| Literature DB >> 30221442 |
Marie Charlotte Schoelmerich1, Alexander Katsyv1, Woung Sung1, Vanessa Mijic1, Anja Wiechmann1, Patrick Kottenhahn1, Jonathan Baker2, Nigel Peter Minton2, Volker Müller1.
Abstract
Acetogenic bacteria compete in an energy-limited environment by coupling different metabolic routes to their central metabolism of CO2 fixation. The underlying regulatory mechanisms are often still not understood. In this work, we analysed how lactate metabolism is regulated in the model acetogen Acetobacterium woodii. Construction of a ΔlctCDEF mutant and growth analyses demonstrated that the genes are essential for growth on lactate. Subsequent bridging PCR and quantitative PCR analyses revealed that the lctBCDEF genes form an operon that was expressed only during lactate metabolism. The lctA gene was cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. LctA bound to the intergenic DNA region between lctA and the lct operon in electromobility shift assays, and binding was revoked in the presence of lactate. Further restriction site protection analyses consolidated the lactate-dependent binding of LctA and identified the binding site within the DNA. Cells grew mixotrophically on lactate and another energy source and showed no diauxic growth. From these data, we conclude that the catabolic lactate metabolism is encoded by the lct operon and its expression is negatively regulated by the DNA-binding repressor LctA.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30221442 DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.14412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Microbiol ISSN: 1462-2912 Impact factor: 5.491