Abstract

Escherichia coli has several elaborate sensing mechanisms for response to the availability of oxygen and the presence of other electron acceptors. Among them, the one component Fnr protein and the two-component Arc system coordinate the adaptive responses to oxygen availability. To systematically investigate the contribution of Arc- and Fnr-dependent regulation in catabolism, glucose-limited chemostat cultures were conducted on wild-type E. coli, an arcA mutant, an fnr mutant, and an arcA fnr double mutant strains under a well-defined semi-aerobic condition. The metabolic flux distributions of the cultures of these strains were estimated based on C-13 labeling experiments. It was shown that the oxidative pentose phosphate (PP) pathway was functioning at low level under semi-aerobic condition. The fluxes through pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) and tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle were found to be lower in the arcA mutant and the arcA fnr double mutant strains than that in the wild-type strain, although the expression of the genes involved in these pathways have been proved to be derepressed in the mutant strains ([Shalel-Levanon, S., San, K.Y., Bennett, G.N., 2005a. Effect of ArcA and FNR on the expression of genes related to the oxygen regulation and the glycolysis pathway in Escherichia coli under microaerobic growth conditions. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 92, 147–159; Shalel-Levanon, S., San, K.Y., Bennett, G.N., 2005c. Effect of oxygen, and ArcA and FNR regulators on the expression of genes related to the electron transfer chain and the TCA cycle in Escherichia coli. Metab. Eng. 7, 364–374]). The significantly higher lactate production in the arcA fnr double mutant strain was shown to be an indirect effect caused by the reduced pyruvate formate-lyase (PFL) and PDH fluxes as well as the intracellular redox state.

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