6533b851fe1ef96bd12a8e80
RESEARCH PRODUCT
d-Alanyl-d-Alanine Carboxypeptidase in the Bacterial Form and L-Form of Proteus mirabilis
Christian MaskosReinhard BurgerHans Herbert Martinsubject
D-Amino-Acid OxidaseDetergentsPenicillin sensitivityL FormsCarboxypeptidasesSpheroplastsBiochemistryDD PeptidaseCell wallpolycyclic compoundsmedicineProteus mirabilischemistry.chemical_classificationAlaninebiologyProtoplastsCell MembranePenicillin GHydrogen-Ion Concentrationbiology.organism_classificationProteus mirabilisPenicillinKineticsMembraneEnzymechemistryBiochemistryPenicillin VPenicillin bindingmedicine.drugdescription
Membranes of the bacterial form and the stable and unstable L-forms of Proteus mirabilis contain LD and DD-carboxypeptidase. The DD-carboxypeptidase is inhibited non-competitively by penicillin G. The enzyme of the bacterial form is highly penicillin-sensitive (Ki - 4 X 10(-9) M penicillin G). Inhibition is only partly reversible by treatment with penicillinase or by dialysis against buffer. In contrast, the DD-carboxypeptidase of the unstable L-form, grown in the presence of penicillin, is 175-fold less penicillin-sensitive (Ki = 7 X 10(7) M penicillin G). Inhibition is completely reversed by penicillinase or dialysis. After inhibition by penicillin and subsequent reactivation the penicillin sensitivity of the bacterial DD-carboxtpeptidase is similar to the sensitivity of the enzyme of the unstable L-form. The hypothesis is proposed that P. mirabilis contains two DD-carboxypeptidases of different penicillin sensitivity and with different mechanisms of penicillin binding. Peptidoglycan synthesis in the cell walls of the unstable L-form is probably carried out with the help of only one DD-carboxypeptidase, viz. the completely reactivatable enzyme with the lower penicillin sensitivity.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1975-07-01 | European Journal of Biochemistry |