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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Sep 1997, 3519-3525, Vol 63, No. 9
C Parker, N Peekhaus, X Zhang and T Conway
The competitive inhibition of fructokinase by glucose has been proposed as
the mechanism by which Zymomonas mobilis preferentially consumes glucose
from mixtures of glucose and fructose and accumulates fructose when growing
on sucrose. In this study, incorporation of radioactive fructose into
biomass was used as a measure of fructose catabolism. It was determined
that the rate of fructose incorporation by Z. mobilis CP4 was somewhat
lower in the presence of an equimolar concentration of glucose but that the
inhibition of fructokinase by glucose was not nearly as severe in vivo as
was predicted from in vitro studies. Interestingly, addition of glucose to
a culture of Z. mobilis CP4-M2, a glucokinaseless mutant, resulted in an
immediate and nearly complete inhibition of fructose incorporation.
Furthermore, addition of nonmetabolizeable glucose analogs had a similar
effect on fructose catabolism by the wild-type Z. mobilis CP4, and fructose
uptake by Z. mobilis CP4-M2 was shown to be severely inhibited by equimolar
amounts of glucose. These results suggest that competition for fructose
transport plays an important role in preferential catabolism of glucose
from sugar mixtures. Indeed, the apparent K(infm) values for sugar uptake
by Z. mobilis CP4 were approximately 200 mM for fructose and 13 mM for
glucose. Other experiments supported the conclusion that a single
facilitated diffusion transport system, encoded by the glf gene, is solely
responsible for the uptake of both glucose and fructose. The results are
discussed with regard to the hypothesis that the kinetics of sugar
transport and phosphorylation allow the preferential consumption of glucose
and accumulation of fructose, making the fructose available for the enzyme
glucose-fructose oxidoreductase, which forms sorbitol, an important
osmoprotectant for Z. mobilis when growing in the presence of high sugar
concentrations.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Kinetics of Sugar Transport and Phosphorylation Influence Glucose and Fructose Cometabolism by Zymomonas mobilis
School of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska 68588-0118, and Department of Microbiology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210-1292
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