Authors
Suman Kumari, Christine M Beatty, Douglas F Browning, Stephen JW Busby, Erica J Simel, Galadriel Hovel-Miner, Alan J Wolfe
Publication date
2000/8/1
Journal
Journal of bacteriology
Volume
182
Issue
15
Pages
4173-4179
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Description
Cells of Escherichia coli growing on sugars that result in catabolite repression or amino acids that feed into glycolysis undergo a metabolic switch associated with the production and utilization of acetate. As they divide exponentially, these cells excrete acetate via the phosphotransacetylase-acetate kinase pathway. As they begin the transition to stationary phase, they instead resorb acetate, activate it to acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) by means of the enzyme acetyl-CoA synthetase (Acs) and utilize it to generate energy and biosynthetic components via the tricarboxylic acid cycle and the glyoxylate shunt, respectively. Here, we present evidence that this switch occurs primarily through the induction of acs and that the timing and magnitude of this induction depend, in part, on the direct action of the carbon regulator cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP) and the oxygen regulator FNR. It also depends, probably indirectly …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Kumari, CM Beatty, DF Browning, SJW Busby… - Journal of bacteriology, 2000