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Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (beta-galactosidase)
14,648 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Beggs, William H. (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis), and Palmer Rogers. Galactose repression of beta-galactosidase induction in Escherichia coli. J. Bacteriol. 91:1869-1874. 1966.-Galactose repression of beta-galactosidase induction in Escherichia coli was investigated to determine whether the galactose molecule itself is the catabolite repressor of this enzyme system. Without exception, beta-galactosidase induction by cells grown in a synthetic salts medium with lactate or glycerol as the carbon source was more strongly repressed by glucose than by galactose. This relationship existed even when the organism was previously grown in the synthetic medium containing galactose as the source of carbon. Two observations suggested that the ability of galactose to repress beta-galactosidase formation by Escherichia coli depends directly upon the cells' capacity to catabolize galactose. First, galactose repression of beta-galactosidase synthesis was markedly enhanced in bacteria tested subsequent to gratuitous induction of the galactose-degrading enzymes with d-fucose. Second, galactose failed to exert a repressive effect on beta-galactosidase in a galactose-negative mutant lacking the first two enzymes involved in galactose catabolism. Glucose completely repressed enzyme formation in this mutant. This same mutant, into which the genes for inducible galactose utilization had been introduced previously by transduction, again exhibited galactose repression. Pyruvate was found to be at least as effective as galactose in repressing beta-galactosidase induction by cells grown in synthetic salts medium plus glycerol. It is concluded that the galactose molecule itself is not the catabolite repressor of beta-galactosidase, but that repression is exerted through some intermediate in galactose catabolism.
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PMID:Galactose repression of beta-galactosidase induction in Escherichia coli. 532 10

1. Repression by glucose of beta-galactosidase synthesis is spontaneously reversible in all strains of Escherichia coli examined long before the glucose has all been consumed. The extent of recovery and the time necessary for reversal differ among various strains. Other inducible enzymes show similar effects. 2. This transient effect of glucose repression is observed in constitutive (i(-)) and permease-less (y(-)) cells as well as in the corresponding i(+) and y(+) strains. 3. Repression is exerted by several rapidly metabolizable substrates (galactose, ribose and ribonucleosides) but not by non-metabolized or poorly metabolized compounds (2-deoxyglucose, 2-deoxyribose, phenyl thio-beta-galactoside and 2-deoxyribonucleosides). 4. The transient repression with glucose is observed in inducible cells supplied with a powerful inducer of beta-galactosidase synthesis (e.g. isopropyl thio-beta-galactoside) but not with a weak inducer (lactose); in the latter instance glucose repression is permanent. Diauxic growth on glucose plus lactose can be abolished by including isopropyl thio-beta-galactoside in the medium. 5. In some strains phosphate starvation increases catabolite repression; in others it relieves it. Adenine starvation in an adenine-requiring mutant also relieves catabolite repression by glycerol but not that by glucose. Restoration of phosphate or adenine to cells starved of these nutrients causes a pronounced temporary repression. Alkaline-phosphatase synthesis is not affected by the availability of adenine. 6. During periods of transient repression of induced enzyme synthesis the differential rate of RNA synthesis, measured by labelled uracil incorporation in 2min. pulses, shows a temporary rise. 7. The differential rate of uracil incorporation into RNA falls during exponential growth of batch cultures of E. coli. This is equally true for uracil-requiring and non-requiring strains. The fall in the rate of incorporation has been shown to be due to a real fall in the rate of RNA synthesis. The significance of the changes in the rate of RNA synthesis is discussed. 8. A partial model of catabolite repression is presented with suggestions for determining the chemical identification of the catabolite co-repressor itself.
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PMID:Catabolite repression of beta-galactosidase synthesis in Escherichia coli. 533 5

1. Acute transient catabolite repression of beta-galactosidase synthesis, observed when glucose is added to glycerol-grown cells of Escherichia coli (Moses & Prevost, 1966), requires the presence of a functional operator gene (o) in the lactose operon. Total deletion of the operator gene abolished acute transient repression, even in the presence of a functional regulator gene (i). 2. Regulator constitutives (i(-)) also show transient repression provided that the operator gene is functional. Regulator deletion mutants (i(del)), with which to test specifically the role of the i gene, have not so far been available. 3. The above mutants, showing various changes in the lactose operon, show no alteration in the effect of glucose on induced tryptophanase synthesis. Glucose metabolism, as measured in terms of the release of (14)CO(2) from [1-(14)C]glucose and [6-(14)C]glucose, also showed no differences between strains exhibiting or not exhibiting transient repression. This suggests no change in the operation of the pentose phosphate cycle, a metabolic activity known to be of paramount importance for glucose repression of beta-galactosidase synthesis (Prevost & Moses, 1967). 4. Chronic permanent repression by glucose of beta-galactosidase synthesis (less severe in degree than acute transient repression) persists in strains in which transient repression has been genetically abolished. Constitutive alkaline-phosphatase synthesis, which shows no transient repression, also demonstrates chronic permanent repression by glucose. 5. Chloramphenicol repression also persists in mutants with no transient repression, and also affects alkaline phosphatase. It is suggested that chronic permanent repression and chloramphenicol repression are non-specific, and that they do not influence beta-galactosidase synthesis via the regulatory system of the lactose operon.
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PMID:Involvement of the lac regulatory genes in catabolite repression in Escherichia coli. 534 Mar 65

