Affiliation:
1. Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Thiamine pyrophosphate is an essential cofactor that is synthesized de novo in
Salmonella enterica
serovar Typhimurium and other bacteria. In addition to genes encoding enzymes in the biosynthetic pathway, mutations in other metabolic loci have been shown to prevent thiamine synthesis. The latter loci identify the integration of the thiamine biosynthetic pathway with other metabolic processes and can be uncovered when thiamine biosynthesis is challenged. Mutations in
gshA
, encoding γ-
l
-glutamyl-
l
-cysteine synthetase, prevent the synthesis of glutathione, the major free thiol in the cell, and are shown here to result in a thiamine auxotrophy in some of the strains tested, including
S. enterica
LT2. Phenotypic characterization of the
gshA
mutants indicated they were similar enough to
apbC
and
apbE
mutants to warrant the definition of a class of mutants unified by (i) a requirement for both the hydroxymethyl pyrimidine (HMP) and thiazole (THZ) moiety of thiamine, (ii) the ability of
l
-tryosine to satisfy the THZ requirement, (iii) suppression of the thiamine requirement by anaerobic growth, and (iv) suppression by a second-site mutation at a single locus. Genetic data indicated that a defective ThiH generates the THZ requirement in these strains, and we suggest this defect is due to a reduced ability to repair a critical [Fe-S] cluster.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
33 articles.
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