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Query: UNIPROT:Q17RS7 (
Gen
)
130,125
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the synthesis of histidase, urocanase and amidase is severly repressed when succinate is added to a culture growing in pyruvate + ammonium salts medium. When growth is nitrogen-limited, catabolite repression by succinate of histidase and urocanase synthesis does not occur but succinate repression of amidase synthesis persists. Amidase synthesis is not regulated in the same way as histidase synthesis by the availability of other nitrogen compounds for growth. Growth of P. aeruginosa strain PACI in succinate + histidine media is nitrogen-limited since this strain is defective in a histidine transport system. When methyl-ammonium chloride is added to succinate + histidine media, growth inhibition occurs. Mutants isolated from succinate + histidine + methylammonium chloride plates were found to be resistant to catabolite repression by succinate even in ammonium salts media. It is suggested that the hut genes of P. aeruginosa may be regulated in the same way as in Klebsiella aerogenes, by induction by urocanate and activation by either the cyclic AMP-dependent activator protein or by
glutamine synthetase
.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1976 Apr
PMID:The effect of nitrogen limitation on catabolite repression of amidase, histidase and urocanase in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 0 23
Transport of glutamine by the high-affinity transport system is regulated by the nitrogen status of the medium. With high concentrations of ammonia, transport is repressed; whereas with Casamino acids, transport is elevated, showing behaviour similar to
glutamine synthetase
. A glutamine auxotroph, lacking
glutamine synthetase
activity, had elevated transport activity even in the presence of high concentrations of ammonia (and glutamine). This suggests that
glutamine synthetase
is involved in the regulation of the transport system. A mutant with low glutamate synthase activity had low glutamine transport and
glutamine synthetase
activities, which could not be derepressed. A mutant in the high-affinity glutamine transport system showed normal regulation of glutamate synthase and
glutamine synthetase
. Possible mechanisms for this regulation are discussed.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1976 Aug
PMID:The regulation of glutamine transport and glutamine synthetase in Salmonella typhimurium. 0 87
Synthesis of
glutamine synthetase
(GS) in anaerobic batch cultures of Escherichia coli was repressed when excess NH4+ was available, but derepressed during growth with a poor nitrogen source. In wild-type bacteria there was only a weak inverse correlation between the activities of GS and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) during growth in various media. No positive correlations were found between the activities of GS and nitrite reductase, or between GS and cytochrome c552: both of these proteins were synthesized normally by mutants that contained no active GS. Although activities of GS and GDH were low in two mutants that are unable to synthesize cytochrome c552 or reduce nitrite because of defects in the nirA gene, the nirA defect was separated from the GS and GDH defects by transduction with bacteriophage P1. Attempts to show that catabolite repression of proline oxidase synthesis could be relieved during NH4+ starvation also failed. It is, therefore, unlikely that nitrite reduction or proline oxidation by E. coli are under positive control by GS protein. The regulation of the synthesis of enzymes for the utilization of secondary nitrogen sources in E. coli, therefore, different from that in Klebsiella aerogenes, but is similar to that in Salmonella typhimurium.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1977 Feb
PMID:Lack of a regulatory function for glutamine synthetase protein in the synthesis of glutamate dehydrogenase and nitrite reductase in Escherichia coli K12. 1 79
Rates of nitrogenase synthesis by Klebsiella pneumoniae were measured by pulse-labelling organisms with a mixture of 14C-labelled amino acids followed by sodium dodecyl sulphate gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. Populations from an NH4+-repressed, SO42--limited chemostat (0.46 mg dry wt ml-1), when released from NH4+ repression, simultaneously synthesized detectable quantities of the three nitrogenase polypeptides 45 min before acetylene-reducing activity was observed. Exposure of populations synthesizing nitrogenase to air or NH4+ (200 microgram N ml-1) repressed synthesis of both component proteins simultaneously, the rate initially decreasing by half in 11 to 12 min; in the presence of NH4+ a second slower phase with an approximate half-life of 30 min was observed. With 5% O2 in N2 the half-lives for the decreases in the rates of synthesis were 30 min for the Fe protein and 33 min for the Mo-Fe protein. Oxygen also repressed nitrogenase in a
glutamine synthetase
constitutive derivative of K. pneumoniae (strain SK24) which escapes NH4+ repression. Regulation of nitrogenase by O2 may therefore be independent of
glutamine synthetase
.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1978 Feb
PMID:Nitrogenase synthesis in Klebsiella pneumoniae: comparison of ammonium and oxygen regulation. 2 75
A higher activity of
glutamine synthetase
(
EC 6.3.1.2
) was found in Neurospora crassa when NH4+ was limiting as nitrogen source than when glutamate was limiting. When glutamate, glutamine or NH4+ were in excess, a lower activity was found. Immunological titration and sucrose gradient sedimentation of the enzyme established that under all these conditions enzyme activity corresponded to enzyme concentration and that the octamer was the predominant oligomeric form. When N. crassa was shifted from nitrogen-limiting substrates to excess product as nitrogen source, the concentration of
glutamine synthetase
was adjusted with kinetics that closely followed dilution by growth. When grown on limiting amounts of glutamate, a lower oligomer was present in addition to the octameric form of the enzyme. When the culture was shifted to excess NH4+, glutamine accululated at a high rate; nevertheless, there was only a slow decrease in enzyme activity and no modification of the oligomeric pattern.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1978 Jun