The physiological function of cyclic AMP (cAMP) phosphodiesterase in Salmonella typhimurium was investigated with strains which were isogenic except for the cpd locus. In crude broken-cell extracts the properties of the enzyme were found to be similar to those reported for Escherichia coli. The specific activity in the mutant was less than 1% that in the wild type. Rates of cAMP production in the mutant were as much as twice those observed in the wild type. The amount of cAMP accumulated when cells grew overnight with limiting glucose was 4.5-fold greater in the mutant than in the wild type. The intracellular concentration of cAMP in the two strains was measured directly, using four different techniques to wash the cells to remove extracellular cAMP. The cAMP level in the cpd strain was only 25% greater than in the wild type. The functional concentration of the cAMP receptor protein-cAMP complex was estimated indirectly from the specific activity of beta-galactosidase in the two strains after introducing F'lac. When cells were grown with carbon sources permitting synthesis of different levels of cAMP, the specific activity of the enzyme was at most 25% greater in the cpd strain. The cpd strain was more sensitive to the effects of exogenous cAMP. Exogenous cAMP relieved both permanent and transient catabolite repression of the lac operon at lower concentrations in the cpd strain than in the wild type. When cells grew with glucose, glycerol, or ribose, exogenous cAMP inhibited growth of the mutant strain more than the wild type.
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PMID:Cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase in Salmonella typhimurium: characteristics and physiological function. 609 95

An alpha-amylase gene from Bacillus coagulans has previously been cloned in Escherichia coli and shown to direct the synthesis of an enzymically active protein of 60,000 Dal (Cornelis et al., 1982). In one particular E. coli host, strain HB101, amylase was found to accumulate in the periplasmic space. To study the processing and the location of the amylase, plasmid pAMY2 was introduced into E. coli 188 which is a strain constitutive for alkaline phosphatase, a periplasmic marker, and for beta-galactosidase, a cytoplasmic marker. Abnormally large amounts of both alpha-amylase and beta-galactosidase were found in the culture fluid of cells grown in rich medium. Furthermore a severe growth defect was found when cells containing pAMY2 were grown in maltose and glycerol media, while the ability to grow on glucose remained normal. This defect could be reversed by two types of spontaneous mutations. Mutations in the first class are located on the plasmid and correspond to the insertional inactivation of the amylase gene by IS1. Mutations in the second class are located on the host chromosome. These results suggest that the synthesis and export of B. coagulans alpha-amylase is deleterious to E. coli, especially in media containing maltose or glycerol as sole carbon source.
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PMID:Growth defects of Escherichia coli cells which contain the gene of an alpha-amylase from Bacillus coagulans on a multicopy plasmid. 618 99

Strain MM6-13 (ptsI suc lacI sup) of Escherichia coli contains a suppressor of the succinate-negative phenotype. In MM6-13, sup caused enhanced growth in glycerol, maltose, melibiose, and succinate media and increased activity of beta-galactosidase and tryptophanase relative to an isogenic strain without sup. In strain A61 (cya sup), sup partially suppressed cya. Cyclic guanosine monophosphate increased beta-galactosidase activity sevenfold in A61 and enabled this strain to grow on maltose, galactose, succinate, and arabinose. Strain A61 responded to much lower concentrations of cyclic adenosine monophosphate than cyclic guanosine monophosphate. It appears that sup is located in the crp locus. These results suggest that sup mutants have an altered cyclic adenosine monophosphate receptor protein which is activated by cyclic guanosine monophosphate and has an increased affinity for cyclic adenosine monophosphate.
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PMID:Suppression of defects in cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate metabolism in Escherichia coli. 625 91

