Affiliation:
1. Departments of Biochemistry and Genetics, College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Abstract
Using a quantitative assay for measuring chemotaxis, we tested a variety of sugars and sugar derivatives for their ability to attract
Escherichia coli
bacteria. The most effective attractants, i.e., those that have thresholds near 10
−5
M or below, are
N
-acetyl-
d
-glucosamine, 6-deoxy-
d
-glucose,
d
-fructose,
d
-fucose, 1-
d
-glycerol-β-
d
-galactoside, galactitol,
d
-galactose,
d
-glucosamine,
d
-glucose, α-
d
-glucose-1-phosphate, lactose, maltose,
d
-mannitol,
d
-mannose, methyl-β-
d
-galactoside, methyl-β-
d
-glucoside,
d
-ribose,
d
-sorbitol, and trehalose. Lactose, and probably
d
-glucose-1-phosphate, are attractive only after conversion to the free monosaccharide, while the other attractants do not require breakdown for taxis. Nine different chemoreceptors are involved in detecting these various attractants. They are called the
N
-acetyl-glucosamine, fructose, galactose, glucose, maltose, mannitol, ribose, sorbitol, and trehalose chemoreceptors; the specificity of each was studied. The chemoreceptors, with the exception of the one for
d
-glucose, are inducible. The galactose-binding protein serves as the recognition component of the galactose chemoreceptor.
E. coli
also has osmotically shockable binding activities for maltose and
d
-ribose, and these appear to serve as the recognition components for the corresponding chemoreceptors.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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