Molecular Microbiology 1998-11-01

Inducer exclusion in Escherichia coli by non-PTS substrates: the role of the PEP to pyruvate ratio in determining the phosphorylation state of enzyme IIAGlc.

B M Hogema, J C Arents, R Bader, K Eijkemans, H Yoshida, H Takahashi, H Aiba, P W Postma

Index: Mol. Microbiol. 30(3) , 487-98, (1998)

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Abstract

The main mechanism causing catabolite repression in Escherichia coli is the dephosphorylation of enzyme IIAGlc, one of the enzymes of the phosphoenolpyruvate:carbohydrate phosphotransferase system (PTS). The PTS is involved in the uptake of a large number of carbohydrates that are phosphorylated during transport, phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) being the phosphoryl donor. Dephosphorylation of enzyme IIAGlc causes inhibition of uptake of a number of non-PTS carbon sources, a process called inducer exclusion. In this paper, we show that dephosphorylation of enzyme IIAGlc is not only caused by the transport of PTS carbohydrates, as has always been thought, and that an additional mechanism causing dephosphorylation exists. Direct monitoring of the phosphorylation state of enzyme IIAGlc also showed that many carbohydrates that are not transported by the PTS caused dephosphorylation during growth. In the case of glucose 6-phosphate, it was shown that transport and the first metabolic step are not involved in the dephosphorylation of enzyme IIAGlc, but that later steps in the glycolysis are essential. Evidence is provided that the [PEP]-[pyruvate] ratio, the driving force for the phosphorylation of the PTS proteins, determines the phosphorylation state of enzyme IIAGlc. The implications of these new findings for our view on catabolite repression and inducer exclusion are discussed.


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