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. 1979 Aug 10;254(15):7295-301.

Transport and binding of riboflavin by Bacillus subtilis

  • PMID: 110806
Free article

Transport and binding of riboflavin by Bacillus subtilis

G Cecchini et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

Riboflavine uptake and membrane-associated riboflavin-binding activity has been investigated in Bacillus subtilis. Riboflavin uptake proceeds via a system whose general properties are indicative of a carrier-mediated process: it is inhibited by substrate analogues, exhibits saturation kinetics, and is temperature-dependent. The organism concentrates riboflavin primarily as the phosphorylated cofactors FMN and FAD. Energy is required for uptake but whether the energy demand is required for both uptake and phosphorylation or only for the phosphorylation step is not known. Membrane-associated binding activity for riboflavin has also been demonstrated in membrane vesicles prepared from B. subtilis, and the binding component can be "solubilized" with Triton X-100. Evidence supporting the function of the binding component in riboflavin uptake by the intact cells includes the following. (i) Riboflavin analogues inhibit binding and uptake to nearly the same extent and with similar specificity of action. (ii) The KD for riboflavin-binding and the Km for uptake are in the same range. Similarly the Ki determined for the inhibitory analogue 5-deazariboflavin in the uptake assay and the KD for its interaction with the riboflavin-binding component of membrane vesicles are in the same range. (iii) Uptake in cells and binding in vesicles vary in the same direction with differences in growth conditions.

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