Literature DB >> 12501348

Synthesis of phenylalanine and production of other related compounds from phenylpyruvic acid and phenylacetic acid by ruminal bacteria, protozoa, and their mixture in vitro.

Mohammad Ruhul Amin1, Ryoji Onodera.   

Abstract

Phenylalanine (Phe) synthesis and the production of other related compounds by mixed ruminal bacteria (B), protozoa (P), and a combination of the two mixture (BP) in an in vitro system were quantitatively investigated using phenylpyruvic acid (PPY) and phenylacetic acid (PAA) as substrates. Rumen microorganisms were collected from fistulated goats fed lucerne cubes (Medicago sativa) and a concentrated mixture twice a day. Microbial suspensions were anaerobically incubated at 39 degrees C for 12 h. Phe and some other related compounds in both supernatants and microbial hydrolysates of the incubations were analysed by HPLC. A large quantity of Phe was produced from both PPY and PAA not only in B but also in P. In B suspensions, free Phe also accumulated in the medium only when PPY was used as a substrate. The ability of B to synthesize Phe from both PPY and PAA (expressed as unit 'per microbial nitrogen') was 5.1 and 24.8% higher than P, respectively. Phe production from PPY in B and P was 43.5 and 55.2% higher than that from PAA. Large amounts of PAA (17-27%) were produced from PPY in all microbial suspension and production amounts were similar in B and P. Small amounts of benzoic acid (BZA) were produced from PPY and PAA in B, P, and BP, and higher BZA production was observed in P as compared to B. Phenylpropionic acid (PPR) was produced in B from both PPY and PAA, but not in P or BP. A trace amount of phenyllactic acid (PLA) was detected only from PPY in B. Higher concentrations of an unknown compound from PPY and PAA were found to be accumulated in the body protein of B and also in the medium of P, and production of the compound from both PPY and PAA was also higher in B than P.

Entities:  

Year:  1997        PMID: 12501348     DOI: 10.2323/jgam.43.9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gen Appl Microbiol        ISSN: 0022-1260            Impact factor:   1.452


  1 in total

1.  Tryptophan regulates bile and nitrogen metabolism in two pig gut lactobacilli species in vitro based on metabolomics study.

Authors:  Shizhe Wu; Moyan Liu; Hui Chen; Qingqing Song; Zhenlong Wu; Zhaolai Dai
Journal:  Amino Acids       Date:  2022-07-15       Impact factor: 3.789

  1 in total

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