ACCUMULATION OF INORGANIC POLYPHOSPHATE IN AEROBACTER AEROGENES II
Author(s) -
Franklin M. Harold,
Susan Sylvan
Publication year - 1963
Publication title -
journal of bacteriology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.652
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1067-8832
pISSN - 0021-9193
DOI - 10.1128/jb.86.2.222-231.1963
Subject(s) - polyphosphate , biochemistry , sulfur , phosphate , biology , glutathione , intracellular , nucleic acid , chemistry , enzyme , organic chemistry
Harold , F. M. (National Jewish Hospital, Denver, Colo.)and Susan Sylvan . Accumulation of inorganic polyphosphate inAerobacter aerogenes . II. Environmental control and the role of sulfur compounds. J. Bacteriol.86: 222–231. 1963.—The accumulation of inorganic polyphosphate inAerobacter aerogenes was shown to be a function of the growth medium. In low-phosphate medium, polyphosphate accumulated whenever nucleic acid synthesis ceased due to a nutritional deficiency, regardless of its nature. In high-phosphate medium polyphosphate accumulation was induced only by sulfur starvation. Polyphosphate accumulation could thus be induced or suppressed at will by manipulation of the sulfur and phosphorus content of the medium. The specific requirement for sulfur starvation was traced to the presence of an intracellular inhibitor of polyphosphate accumulation. This was depleted during sulfur starvation and replenished when sulfate was restored. The inhibitor was identified as oxidized glutathione or a closely related compound. Suppression of polyphosphate accumulation required the simultaneous presence of a high exogenous phosphate concentration and a high intracellular glutathione level. Suppression of polyphosphate accumulation resulted in a constant polyphosphate level, due to a steady state of polyphosphate synthesis and degradation. The former continued at half the original rate while the latter was sharply accelerated. The synthetic and degradative phases of polyphosphate metabolism could be completely dissociated by inhibitors of energy generation. It is proposed that the primary effect of glutathione plus phosphate is the stimulation of polyphosphate degradation. Polyphosphate synthesis appears to be a general consequence of the inhibition of nucleic acid synthesis, but net accumulation may be obscured by concurrent degradation.
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