The adenylate cyclase gene of Escherichia coli has been cloned on the plasmid vector pBR325. The hybrid plasmid pTH4 obtained has a molecular weight of 6,4 megadalton and represents pBR325 plasmid with the insertion of 2,8 megadalton in the Pst1 site. The cya mutant bacteria carrying pTH4 recover their ability to utilize mannitol, lactose and other carbohydrates as carbon sources, and lose this ability again in the case of rare spontaneous excision of the DNA insert from the Pst1 site. The phenotypical effect of pTH4 in cya mutants can be only seen in the crp+ genome. The strains carrying pTH4 are also characterized by the ability of beta-galactosidase induction under conditions of catabolite repression. Besides, the bacteria containing cya+ allele on the plasmid do not grow on glycerol, which seems to be caused by toxic concentrations of methylglyoxal formed as a result of the increased intracellular level of cyclic adenosine monophosphate.
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PMID:[Cloning of the adenylate cyclase gene of Escherichia coli K-12]. 629 20

Catabolite repression of beta-galactosidase synthesis in E. coli 3000A1 (adenine-) was studied under a variety of growth conditions. The differential rate of induced beta-galactosidase synthesis was maximal at the growth rate of 0.75 division per h, irrespective of whether growth conditions were aerobic or anaerobic. The addition of cyclic AMP (cAMP) to the medium partly restored the repressed synthesis of beta-galactosidase under some growth conditions, but showed little or no effect on the enzyme synthesis under other conditions. Although growth rate and profile of beta-galactosidase synthesis in glucose-grown cells were similar to those in arabinose-grown cells, the acceleration of beta-galactosidase synthesis upon the addition of cAMP was found only in glucose-grown cells. The cells aerobically grown in the presence of glycerol, xylose, or arabinose showed a high synthetic rate of cAMP and were insensitive to exogenously supplied cAMP as regards beta-galactosidase synthesis. Although the cells grown with glucose showed similar rates of cAMP synthesis under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, the differential rate of beta-galactosidase synthesis was much higher in the anaerobic state than in the aerobic state. These findings support the idea that catabolite repression found in the strain is caused through two mechanisms, i.e., cAMP-mediated and cAMP-independent ones.
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PMID:Effect of growth conditions on catabolite repression and cyclic AMP synthesis in Escherichia coli 3000A1. 630 93

Steady-state kinetic studies with beta-galactosidase and various substrates were carried out to determine why the ratio of transgalactosylis to hydrolysis increased as a function of pH from 7.0 to 10.0. The rate constant (k'3) for the formation of galactose (hydrolytic reaction) decreased whereas the rate constant (k4) for the transgalactosylic reaction (i.e., the formation of allolactose) remained constant. The equilibrium constant for acceptor dissociation from the galactosyl form of the enzyme was also unaffected by pH in the range studied; this was true whether the acceptor was glucose, sucrose, or glycerol. These results suggest that there is a group of high pKa at, or of influence at, the enzyme's active site which affects hydrolysis but not transgalactosylis. A further finding was that the rate constant for the breakage of the glycosidic bond decreased with pH in a manner different from the change observed for the hydrolytic rate constant (pKa 9.4 for glycosidic breakage as compared with 8.6 for hydrolysis). This could explain why the pH optimum for beta-galactosidase activity varies with substrate; different steps are rate limiting for different substrates.
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PMID:Differences in the effects of pH on the hydrolytic and transgalactosylic reactions of beta-galactosidase (Escherichia coli). 640 19

Strains of Escherichia coli K-12 deleted in the native lac operon and bearing both a wild-type glpT operon encoding for sn-glycerol 3-phosphate (G3P) transport and a hybrid operon in which glpT operator and promoter regions are fused to the lacZ gene were constructed. In strains with such a hybrid operon, beta-galactosidase and beta-galactoside permease become inducible by G3P. In these mutants the function and maturation of the glpT-coded proteins should be distinguishable from the level of gene expression, since the beta-galactosidase activity can serve as an index of the latter. With the aid of such mutants, it was shown that: (i) the expressions of the two neighboring operons, glpT and glpA (encoding anaerobic G3P dehydrogenase), are not coordinate; (ii) upon induction, the appearance of the cytoplasmic beta-galactosidase activity preceded that of methyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside transport activity (requiring only a cytoplasmic membrane protein) by about 4 min and that of G3P transport activity (requiring both a cytoplasmic membrane protein and a periplasmic protein) by about 9 min; and (iii) when cells grown at several temperatures from 24 to 42 degrees C were measured for G3P transport activity at 30 degrees C, the activity increased with the growth temperature, indicating that, within the range studied, the rate of transport increases with the fluidity of membrane phospholipids.
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PMID:Use of Escherichia coli operon-fusion strains for the study of glycerol 3-phosphate transport activity. 677 29


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