Abstract

The interaction of polymyxin with the producer organism Bacillus polymyxa has been shown to be at the level of membranes, resulting in an enhancement of the activities of its own biosynthetic enzymes. This enhancement has been shown to be due to the solubilization of the membrane-associated multienzyme complex by polymyxin in a specific manner. The relevance of this physiological feature was also indicated by the appearance of the soluble multienzyme complex activity only in cells, which synthesize maximal amounts of polymyxin. Purification of the polymyxin released multienzyme complex from the membranes and the soluble form of the complex from the stationary phase cells has revealed several similarities between them. Both contain two major fractions of the molecular weights of 300,000 and 170,000, harboring all the polymyxin component amino acid-activating enzymes. Their multisubunit nature was established by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide slab gel electrophoresis. Using mutants blocked in sporulation and/or antibiotic synthesis, it was shown that the interaction of polymyxin with the producer organism was inoperative when antibiotic production was curtailed. This interaction has been suggested as one of the early sporulation-specific phenemenon.

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