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. 1993 Winter;6(4):234-8.
doi: 10.1007/BF00187761.

The nutritional selectivity of a siderophore-catabolizing bacterium

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The nutritional selectivity of a siderophore-catabolizing bacterium

R DeAngelis et al. Biometals. 1993 Winter.

Abstract

The ability of a siderophore-catabolizing bacterium to assimilate ferric ion was examined. While the bacterium utilizes the siderophore deferrioxamine B (DFB) as a carbon source, it was incapable of using the ferric ion analogue (ferrioxamine B) as an iron source. It did, however, assimilate the ferric ion of the chelator ferric nitrilotriacetic acid and of the siderophore ferrirhodotorulic acid (ferriRA). Neither ferriRA nor its deferrated analog (RA), however, were capable of functioning as carbon sources for the bacterium. The microbe thus employs a 'nutritional selectivity' with respect to these two siderophores. That is, it does not use the siderophore it employs as a carbon source (DFB) as an iron source nor does the siderophore utilized as an iron source, i.e. ferriRA, nor its deferrated analog (RA), serve as carbon sources for the organism.

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