AI Article Synopsis

  • Metabolic studies on Phytomonas sp. from Euphorbia characias show that glucose is the main energy source during growth, with reduced consumption in the stationary phase.
  • Both aerobic and anaerobic conditions were tested, revealing that glucose consumption slightly increases without the 'reverse Pasteur' effect seen in Leishmania major.
  • Key end-products of glucose breakdown included acetate, ethanol, and carbon dioxide under aerobic conditions, while anaerobic conditions produced ethanol, glycerol, and carbon dioxide, along with several other metabolites.

Article Abstract

Metabolic studies on Phytomonas sp. isolated from the lactiferous tubes of the latex-bearing spurge Euphorbia characias indicate that glucose is the preferred energy and carbon substrate during logarithmic growth. In stationary phase cells glucose consumption was dramatically reduced. Glucose consumption and end-product formation were measured on logarithmically growing cells, both under aerobic (air and 95% O2/5% CO2) and anaerobic (95% N2/5% CO2 and 100% N2) conditions. The rate of glucose consumption slightly increased under anaerobic conditions indicating that Phytomonas lacks a 'reverse Pasteur' effect contrary to the situation encountered in Leishmania major. Major end-products of glucose catabolism under aerobic conditions, detected by enzymatic and NMR measurements, were acetate, ethanol and carbon dioxide and under anaerobic conditions ethanol, glycerol and carbon dioxide. Smaller amounts of pyruvate, succinate, L-malate, L-lactate, phosphoenolpyruvate, alanine and aspartate were also detected.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0166-6851(94)00141-3DOI Listing

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