidirectional, and phosphate concentration gradients of up to 10(5) could be established. Substrate specificity studies of the transport system indicated no preference for either mono- or divalent phosphate anion. The activity of the phosphate transport system was affected by the intracellular Pi concentration by a feedback inhibition mechanism. Uncouplers and ionophores which dissipate the pH gradient across the cytoplasmic membrane inhibited phosphate transport at acidic but not at alkaline pH values, indicating that transport activity is regulated by the internal proton concentration. Phosphate uptake driven by arginine metabolism increased with the intracellular pH with a pKa of 7.3. Differences in transport activity with arginine and lactose as energy sources are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The specific oligopeptide transport system Opp is essential for growth of Lactococcus lactis in milk. We examined the biodiversity of oligopeptide transport specificity in the L. lactis species. Six strains were tested for (i) consumption of peptides during growth in a chemically defined medium and (ii) their ability to transport these peptides. Each strain demonstrated some specific preferences for peptide utilization, which matched the specificity of peptide transport. Sequencing of the binding protein OppA in some strains revealed minor differences at the amino acid level. The differences in specificity were used as a tool to unravel the role of the binding protein in transport specificity. The genes encoding OppA in four strains were cloned and expressed in L. lactis MG1363 deleted for its oppA gene. The substrate specificity of these engineered strains was found to be similar to that of the L. lactis MG1363 parental strain, whichever oppA gene was expressed. In situ binding experiments demonstrated the ability of OppA to interact with non-transported peptides. Taken together, these results provide evidence for a new concept. Despite that fact that OppA is essential for peptide transport, it is not the (main) determinant of peptide transport specificity in L. lactis.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Various methods of manipulation of the intracellular pH in Streptococcus lactis result in a unique relationship between the rate of glutamate and glutamine transport and the cytoplasmic pH. The initial rate of glutamate uptake by S. lactis cells increases more than 30-fold when the intracellular pH is raised from 6.0 to 7.4. A further increase of the cytoplasmic pH to 8.0 was without effect on transport. The different levels of inhibition of glutamate and glutamine transport at various external pH values by uncouplers and ionophores, which dissipate the proton motive force, can be explained by the effects exerted on the intracellular pH. The dependence of glutamate transport on the accumulation of potassium ions in potassium-filled and -depleted cells is caused by the regulation of intracellular pH by potassium movement.  相似文献   

17.
The uptake of the basic amino acids arginine, ornithine, and lysine was studied in membrane vesicles derived from cells of Lactococcus lactis which were fused with liposomes in which beef heart mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase was incorporated as a proton motive force (PMF)-generating system. In the presence of ascorbate N,N,N'N'-tetramethylphenylenediamine-cytochrome c as the electron donor, these fused membranes accumulated lysine but not ornithine or arginine under aerobic conditions. The mechanism of energy coupling to lysine transport was examined in membrane vesicles of L. lactis subsp. cremoris upon imposition of an artificial electrical potential (delta psi) or pH gradient or both and in fused membranes of these vesicles with cytochrome c oxidase liposomes in which the delta psi and delta pH were manipulated with ionophores. Lysine uptake was shown to be coupled to the PMF and especially to the delta psi, suggesting a proton symport mechanism. The lysine carrier appeared to be specific for L and D isomers of amino acids with a guanidine or NH2 group at the C6 position of the side chain. Uptake of lysine was blocked by p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonic acid but not by maleimides. Counterflow of lysine could not be detected in L. lactis subsp. cremoris, but in the arginine-ornithine antiporter-containing L. lactis subsp. lactis, rapid counterflow occurred. Homologous exchange of lysine and heterologous exchange of arginine and lysine were mediated by this antiporter. PMF-driven lysine transport in these membranes was noncompetitively inhibited by arginine, whereas the uptake of arginine was enhanced by lysine. These observations are compatible with a model in which circulation of lysine via the lysine carrier and the arginine-ornithine antiporter leads to accumulation of arginine.  相似文献   

