Search results for "Fumarate reductase"

showing 10 items of 15 documents

C 4 -Dicarboxylate Utilization in Aerobic and Anaerobic Growth

2016

C 4 -dicarboxylates and the C 4 -dicarboxylic amino acid l -aspartate support aerobic and anaerobic growth of Escherichia coli and related bacteria. In aerobic growth, succinate, fumarate, D - and L -malate, L -aspartate, and L -tartrate are metabolized by the citric acid cycle and associated reactions. Because of the interruption of the citric acid cycle under anaerobic conditions, anaerobic metabolism of C 4 -dicarboxylates depends on fumarate reduction to succinate (fumarate respiration). In some related bacteria (e.g., Klebsiella ), utilization of C 4 -dicarboxylates, such as tartrate, is independent of fumarate respiration and uses a Na + -dependent membrane-bound oxaloacetate decarbo…

0301 basic medicineCarboxy-LyasesCitric Acid Cycle030106 microbiologySuccinic AcidContext (language use)medicine.disease_causeMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesFumaratesKlebsiellaEscherichia colimedicineHumansDicarboxylic AcidsAnaerobiosisEscherichia coliDicarboxylic Acid TransportersbiologyEscherichia coli ProteinsMembrane Transport ProteinsBiological TransportGene Expression Regulation BacterialMetabolismFumarate reductasebiology.organism_classificationAerobiosisCitric acid cycle030104 developmental biologyOxaloacetate decarboxylaseBiochemistryAnaerobic exerciseBacteriaEcoSal Plus
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Requirement for the Proton-Pumping NADH Dehydrogenase I of Escherichia Coli in Respiration of NADH to Fumarate and Its Bioenergetic Implications

1997

In Escherichia coli the expression of the nuo genes encoding the proton pumping NADH dehydrogenase I is stimulated by the presence of fumarate during anaerobic respiration. The regulatory sites required for the induction by fumarate, nitrate and O2 are located at positions around –309, –277, and downstream of –231 bp, respectively, relative to the transcriptional-start site. The fumarate regulator has to be different from the O2 and nitrate regulators ArcA and NarL. For growth by fumarate respiration, the presence of NADH dehydrogenase I was essential, in contrast to aerobic or nitrate respiration which used preferentially NADH dehydrogenase II. The electron transport from NADH to fumarate …

Anaerobic respirationAcetatesmedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryElectron TransportFumaratesEscherichia colimedicineDimethyl SulfoxideNADH NADPH OxidoreductasesAnaerobiosisEscherichia colichemistry.chemical_classificationElectron Transport Complex IEthanolbiologyNADH dehydrogenaseGene Expression Regulation BacterialProton PumpsElectron acceptorFumarate reductaseNADElectron transport chainGlycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenaseBiochemistrychemistryElectron Transport Complex Ibiology.proteinEnergy MetabolismEuropean Journal of Biochemistry
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Transport of C(4)-dicarboxylates in Wolinella succinogenes.

2000

ABSTRACT C 4 -dicarboxylate transport is a prerequisite for anaerobic respiration with fumarate in Wolinella succinogenes , since the substrate site of fumarate reductase is oriented towards the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. W. succinogenes was found to transport C 4 -dicarboxylates (fumarate, succinate, malate, and aspartate) across the cytoplasmic membrane by antiport and uniport mechanisms. The electrogenic uniport resulted in dicarboxylate accumulation driven by anaerobic respiration. The molar ratio of internal to external dicarboxylate concentration was up to 10 3 . The dicarboxylate antiport was either electrogenic or electroneutral. The electroneutral antiport required the prese…

Anaerobic respirationAntiporterPhysiology and MetabolismMutantMalatesBiologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyCell membraneElectron TransportOxygen ConsumptionBacterial ProteinsFumaratesRespirationmedicineDicarboxylic AcidsAnaerobiosisMolecular BiologyEscherichia coliDicarboxylic Acid TransportersAspartic AcidNitratesEscherichia coli ProteinsCell MembraneSodiumMembrane ProteinsBiological TransportSuccinatesFumarate reductaseElectron transport chainWolinellamedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistryMutagenesisCarrier ProteinsGene DeletionJournal of bacteriology
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Anaerobic respiration of Bacillus macerans with fumarate, TMAO, nitrate and nitrite and regulation of the pathways by oxygen and nitrate

