Abstract

Changes in the endogenous intracellular amino acid pool and total free amino acid production in Bacillus licheniformis grown in minimal media were investigated. The total intracellular pool increased during exponential growth and then decreased rapidly after the end of growth. Most of the amino acids were present at low concentrations, but glutamate and alanine comprised 60 to 90% of the total intracellular free amino acid at most times during the growth cycle. It was concluded that, in addition to providing monomers for protein synthesis, the intracellular amino acid pool may be maintained for the storage of energy-providing metabolic intermediates and possibly as a balance to the ionic strength of the medium. The total free amino acid production by the cell was found to be dependent upon the composition of the salts medium as well as the culture age under conditions in which the carbon and nitrogen sources were the same. A 10-fold increase in extracellular amino acid was observed as the cells changed from vegetative to sporulation metabolism, mostly due to the extrusion of intracellular amino acid. The impact of this increase upon amino acid uptake and pulse-labeling studies using unwashed cells is discussed.

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