Abstract

Some cultures of Escherichia coli BGA8, a mutant unable to synthesize putrescine, showed a change of behaviour and could grow almost equally well in either the absence or the presence of polyamines after repeated periods of polyamine starvation. Experiments in vivo with radioactive precursors showed that the bacteria which evaded the polyamine requirement had recovered their ability to synthesize putrescine from glucose or glutamic acid, but not from ornithine or arginine. These results are in agreement with the fact that the polyamine-independent cells were still deficient in the enzymes ornithine decarboxylase and agmatinase. Our findings seem to indicate the existence of a new pathway synthesize putrescine which does not involve ornithine or arginine as intermediates.

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