Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Chemistry, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104
Abstract
The major component of leucine uptake in
Escherichia coli
K-12 is a common system for
l
-leucine,
l
-isoleucine, and
l
-valine (LIV-I) with a Michaelis constant (
K
m
) value of 0.2 μM (LIV-I system). The LIV-binding protein appears to be associated with this system. It now appears that the LIV-I transport system and LIV-binding protein also serve for the entry of
l
-alanine,
l
-threonine, and possibly
l
-serine. A minor component of
l
-leucine entry occurs by a leucine-specific system (L-system) for which a specific leucine-binding protein has been isolated. A mutant has been obtained that shows increased levels of the LIV-I transport activity and increased levels of both of the binding proteins. Another mutant has been isolated that shows only a major increase in the levels of the leucine-specific transport system and the leucine-specific binding protein. A third binding protein that binds all three branched-chain amino acids but binds isoleucine preferentially has been identified. The relationship of the binding proteins to each other and to transport activity is discussed. A second general transport system (LIV-II system) with a
K
m
value of 2 μM and a relatively low
V
max
can be observed in
E. coli
. The LIV-II system is not sensitive to osmotic shock treatment nor to growth of cells in the presence of leucine. This high
K
m
system, which is specific for the branched-chain amino acids, can be observed in membrane vesicle preparations.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
118 articles.
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