1995

In Bacillus macerans, anaerobic respiratory pathways and the regulation of facultatively anaerobic catabolism by electron acceptors were analysed. In addition to fermentative growth, B. macerans was able to grow anaerobically by fumarate, trimethylamine N-oxide, nitrate, and nitrite respiration with glycerol as donor. During growth by fumarate respiration, a membrane-bound fumarate reductase was present that was different from succinate dehydrogenase. The end product of nitrate and nitrite respiration was ammonia. No N2 or NO and only traces of N2O could be detected. O2 repressed the activity of nitrate and fumarate reductases and the fermentation of glucose, presumably at the transcription…

Anaerobic respirationCellular respirationGeneral MedicineFumarate reductaseNitrate reductaseNitrite reductaseBiochemistryMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryNitrateBiochemistryGeneticsFermentationNitriteMolecular BiologyArchives of Microbiology
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DctA- and Dcu-independent transport of succinate in Escherichia coli : contribution of diffusion and of alternative carriers

2001

Quintuple mutants of Escherichia coli deficient in the C4-dicarboxylate carriers of aerobic and anaerobic metabolism (DctA, DcuA, DcuB, DcuC, and the DcuC homolog DcuD, or the citrate/succinate antiporter CitT) showed only poor growth on succinate (or other C4-dicarboxylates) under oxic conditions. At acidic pH (pH 6) the mutants regained aerobic growth on succinate, but not on fumarate. Succinate uptake by the mutants could not be saturated at physiological succinate concentrations (≤5 mM), in contrast to the wild-type, which had a K m for succinate of 50 µM and a V max of 35 U/g dry weight at pH 6. At high substrate concentrations, the mutants showed transport activities (32 U/g dry weigh…

AntiporterMutantSuccinic AcidBiologymedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryMicrobiologyBacterial ProteinsFumaratesNitrilesEscherichia coliGeneticsmedicineMolecular BiologyEscherichia coliDicarboxylic Acid TransportersUncoupling AgentsEscherichia coli ProteinsBiological TransportGeneral MedicineMetabolismHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationFumarate reductasebiology.organism_classificationEnterobacteriaceaeBiochemistryMutationFermentationEffluxCarrier ProteinsArchives of Microbiology
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The Fumarate/Succinate Antiporter DcuB of Escherichia coli Is a Bifunctional Protein with Sites for Regulation of DcuS-dependent Gene Expression

2008

DcuB of Escherichia coli catalyzes C4-dicarboxylate/succinate antiport during growth by fumarate respiration. The expression of genes of fumarate respiration, including the genes for DcuB (dcuB) and fumarate reductase (frdABCD) is transcriptionally activated by C4-dicarboxylates via the DcuS-DcuR two-component system, comprising the sensor kinase DcuS, which contains a periplasmic sensing domain for C4-dicarboxylates. Deletion or inactivation of dcuB caused constitutive expression of DcuS-regulated genes in the absence of C4-dicarboxylates. The effect was specific for DcuB and not observed after inactivation of the homologous DcuA or the more distantly related DcuC transporter. Random and s…

AntiporterMutantlac operonBiologymedicine.disease_causePeptide MappingBiochemistryAntiportersFumaratesEscherichia colimedicineMolecular BiologyEscherichia coliDerepressionDicarboxylic Acid TransportersIon TransportEscherichia coli ProteinsMutagenesisSuccinatesGene Expression Regulation BacterialCell BiologyPeriplasmic spaceFumarate reductaseDNA-Binding ProteinsSuccinate DehydrogenaseAmino Acid SubstitutionBiochemistryGene Knockdown TechniquesMutagenesis Site-DirectedProtein KinasesTranscription FactorsJournal of Biological Chemistry
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Transcriptional regulation and energetics of alternative respiratory pathways in facultatively anaerobic bacteria

1998

Abstract The facultatively anaerobic Escherichia coli is able to grow by aerobic and by anaerobic respiration. Despite the large difference in the amount of free energy that could maximally be conserved from aerobic versus anaerobic respiration, the proton potential and Δg ′ Phos are similar under both conditions. O 2 represses anaerobic respiration, and nitrate represses fumarate respiration. By this the terminal reductases of aerobic and anaerobic respiration are expressed in a way to obtain maximal H + e − ratios and ATP yields. The respiratory dehydrogenases, on the other hand, are not synthesized in a way to achieve maximal H + e − ratios. Most of the dehydrogenases of aerobic respirat…

Cellular waste productAnaerobic respirationFumarate nitrate reductase regulatorCellular respirationAerobic and anaerobic respirationBiophysicsO2-sensingRegulation of energeticsProton potentialCell BiologyBiologyFumarate reductasemedicine.disease_causeObligate aerobeBiochemistryTranscriptional regulationBiochemistrymedicineAnaerobic bacteriaAnaerobic exerciseEscherichia coliBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics
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Anaerobic central metabolic pathways active during polyhydroxyalkanoate production in uncultured cluster 1Defluviicoccusenriched in activated sludge …

