Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 1999, p. 1703-1709, Vol. 65, No. 4
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Institut für Mikrobiologie und Genetik der Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, 37077 Göttingen, Germany
Received 13 October 1998/Accepted 16 January 1999
The relationship between extracellular poly(3-hydroxybutyrate)
(PHB) depolymerase synthesis and the unusual properties of a succinate
uptake system was investigated in Pseudomonas lemoignei. Growth on and uptake of succinate were highly pH dependent, with optima
at pH 5.6. Above pH 7, growth on and uptake of succinate were strongly
reduced with concomitant derepression of PHB depolymerase synthesis.
The specific succinate uptake rates were saturable by high
concentrations of succinate, and maximal transport rates of 110 nmol/mg
of cell protein per min were determined between pH 5.6 and 6.8. The
apparent KS0.5 values increased with increasing pH from 0.2 mM succinate at pH 5.6 to more than 10 mM succinate at pH
7.6. The uptake of [14C]succinate was strongly inhibited
by several monocarboxylates. Dicarboxylates also inhibited the uptake
of succinate but only at pH values near the dissociation constant of
the second carboxylate function (pKa2). We conclude that
the succinate carrier is specific for the monocarboxylate forms of
various carboxylic acids and is not able to utilize the dicarboxylic
forms. The inability to take up succinate2
accounts for
the carbon starvation of P. lemoignei observed during growth on succinate at pH values above 7. As a consequence the bacteria
produce high levels of extracellular PHB depolymerase activity in an
effort to escape carbon starvation by utilization of PHB hydrolysis products.
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