Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas 75083-0688
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Escherichia coli
is not known to utilize purines, other than adenine and adenosine, as nitrogen sources. We reinvestigated purine catabolism because a computer analysis suggested several potential ς
54
-dependent promoters within a 23-gene cluster whose products have homology to purine catabolic enzymes. Our results did not provide conclusive evidence that the ς
54
-dependent promoters are active. Nonetheless, our results suggest that some of the genes are metabolically significant. We found that even though several purines did not support growth as the sole nitrogen source, they did stimulate growth with aspartate as the nitrogen source. Cells produced
14
CO
2
from minimal medium containing [
14
C]adenine, which implies allantoin production. However, neither ammonia nor carbamoyl phosphate was produced, which implies that purine catabolism is incomplete and does not provide nitrogen during nitrogen-limited growth. We constructed strains with deletions of two genes whose products might catalyze the first reaction of purine catabolism. Deletion of one eliminated
14
CO
2
production from [
14
C]adenine, which implies that its product is necessary for xanthine dehydrogenase activity. We changed the name of this gene to
xdhA
. The
xdhA
mutant grew faster with aspartate as a nitrogen source. The mutant also exhibited sensitivity to adenine, which guanosine partially reversed. Adenine sensitivity has been previously associated with defective purine salvage resulting from impaired synthesis of guanine nucleotides from adenine. We propose that xanthine dehydrogenase contributes to this purine interconversion.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
127 articles.
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