Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Biochemistry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Abstract
Changes in amino acid uptake in
Bacillus licheniformis
and in the amino acid pools of three
Bacillus
species were investigated, by use of cells from different stages of the life cycle.
B. licheniformis
contains catalytic uptake systems for all of the 10 amino acids studied. The apparent maximal velocities of uptake decreased during sporulation but did not fall below the range observed for other microorganisms. In sporulating cells, the apparent affinity constants of the uptake systems for individual amino acids remained about the same as in growing cells, i.e., from 2 × 10
−7
m
to 7 × 10
−6
m
, whereas, in some cases, the apparent maximal velocities decreased significantly. Because the velocity of uptake showed an atypical dependence on substrate concentration, it was postulated that these cells contain two or more uptake systems for each amino acid. Only one of these systems appeared to be operative at a substrate concentration below 10
−6
m
. Working at these low substrate concentrations, catalytic activities producing a net efflux of amino acids were demonstrable in vegetative cells in the presence of chloramphenicol, but these exit systems were lost during sporulation. A pool formed by the addition of radioactive algal hydrolysate will exchange with the external medium in vegetative cells but not in sporulating cells. Glutamic acid and alanine comprise at least 60% of the amino acid pool of
B. licheniformis
A-5,
B. subtilis
23, and
B. cereus
T during all stages of growth and sporulation. The concentrations of the other amino acids in the pool varied extensively, but reflected, in general, the amino acid turnover known to occur during sporulation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
57 articles.
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