Affiliation:
1. Departments of Biochemistry
2. Microbiology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Based on its genome sequence, the pathway of β-oxidative fatty acid degradation in
Salmonella enterica
serovar Typhimurium LT2 has been thought to be identical to the well-characterized
Escherichia coli
K-12 system. We report that wild-type strains of
S. enterica
grow on decanoic acid, whereas wild-type
E. coli
strains cannot. Mutant strains (carrying
fadR
) of both organisms in which the genes of fatty acid degradation (
fad
) are expressed constitutively are readily isolated. The
S. enterica fadR
strains grow more rapidly than the wild-type strains on decanoic acid and also grow well on octanoic and hexanoic acids (which do not support growth of wild-type strains). By contrast,
E. coli fadR
strains grow well on decanoic acid but grow only exceedingly slowly on octanoic acid and fail to grow at all on hexanoic acid. The two wild-type organisms also differed in the ability to grow on oleic acid when FadR was overexpressed. Under these superrepression conditions,
E. coli
failed to grow, whereas
S. enterica
grew well. Exchange of the wild-type
fadR
genes between the two organisms showed this to be a property of
S. enterica
rather than of the FadR proteins per se. This difference in growth was attributed to
S. enterica
having higher cytosolic levels of the inducing ligands, long-chain acyl coenzyme As (acyl-CoAs). The most striking results were the differences in the compositions of CoA metabolites of strains grown with octanoic acid or oleic acid.
S. enterica
cleanly converted all of the acid to acetyl-CoA, whereas
E. coli
accumulated high levels of intermediate-chain-length products. Exchange of homologous genes between the two organisms showed that the
S. enterica
FadE and FadBA enzymes were responsible for the greater efficiency of β-oxidation relative to that of
E. coli
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
67 articles.
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