18.
The Escherichia coli mutant NM81, which is deficient in the nhaA gene for the sodium/proton antiporter, still has a sodium ion extrusion activity because of a second antiporter encoded by nhaB (E. Padan, N. Maisler, D. Taglicht, R. Karpel, and S. Schuldiner, J. Biol. Chem. 264:20297-20302, 1989). By chance, we have found that E. coli pop6810 already contains a mutation affecting the sodium ion circulation, probably in or near nhaB, and that its delta nhaA mutant, designated RS1, has no sodium ion extrusion activity at alkaline pH. The growth of RS1 was inhibited completely by 0.1 M sodium, whereas growth inhibition of NM81 was observed only at sodium concentrations greater than 0.2 M. RS1 grew at a normal rate in an alkaline medium containing a low sodium concentration. Furthermore, RS1 grew with a negligible proton motive force in the alkaline medium containing carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone. The transport activities for proline and serine were not impaired in RS1, suggesting that these transport systems could be driven by the proton motive force at alkaline pH. These findings led us to conclude that the operation of the sodium/proton antiporter is not essential for growth at alkaline pH but that the antiporter is required for maintaining a low internal sodium concentration when the growth medium contains a high concentration of these ions.  相似文献   

19.
Listeria monocytogenes takes up di- and tripeptides via a proton motive force-dependent carrier protein. This peptide transport system resembles the recently cloned and sequenced secondary di- and tripeptide transport system of Lactococcus lactis (A. Hagting, E. R. S. Kunji, K. J. Leenhouts, B. Poolman, and W. N. Konings, J. Biol. Chem. 269:11391-11399, 1994). The peptide permease of L. monocytogenes has a broad substrate specificity and allows transport of the nonpeptide substrate 5-aminolevulinic acid, the toxic di- and tripeptide analogs, alanyl-beta-chloroalanine and alanyl-alanyl-beta-chloroalanine, and various di- and tripeptides. No extracellular peptide hydrolysis was detected, indicating that peptides are hydrolyzed after being transported into the cell. Indeed, peptidase activities in response to various synthetic substrates were detected in cell extracts obtained from L. monocytogenes cells grown in brain heart infusion broth or defined medium. The di- and tripeptide permease can supply L. monocytogenes with essential amino acids for growth and might contribute to growth of this pathogen in various foods where peptides are supplied by proteolytic activity of other microorganisms present in these foods. Possible roles of this di- and tripeptide transport system in the osmoregulation and virulence of L. monocytogenes are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Energy coupling to net K+ transport in Escherichia coli K-12.   总被引:24,自引:0,他引:24  
Energy coupling for three K+ transport systems of Escherichia coli K-12 was studied by examining effects of selected energy sources and inhibitors in strains with either a wild type or a defective (Ca2+, Mg2+)-stimulated ATPase. This approach allows discrimination between transport systems coupled to the proton motive force from those coupled to the hydrolysis of a high energy phosphate compound (ATP-driven). The three K+ transport systems here studied are: (a) the Kdp system, a repressible high affinity (Km=2 muM) system probably coded for by four linked Kdp genes; (b) the Trka system, a constitutive system with high rate and modest affinity (Km=1.5 mM) defined by mutations in the single trkA gene; and (c) the TrkF system, a nonsaturable system with a low rate of uptake (Rhoads, D.B., Waters, F.B., and Epstein, W. (1976) J. Gen. Physiol. 67, 325-341). Each of these systems has a different mode of energy coupling: (a) the Kdp system is ATP-driven and has a periplasmic protein component; (b) the TrkF system is proton motive force-driven; and (c) the TrkA system is unique among bacterial transport systems described to date in requiring both the proton motive force and ATP for activity. We suggest that this dual requirement represents energy fueling by ATP and regulation by the proton motive force. Absence of ATP-driven systems in membrane vesicles is usually attributed to the requirement of such systems for a periplasmic protein. This cannot explain the failure to demonstrate the TrkA system in vesicles, since this system does not require a periplasmic protein. Our findings indicate that membrane vesicles cannot couple energy to ATP-driven transport systems. Since vesicles can generate a proton motive force, the inability of vesicles to generate ATP or couple ATP to transport (or both) must be invoked to explain the absence of TrkA in vesicles. The TrkF system should function in vesicles, but its very low rate may make it difficult to identify.  相似文献   

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