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Import and Metabolism of Glutathione by Streptococcus mutans
Authors:Christopher Sherrill  Robert C. Fahey
Affiliation:Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093
Abstract:Glutathione (γ-GluCysGly, GSH) is not found in most gram-positive bacteria, but some appear to synthesize it and others, including Streptococcus mutans ATCC 33402, import it from their growth medium. Import of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) by S. mutans 33402 in 7H9 medium was shown to require glucose and to occur with an apparent Km of 18 ± 5 μM. GSSG, GSH, S-methylglutathione, and homocysteine-glutathione mixed disulfide (hCySSG) were imported at comparable rates (measured by depletion of substrate in the medium), as was the disulfide of γ-GluCys. In contrast, the disulfide of CysGly was not taken up at a measurable rate, indicating that the γ-Glu residue is important for efficient transport. During incubation with GSSG, little GSSG was detected in cells but GSH and γ-GluCys accumulated during the first 30 min and then declined. No significant intracellular accumulation of Cys or sulfide was found. Transient intracellular accumulation of d/l-homocysteine, as well as GSH and γ-GluCys, was observed during import of hCySSG. Although substantial levels of GSH were found in cells when S. mutans was grown on media containing glutathione, such GSH accumulation had no effect on the growth rate. However, the presence of cellular GSH did protect against growth inhibition by the thiol-oxidizing agent diamide. Import of glutathione by S. mutans ATCC 25175, which like strain 33402 does not synthesize glutathione, occurred at a rate comparable to that of strain 33402, but three species which appear to synthesize glutathione (S. agalactiae ATCC 12927, S. pyogenes ATCC 8668, and Enterococcus faecalis ATCC 29212) imported glutathione at negligible or markedly lower rates.Bacteria import peptides composed of two to eight residues by means of a number of different multiprotein uptake systems or permeases (14). Of the bacterial permeases, those of Escherichia coli, Lactococcus lactis, and Salmonella typhimurium are the best studied (6, 7). In these organisms, there are individual permeases that have high affinity for dipeptides, tripeptides, dipeptides and tripeptides, or oligopeptides. Among the bacterial peptide permeases (14), there seems to be no discrimination of the specific amino acids of the transported peptides. However, switching the stereochemistry of Cα from l to d or modifying the C-terminal carboxylate or N-terminal amine of transported peptides significantly reduces the rate of transport. One transport system which does seem to recognize peptide residue side chains has been reported to exist in Enterococcus faecalis; this system transports only peptides that possess an N-terminal Asp or Glu (13).In 1978, we reported that glutathione (γ-GluCysGly, GSH) is not synthesized by most gram-positive bacteria (4), apparent exceptions being Streptococcus agalactiae and L. lactis (previously Streptococcus lactis). However, some of the gram-positive bacteria appeared to acquire GSH by import of another form of GSH from the growth medium. Uptake of glutathione by Streptococcus mutans was later studied by Thomas (16), who found that total cellular thiol content, and radioactivity from labeled GSH or oxidized GSH (GSSG), increased with the same kinetics. A careful study of L. lactis subsp. cremoris by Wiederholt and Steele (17) established that strain Z8 efficiently accumulates GSH when grown in medium supplemented with GSH but is unable to synthesize it, whereas strain C2 can neither import nor synthesize GSH. Species of Peptostreptococcus and Fusobacterium have been shown to markedly increase their production of H2S, apparently derived by import of glutathione from the growth medium (2). Finally, cellular accumulation of radioactivity from radiolabeled GSH or GSSG added to the incubation medium has been demonstrated in Streptococcus pneumoniae, and a mutant in which the apparent transport of glutathione is blocked has been found (9).In a recent report (10), we provided evidence for accumulation of GSH through transport and synthesis of GSH by streptococci and enterococci, but the occurrence of these processes appeared to be species dependent and even, for some species, strain dependent. Such strain dependence appears most variable for L. lactis, where different strains can synthesize GSH, accumulate GSH by import, or do neither (4, 17). In the present research, we expand on our studies of streptococci in order to gain insight into the nature of the glutathione species transported, the fate of the glutathione once it enters the cell, and the function of glutathione in the cell.
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