Affiliation:
1. Division of Neurosciences, City of Hope Medical Center, Duarte, California 91010
Abstract
Aminophosphonic acids analogous to glutamic acid, aspartic acid, alanine, and valine were actively accumulated by
Lactobacillus plantarum
. Uptake was dependent on the availability of glucose and, in all cases, the estimated intracellular concentrations substantially exceeded extracellular levels. During uptake, there was little metabolism of tritiated 2-amino-3-phosphonopropionic acid (APP), the aspartic acid analogue, and a negligible incorporation of isotope from this substance into the nucleic acid, lipid, protein, or cell wall fractions of the cell. Competition studies with APP indicated that its transport in
L. plantarum
and in
Streptococcus faecalis
was antagonized only by structurally related compounds such as glutamic, aspartic, and cysteic acids. Kinetic studies showed that APP was taken up by a single catalytic system in
S. faecalis
. A mutant strain of this organism which lacks one of two kinetically distinguishable dicarboxylic amino acid transport systems failed to accumulate measurable amounts of APP. These experiments indicate that the aminophosphonic acids are accumulated by the amino acid transport systems in these bacteria with minimal metabolic changes.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
18 articles.
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