| Literature DB >> 33668720 |
Harutaka Mishima1, Hirokazu Watanabe1, Kei Uchigasaki1, So Shimoda1, Shota Seki1, Toshitaka Kumagai2, Tomonori Nochi3, Tasuke Ando1, Hiroshi Yoneyama1.
Abstract
In Escherichia coli, L-alanine is synthesized by three isozymes: YfbQ, YfdZ, and AvtA. When an E. coli L-alanine auxotrophic isogenic mutant lacking the three isozymes was grown on L-alanine-deficient minimal agar medium, L-alanine prototrophic mutants emerged considerably more frequently than by spontaneous mutation; the emergence frequency increased over time, and, in an L-alanine-supplemented minimal medium, correlated inversely with L-alanine concentration, indicating that the mutants were derived through stress-induced mutagenesis. Whole-genome analysis of 40 independent L-alanine prototrophic mutants identified 16 and 18 clones harboring point mutation(s) in pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and phosphotransacetylase-acetate kinase pathway, which respectively produce acetyl coenzyme A and acetate from pyruvate. When two point mutations identified in L-alanine prototrophic mutants, in pta (D656A) and aceE (G147D), were individually introduced into the original L-alanine auxotroph, the isogenic mutants exhibited almost identical growth recovery as the respective cognate mutants. Each original- and isogenic-clone pair carrying the pta or aceE mutation showed extremely low phosphotransacetylase or pyruvate dehydrogenase activity, respectively. Lastly, extracellularly-added pyruvate, which dose-dependently supported L-alanine auxotroph growth, relieved the L-alanine starvation stress, preventing the emergence of L-alanine prototrophic mutants. Thus, L-alanine starvation-provoked stress-induced mutagenesis in the L-alanine auxotroph could lead to intracellular pyruvate increase, which eventually induces L-alanine prototrophy.Entities:
Keywords: Escherichia coli; L-alanine; auxotrophic mutant; prototrophic mutant; starvation; stress-induced mutagenesis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33668720 PMCID: PMC7996224 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9030472
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607