AI Article Synopsis

  • Metabolic production of important compounds in microbes mostly occurs during the stationary growth phase, making it crucial to measure metabolic flux during this time.
  • To analyze metabolism during this phase, researchers used (13)C-labeled glucose and induced the expression of green fluorescent protein (GFP) in Escherichia coli.
  • Findings revealed that E. coli could create new proteins in the stationary phase, largely utilizing amino acids derived from proteins made during earlier growth phases, with notable activity in synthesizing serine, alanine, glutamate/glutamine, and aspartate/asparagine.

Article Abstract

Microbial production of many commercially important secondary metabolites occurs during stationary phase, and methods to measure metabolic flux during this growth phase would be valuable. Metabolic flux analysis is often based on isotopomer information from proteinogenic amino acids. As such, flux analysis primarily reflects the metabolism pertinent to the growth phase during which most proteins are synthesized. To investigate central metabolism and amino acids synthesis activity during stationary phase, addition of fully (13)C-labeled glucose followed by induction of green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression during stationary phase was used. Our results indicate that Escherichia coli was able to produce new proteins (i.e., GFP) in the stationary phase, and the amino acids in GFP were mostly from degraded proteins synthesized during the exponential growth phase. Among amino acid biosynthetic pathways, only those for serine, alanine, glutamate/glutamine, and aspartate/asparagine had significant activity during the stationary phase.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/btpr.325DOI Listing

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