Affiliation:
1. Department of Food Science and Nutrition, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 55108,1 and
2. New Zealand Dairy Research Institute, Palmerston North, New Zealand2
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A mutant of fast milk-coagulating (Fmc
+
)
Lactococcus lactis
subsp.
lactis
C2, designated
L. lactis
KB4, was identified. Although possessing the known components essential for utilizing casein as a nitrogen source, which include functional proteinase (PrtP) activity and oligopeptide, di- and tripeptide, and amino acid transport systems, KB4 exhibited a slow milk coagulation (Fmc
−
) phenotype. When the amino acid requirements of
L. lactis
C2 were compared with those of KB4 by use of a chemically defined medium, it was found that KB4 was unable to grow in the absence of aspartic acid. This aspartic acid requirement could also be met by aspartate-containing peptides. The addition of aspartic acid to milk restored the Fmc
+
phenotype of KB4. KB4 was found to be defective in pyruvate carboxylase and thus was deficient in the ability to form oxaloacetate and hence aspartic acid from pyruvate and carbon dioxide. The results suggest that when lactococci are propagated in milk, aspartate derived from casein is unable to meet fully the nutritional demands of the lactococci, and they become dependent upon aspartate biosynthesis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
21 articles.
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