Literature DB >> 16887504

Carbohydrate utilization patterns and substrate preferences in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron.

B A Degnan1, G T Macfarlane.   

Abstract

Specific growth rates of Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron NCTC 10582 with either glucose, arabinose, mannose, galactose or xylose as sole carbon sources were 0.42/h, 0.10/h, 0.38/h, 0.38/h and 0.16/h respectively, suggesting that hexose metabolism was energetically more efficient than pentose fermentation in this bacterium. Batch culture experiments to determine whether carbohydrate utilization was controlled by substrate-induced regulatory mechanisms demonstrated that mannose inhibited uptake of glucose, galactose and arabinose, but had less effect on xylose. Arabinose and xylose were preferentially utilized at high dilution rates (D > 0.26/h) in carbon-limited continuous cultures grown on mixtures of arabinose, xylose, galactose and glucose. When mannose was also present, xylose was co-assimilated at all dilution rates. Under nitrogen-limited conditions, however, mannose repressed uptake of all sugars, showing that its effect on xylose utilization was strongly concentration dependent. Studies with individual D-ZU-14C]-labelled substrates showed that transport systems for glucose, galactose, xylose and mannose were inducible. Measurements to determine incorporation of these sugars into trichloroacetic acid-precipitable material indicated that glucose and mannose were the principal precursor monosaccharides. Xylose was only incorporated into intracellular macromolecules when it served as growth substrate. Phosphoenolpyruvate:phosphotransferase systems were not detected in preliminary experiments to elucidate the mechanisms of sugar uptake, and studies with inhibitors of carbohydrate transport showed no consistent pattern of inhibition with glucose, galactose, xylose and mannose. These results indicate the existence of a variety of different systems involved in sugar transport in B. thetaiotaomicron.

Entities:  

Year:  1995        PMID: 16887504     DOI: 10.1016/s1075-9964(95)80392-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anaerobe        ISSN: 1075-9964            Impact factor:   3.331


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