AI Article Synopsis

  • A study compared the gene expression of Corynebacterium glutamicum with and without the transcriptional regulator AtlR, identifying eight genes with significantly higher mRNA levels in the mutant strain.
  • Four of these genes (xylB, rbtT, mtlD, sixA) are closely linked to atlR and are organized into operons that suggest a coordinated transcriptional regulation.
  • Growth experiments indicated that wild-type C. glutamicum metabolizes D-arabitol effectively, which aids subsequent growth on D-mannitol, and that the proteins XylB, RbtT, and MtlD are critical for D-arabitol metabolism, whereas the absence of AtlR causes increased metabolic activity of these

Article Abstract

Expression profiling of Corynebacterium glutamicum in comparison to a derivative deficient in the transcriptional regulator AtlR (previously known as SucR or MtlR) revealed eight genes showing more than 4-fold higher mRNA levels in the mutant. Four of these genes are located in the direct vicinity of the atlR gene, i.e., xylB, rbtT, mtlD, and sixA, annotated as encoding xylulokinase, the ribitol transporter, mannitol 2-dehydrogenase, and phosphohistidine phosphatase, respectively. Transcriptional analysis indicated that atlR and the four genes are organized as atlR-xylB and rbtT-mtlD-sixA operons. Growth experiments with C. glutamicum and C. glutamicum ΔatlR, ΔxylB, ΔrbtT, ΔmtlD, and ΔsixA derivatives with sugar alcohols revealed that (i) wild-type C. glutamicum grows on D-arabitol but not on other sugar alcohols, (ii) growth in the presence of D-arabitol allows subsequent growth on D-mannitol, (iii) D-arabitol is cometabolized with glucose and preferentially utilized over D-mannitol, (iv) RbtT and XylB are involved in D-arabitol but not in D-mannitol metabolism, (v) MtlD is required for D-arabitol and D-mannitol metabolism, and (vi) SixA is not required for growth on any of the substrates tested. Furthermore, we show that MtlD confers D-arabitol and D-mannitol dehydrogenase activities, that the levels of these and also xylulokinase activities are generally high in the C. glutamicum ΔatlR mutant, whereas in the parental strain, they were high when cells were grown in the presence of D-arabitol and very low when cells were grown in its absence. Our results show that the XylB, RbtT, and MtlD proteins allow the growth of C. glutamicum on D-arabitol and that D-arabitol metabolism is subject to arabitol-dependent derepression by AtlR.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3294798PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JB.06064-11DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

d-arabitol d-mannitol
12
d-arabitol
9
corynebacterium glutamicum
8
xylb rbtt
8
rbtt mtld
8
glutamicum Δatlr
8
sugar alcohols
8
presence d-arabitol
8
d-mannitol metabolism
8
cells grown
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!