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The nature of the requirement of Saccharomyces carlsbergensis for vitamin B6
Authors:RABINOWITZ J C  SNELL E E
Affiliation:From the Department of Biochemistry, College of Agriculture, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin USA
Abstract:Saccharomyces carlsbergensis 4228, an organism widely used for determination of vitamin B6, grows well without this vitamin if thiamine is also omitted from the basal medium, and an inoculum grown in a thiamine-low medium is used. Thiamine inhibits growth when added to such a medium. The thiazole moiety of thiamine, but not the pyrimidine, is also inhibitory, but less so than thiamine itself.Growth inhibition by thiamine is prevented by vitamin B6. At low concentrations of thiamine, the amount of vitamin B6 required for growth increases with the thiamine concentration; at concentrations of thiamine above 1 μg./10 ml. the vitamin B6 requirement for growth remains essentially constant. Since these higher concentrations of thiamine have been used in methods that utilize this organism for determination of vitamin B6 (1,2), the validity of these methods is confirmed.In the presence of thiamine, growth was also permitted by additions of the thiamine antagonist, neopyrithiamine. In this case, however, the relationship was fully competitive; i.e., the amount of neopyrithiamine required for growth increased regularly with the thiamine concentration. At concentrations considerably higher than those required for growth, neopyrithiamine again inhibited growth, and this inhibition was prevented by an increase in the thiamine concentration. Thus neopyrithiamine acts by lowering the effective thiamine concentration to subinhibitory levels; if excessive amounts are used, it prevents essential metabolic functions of thiamine and itself becomes toxic. The mechanism by which vitamin B6 prevents thiamine toxicity is not known.The appearance of a requirement for certain growth factors because of inhibitory effects of other metabolically important compounds, rather than because of an intrinsic inability of the organism to synthesize the growth factor, may be much more common than the few recorded instances of this phenomenon indicate.
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