Affiliation:
1. Institut de Biologie Physico-Chimique (UPR9073-CNRS), Paris, France
2. Departamento de Bioquimica, Facultad de Medicina, Laboratorio de Fisicoquímica e Ingeniería de Proteínas, UNAM, Mexico City, Mexico
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Wild-type
Escherichia coli
grows more slowly on glucosamine (GlcN) than on
N
-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) as a sole source of carbon. Both sugars are transported by the phosphotransferase system, and their 6-phospho derivatives are produced. The subsequent catabolism of the sugars requires the allosteric enzyme glucosamine-6-phosphate (GlcN6P) deaminase, which is encoded by
nagB
, and degradation of GlcNAc also requires the
nagA
-encoded enzyme,
N
-acetylglucosamine-6-phosphate (GlcNAc6P) deacetylase. We investigated various factors which could affect growth on GlcN and GlcNAc, including the rate of GlcN uptake, the level of induction of the
nag
operon, and differential allosteric activation of GlcN6P deaminase. We found that for strains carrying a wild-type deaminase (
nagB
) gene, increasing the level of the NagB protein or the rate of GlcN uptake increased the growth rate, which showed that both enzyme induction and sugar transport were limiting. A set of point mutations in
nagB
that are known to affect the allosteric behavior of GlcN6P deaminase in vitro were transferred to the
nagB
gene on the
Escherichia coli
chromosome, and their effects on the growth rates were measured. Mutants in which the substrate-induced positive cooperativity of NagB was reduced or abolished grew even more slowly on GlcN than on GlcNAc or did not grow at all on GlcN. Increasing the amount of the deaminase by using a
nagC
or
nagA
mutation to derepress the
nag
operon improved growth. For some mutants, a
nagA
mutation, which caused the accumulation of the allosteric activator GlcNAc6P and permitted allosteric activation, had a stronger effect than
nagC
. The effects of the mutations on growth in vivo are discussed in light of their in vitro kinetics.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
63 articles.
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