6533b86dfe1ef96bd12c951f

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Regulation of aerobic and anaerobic D-malate metabolism of Escherichia coli by the LysR-type regulator DmlR (YeaT).

Ok Bin KimHanna LukasJan GrimpoGottfried UndenJulia Reimann

subject

Physiology and MetabolismRegulatorMalatesDehydrogenasemedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyMalate dehydrogenaseMicrobiologyMalate DehydrogenasemedicineAnaerobiosisMolecular BiologyEscherichia coliTartratesChromatography High Pressure LiquidbiologyEscherichia coli K12Escherichia coli ProteinsMetabolismGene Expression Regulation Bacterialbiology.organism_classificationbeta-GalactosidaseAerobiosisBiochemistryMutationFermentationAnaerobic exerciseBacteria

description

ABSTRACT Escherichia coli K-12 is able to grow under aerobic conditions on d -malate using DctA for d -malate uptake and the d -malate dehydrogenase DmlA (formerly YeaU) for converting d -malate to pyruvate. Induction of dmlA encoding DmlA required an intact dmlR (formerly yeaT ) gene, which encodes DmlR, a LysR-type transcriptional regulator. Induction of dmlA by DmlR required the presence of d -malate or l - or meso -tartrate, but only d -malate supported aerobic growth. The regulator of general C 4 -dicarboxylate metabolism (DcuS-DcuR two-component system) had some effect on dmlA expression. The anaerobic l -tartrate regulator TtdR or the oxygen sensors ArcB-ArcA and FNR did not have a major effect on dmlA expression. DmlR has a high level of sequence identity (49%) with TtdR, the l - and meso -tartrate-specific regulator of l -tartrate fermentation in E. coli . dmlA was also expressed at high levels under anaerobic conditions, and the bacteria had d -malate dehydrogenase activity. These bacteria, however, were not able to grow on d -malate since the anaerobic pathway for d -malate degradation has a predicted yield of ≤0 ATP/mol d -malate. Slow anaerobic growth on d -malate was observed when glycerol was also provided as an electron donor, and d -malate was used in fumarate respiration. The expression of dmlR is subject to negative autoregulation. The network for regulation and coordination of the central and peripheral pathways for C 4 -dicarboxylate metabolism by the regulators DcuS-DcuR, DmlR, and TtdR is discussed.

10.1128/jb.01665-09https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20233924