Affiliation:
1. Department of Bacteriology, The Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel
Abstract
The glutamate permeation system in
Escherichia coli
K-12 consists of three genes:
gltC, gltS
, and
gltR
. The genes
gltC
and
gltS
are very closely linked, and are located between the
pyrE
and
tna
loci, in the following order:
tna, gltC, gltS, pyrE; gltR
is located near the
metA
gene. The three
glt
genes constitute a regulatory system in which
gltR
is the regulator gene responsible for the formation of repressor,
gltS
is the structural gene of the glutamate permease, and
gltC
is most probably the operator locus. The synthesis of glutamate permease is partially repressed in wild-type K-12 strains, resulting in the inability of these strains to utilize glutamate as the sole source of carbon. Derepression due to mutation at the
gltC
locus enables growth on glutamate as a carbon source both at 30 C and at 42 C. Temperature-sensitive
gltR
mutants capable of utilizing glutamate for growth at 42 C but not at 30 C were found to be derepressed for glutamate permease when grown at 42 C and partially repressed (wild-type phenotype) upon growth at 30 C. These mutants produce an altered thermolabile repressor which can be inactivated by mild heat treatment (10 min at 44 C) in the absence of growth.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
58 articles.
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