Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA
2. Department of Chemistry, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA
3. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Salmonella enteric
serovar Typhimurium, a major cause of food-borne illness, is capable of using a variety of carbon and nitrogen sources. Fructoselysine and glucoselysine are Maillard reaction products formed by the reaction of glucose or fructose, respectively, with the ε-amine group of lysine. We report here that
S
. Typhimurium utilizes fructoselysine and glucoselysine as carbon and nitrogen sources via a mannose family phosphotransferase (PTS) encoded by
gfrABCD
(glucoselysine/fructoselysine PTS components EIIA, EIIB, EIIC, and EIID; locus numbers STM14_5449 to STM14_5454 in
S
. Typhimurium 14028s). Genes coding for two predicted deglycases within the
gfr
operon,
gfrE
and
gfrF
, were required for growth with glucoselysine and fructoselysine, respectively. GfrF demonstrated fructoselysine-6-phosphate deglycase activity in a coupled enzyme assay. The biochemical and genetic analyses were consistent with a pathway in which fructoselysine and glucoselysine are phosphorylated at the C-6 position of the sugar by the GfrABCD PTS as they are transported across the membrane. The resulting fructoselysine-6-phosphate and glucoselysine-6-phosphate subsequently are cleaved by GfrF and GfrE to form lysine and glucose-6-phosphate or fructose-6-phosphate. Interestingly, although
S
. Typhimurium can use lysine derived from fructoselysine or glucoselysine as a sole nitrogen source, it cannot use exogenous lysine as a nitrogen source to support growth. Expression of
gfrABCDEF
was dependent on the alternative sigma factor RpoN (σ
54
) and an RpoN-dependent LevR-like activator, which we designated GfrR.
IMPORTANCE
Salmonella
physiology has been studied intensively, but there is much we do not know regarding the repertoire of nutrients these bacteria are able to use for growth. This study shows that a previously uncharacterized PTS and associated enzymes function together to transport and catabolize fructoselysine and glucoselysine. Knowledge of the range of nutrients that
Salmonella
utilizes is important, as it could lead to the development of new strategies for reducing the load of
Salmonella
in food animals, thereby mitigating its entry into the human food supply.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
23 articles.
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