Abstract

BackgroundDespite the fact that many reports deal with glycolysis in Lactococcus lactis, there is not much information on the regulation of uptake of glucose itself. The aim of the present work was to investigate the effect of the glucose level on its specific uptake rate.ResultsStudies on aeration levels in pH controlled L. lactis spp. lactis batch cultures on glucose (55 mM) showed that product formation is extremely homolactic and the highest yield of lactate on glucose is obtained under microaerobic conditions (5% dissolved oxygen). Microaerobic conditions were therefore applied in experiments carried out to investigate the regulation of the uptake of glucose. The tool of glucostat fed-batch culture was employed, in which glucose was added at a rate suitable to maintain a stable concentration throughout the runs with glucose concentration ranging from 13.75 to 555 mM. The glucostat experiments showed that the concentration of glucose influences its specific uptake rate and consequently the glycolytic flux, as well as the fermentation pattern. The highest specific activities of the key glycolytic enzymes PFK, PYK and the LDH were obtained at 55 mM glucose, the area of the highest observed glycolytic flux. Reduction of the glycolytic flux by 55% in the 277 mM glucostat corresponded to an almost identical reduction in PFK activity, indicating a certain controlling influence of this enzyme on the flux, through the glucose effect.ConclusionDetermination of intracellular metabolites' pools showed that FBP cannot be regarded as a direct regulator of product formation, since almost identical concentrations were obtained at both low (13.75 mM) and high (138 mM) glucose levels, at which neither the glucose uptake rates and the glycolytic flux, nor the fermentation patterns were similar (mixed acids vs homolactic, respectively). Glucostat data showed instead that the control of the flux through the glycolytic pathway under the examined conditions, resides to a large extent in processes outside the pathway, like the ATP consuming reactions and glucose transport. A regulation mechanism is proposed governed by the energy state of the cell by which L. lactis can handle the glycolytic flux through the allosteric properties of key enzymes, with PFK having a significant influence on the control.

Highlights

  • Despite the fact that many reports deal with glycolysis in Lactococcus lactis, there is not much information on the regulation of uptake of glucose itself

  • Having evaluated the effects of aeration, microaerobic conditions were chosen to perform a series of batch fermentations with different initial glucose concentrations and fed-batch fermentations in which glucose was added at a rate suitable to maintain a stable concentration throughout the runs

  • Microaerobic conditions led to a maximum yield of lactate on glucose compared to all other conditions

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Despite the fact that many reports deal with glycolysis in Lactococcus lactis, there is not much information on the regulation of uptake of glucose itself. Regulation of glycolysis and the shift between different fermentation modes of Lactococcus lactis have been extensively studied [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]. Despite the wealth of available metabolic information for L. lactis, the key question of what controls the glycolytic flux in this organism cannot yet be answered unambiguously [11]. The mechanisms underlying the shift from homolactic to mixed acid fermentation have been the object of considerable controversy so far and a full explanation has yet to be put forward

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.