Stringent control of intermediary metabolism in Escherichia coli: pyruvate excretion by cells grown on succinate
- PMID: 7040357
- DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a133610
Stringent control of intermediary metabolism in Escherichia coli: pyruvate excretion by cells grown on succinate
Abstract
A large amount of pyruvate was excreted into the medium by CP78 (rel+) cells grown on succinate when they were starved for amino acids. In contrast, no such excretion was observed with CP79 (rel-) cells. This phenomenon was also seen with two other isogenic pairs of strains: NF161 (rel+) and NF162 (rel-), and 10B601 (rel+) and 10B602 (rel-). Besides succinate, L-malate, and fumarate were effective carbon sources for the excretion, but glucose, glycerol, and acetate were not. When DL-lactate was used, not only CP78 but also CP79 cells excreted pyruvate. Experiments using [1,4-14C]succinate as a carbon source revealed that pyruvate was formed by decarboxylation of one carboxyl group of succinate and that the pyruvate excretion amounted to about 40% of the total succinate degraded. Experiments designed to elucidate the mechanism of the excretion yielded the following observations. (i) The concentration of pyruvate in CP78 cells grown on the C4-dicarboxylic acids mentioned above was not significantly changed upon amino acid starvation. (ii) Guanosine 5'-diphosphate-3'-diphosphate exerted no effect on the activities of several enzymes thought to be involved in pyruvate-related metabolism. It is suggested firstly that the excretion was not due to some impairment in the biosynthetic pathway of a particular amino acid, but was due to the stringent control of central amphibolic metabolism, and secondly that no de novo protein synthesis was involved in the excretion.
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