2009

A glycogen nonpolyphosphate-accumulating organism (GAO) enrichment culture dominated by the Alphaproteobacteria cluster 1 Defluviicoccus was investigated to determine the metabolic pathways involved in the anaerobic formation of polyhydroxyalkanoates, carbon storage polymers important for the proliferation of microorganisms in enhanced biological phosphorus removal processes. FISH-microautoradiography and post-FISH fluorescent chemical staining confirmed acetate assimilation as polyhydroxyalkanoates in cluster 1 Defluviicoccus under anaerobic conditions. Chemical inhibition of glycolysis using iodoacetate, and of isocitrate lyase by 3-nitropropionate and itaconate, indicated that carbon is …

Glyoxylate cycleIsocitric acidAcetatesBiologyModels BiologicalMicrobiologyAconitaseMicrobiologyGlycolysis Inhibitionchemistry.chemical_compoundBacterial ProteinsGeneticsAnaerobiosisMolecular BiologyAconitate HydrataseSewagePolyhydroxyalkanoatesIsocitrate lyaseFumarate reductaseRhodospirillaceaeSuccinate DehydrogenaseCitric acid cycleMetabolic pathwayBiochemistrychemistryMetabolic Networks and PathwaysFEMS Microbiology Letters
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Fumarate regulation of gene expression in Escherichia coli by the DcuSR (dcuSR genes) two-component regulatory system.

1998

ABSTRACT In Escherichia coli the genes encoding the anaerobic fumarate respiratory system are transcriptionally regulated by C 4 -dicarboxylates. The regulation is effected by a two-component regulatory system, DcuSR, consisting of a sensory histidine kinase (DcuS) and a response regulator (DcuR). DcuS and DcuR are encoded by the dcuSR genes (previously yjdHG ) at 93.7 min on the calculated E. coli map. Inactivation of the dcuR and dcuS genes caused the loss of C 4 -dicarboxylate-stimulated synthesis of fumarate reductase ( frdABCD genes) and of the anaerobic fumarate-succinate antiporter DcuB ( dcuB gene). DcuS is predicted to contain a large periplasmic domain as the supposed site for C 4…

Histidine KinaseGenetics and Molecular Biologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyAntiportersBacterial ProteinsFumaratesmedicineEscherichia coliDicarboxylic AcidsMolecular BiologyEscherichia coliRegulation of gene expressionDicarboxylic Acid TransportersbiologySuccinate dehydrogenaseEscherichia coli ProteinsHistidine kinaseMembrane ProteinsPeriplasmic spaceGene Expression Regulation BacterialFumarate reductaseTwo-component regulatory systemDNA-Binding ProteinsSuccinate DehydrogenaseResponse regulatorMutagenesis InsertionalBiochemistryGenes Bacterialbiology.proteinCarrier ProteinsProtein KinasesSignal TransductionTranscription FactorsJournal of bacteriology
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Fumarate respiration of Wolinella succinogenes: enzymology, energetics and coupling mechanism.

2002

Wolinella succinogenes performs oxidative phosphorylation with fumarate instead of O2 as terminal electron acceptor and H2 or formate as electron donors. Fumarate reduction by these donors ('fumarate respiration') is catalyzed by an electron transport chain in the bacterial membrane, and is coupled to the generation of an electrochemical proton potential (Deltap) across the bacterial membrane. The experimental evidence concerning the electron transport and its coupling to Deltap generation is reviewed in this article. The electron transport chain consists of fumarate reductase, menaquinone (MK) and either hydrogenase or formate dehydrogenase. Measurements indicate that the Deltap is generat…

HydrogenaseStereochemistryBiophysicsOxidative phosphorylationCoupling mechanismFormate dehydrogenaseBiochemistryCatalysisOxidative PhosphorylationWolinella succinogenesElectron Transportchemistry.chemical_compoundFumaratesHydrogenaseFormatechemistry.chemical_classificationFumarate respirationBinding SitesbiologySuccinate dehydrogenaseCell MembraneVitamin K 2Cell BiologyElectron acceptorFumarate reductaseElectron transport chainFormate DehydrogenasesWolinellaSuccinate DehydrogenaseBiochemistrychemistryModels Chemicalbiology.proteinFormate dehydrogenaseEnergy MetabolismOxidation-ReductionBacillus subtilisBiochimica et biophysica acta
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