Abstract: | A threonine dehydrataseless mutant of Escherichia coli, Crookes strain, was observed to grow on an acetate minimal medium without the usual requirement for isoleucine supplementation. Both the wild-type Crookes strain and a threonine auxotroph metabolized l-glutamate-1-(14)C to l-isoleucine-1-(14)C with no appreciable randomization, suggesting that a pathway for isoleucine formation from glutamate via beta-methylaspartate, beta-methyloxaloacetate, and alpha-ketobutyrate was possible in addition to the pathway from threonine and alpha-ketobutyrate. Crude cell-free extracts formed (14)C-beta-methylaspartate from (14)C-glutamate, and the conversion of beta-methylaspartate to alpha-ketobutyrate was also demonstrated, thus supporting the conclusion that glutamate can serve as a precursor of alpha-ketobutyrate (and isoleucine) without the necessary involvement of threonine as an intermediate. |