PMID:Nitrogen regulation of glutamine synthetase in Neurospora crassa. 2 75
During nitrogen deprivation, de novo synthesis of
glutamine synthetase
was induced in non-growing conidia of Neurospora crassa. When ammonia or glutamine was added to conidia which had been deprived of nitrogen, glutamine and arginine accumulated at a higher rate than in condia not deprived of nitrogen. The degradation of exogenous glutamine to glutamate is apparently a necessary step in the accumulation of glutamine and arginine within the conidia. In non-growing conidia, a cycle probably operates in which glutamine is degraded and resynthesized. The advantages of such a cycle would be that the carbon and nitrogen could be used to synthesize amino acids in general, as well as for the synthesis and accumulation of arginine and/or glutamine in particular.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1979 Nov
PMID:Glutamine metabolism in nitrogen-starved conidia of Neurospora crassa. 4 52
The enzymes involved in the assimilation of ammonia by free-living cultures of Rhizobium spp. are
glutamine synthetase
(EC. 6.o.I.2), glutamate synthase (L-glutamine:2-oxoglutarate amino transferase) and glutamate dehydrogenase (ED I.4.I.4). Under conditions of ammonia or nitrate limitation in a chemostat the assimilation of ammonia by cultures of R. leguminosarum, R. trifolii and R. japonicum proceeded via
glutamine synthetase
and glutamate synthase. Under glucose limitation and with an excess of inorganic nitrogen, ammonia was assimilated via glutamate dehydrogenase, neither
glutamine synthetase
nor glutamate synthase activities being detected in extracts. The coenzyme specificity of glutamate synthase varied according to species, being linked to NADP for the fast-growing R. leguminosarum, R. melitoti, R. phaseoli and R. trifolii but to NAD for the slow-growing R. japonicum and R. lupini. Glutamine synthetase, glutamate synthase and glutamate dehydrogenase activities were assayed in sonicated bacteroid preparations and in the nodule supernatants of Glycine max, Vicia faba, Pisum sativum, Lupinus luteus, Medicago sativa, Phaseolus coccineus and P. vulgaris nodules. All bacteroid preparations, except those from M. sativa and P. coccineus, contained glutamate synthase but substantial activities were found only in Glycine max and Lupinus luteus. The
glutamine synthetase
activities of bacteroids were low, although high activities were found in all the nodule supernatants. Glutamate dehydrogenase activity was present in all bacteroid samples examined. There was no evidence for the operation of the
glutamine synthetase
/glutamate synthase system in ammonia assimilation in root nodules, suggesting that ammonia produced by nitrogen fixation in the bacteroid is assimilated by enzymes of the plant system.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1975 Jan
PMID:Ammonia assimilation by rhizobium cultures and bacteroids. 23 5
Mutants of Escherichia coli K12 requiring glutamine as a nitrogen source were isolated, and characterized as lacking
glutamine synthetase
activity. Temperature sensitive revertants of one of the mutants had a heat labile
glutamine synthetase
, while temperature insensitive revertants had a
glutamine synthetase
which was thermostable in vitro, indicating that the mutation was in the structural gene for the enzyme. All of the mutations mapped in the same region of the chromosome suggesting that they might all be in the same gene. The
glutamine synthetase
gene (gln) was located on the E. coli chromosome by conjugation and P1-mediated transduction at minute 77. The gln gene cotransduced with the genes for oleate degradation (old), and the genes for L-rhamnose utilization (rha). The most probable gene order is old-gln-rha.
Mol
Gen
Genet 1975
PMID:The isolation and characterization of glutamine-requiring strains of Escherichia coli K12. 24 28
The structural gene (glnA) encoding the
glutamine synthetase
(GS) of the extremely thermophilic eubacterium Thermotoga maritima has been cloned on a 6.0 kb HindIII DNA fragment. Sequencing of the region containing the glnA gene (1444 bp) showed an ORF encoding a polypeptide (439 residues) with an estimated mass of 50,088 Da, which shared significant homology with the GSI sequences of other Bacteria (Escherichia coli, Bacillus subtilis) and Archaea (Pyrococcus woesei, Sulfolobus solfataricus). The T. maritima glnA gene was expressed in E. coli, as shown by the ability to complement a glnA lesion in the glutamine-auxotrophic strain ET8051. The recombinant GS has been partially characterized with respect to the temperature dependence of enzyme activity, molecular mass and mode of regulation. The molecular mass of the Thermotoga GS (590,000 Da), estimated by gel filtration, was compatible with a dodecameric composition for the holoenzyme, as expected for a
glutamine synthetase
of the GSI type. Comparison of the amino acid sequence of T. maritima GS with those from thermophilic and mesophilic micro-organisms failed to detect any obvious features directly related to thermal stability.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1992 Feb
PMID:The glnA gene of the extremely thermophilic eubacterium Thermotoga maritima: cloning, primary structure, and expression in Escherichia coli. 134 81
A mutant of Bradyrhizobium (Parasponia) sp. ANU289 affected in the regulation of nitrogen metabolism was isolated. The mutant, designated ANU293, was unable to induce ammonium transport (Amt), nitrate reductase (NR) or
glutamine synthetase
II (GSII) activities under conditions that induce these activities in the wild-type. However,
glutamine synthetase
I (GSI), which is expressed constitutively in the wild-type, was present at normal levels in the mutant. The mutant also retained the ability to fix nitrogen in vitro and in planta, although nodule development on siratro (Macroptilium atropurpureum) was retarded. Southern blot analysis showed that ntrC, the product of which is involved in regulation of nitrogen metabolism, is the site of pSUP1021 insertion in ANU293. These results indicate that the transcriptional activator NtrC is required for the expression of Amt, NR and GSII, but not GSI or nitrogenase in Bradyrhizobium (Parasponia) sp. ANU289.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1992 May
PMID:Isolation and characterization of a ntrC mutant of Bradyrhizobium (Parasponia) sp. ANU289. 135 84
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