Abstract

On-line NAD(P)H fluorescence and culture redox potential (CRP) measurements were utilized to investigate the role of Vitreoscilla hemoglobin (VHb) in perturbing oxygen metabolism of microaerobic Escherichia coli Batch cultures of a VHb-synthesizing E. coli strain and the iso-genic control under fully aerated conditions were subject to several high/low oxygen transitions, and the NAD(P)H fluorescence and CRP were monitored during these passages. The presence of VHb decreased the rate of net NAD(P)H generation by 2.4-fold under diminishing oxygen tension. In the absence of aeration, the strain producing VHb maintained a steady NAD(P)H level 1.8-fold less than that of the control, indicating that the presence of VHb keeps E. coli in a more oxidized state under oxygen-limited conditions. Estimated from CRP, the oxygen uptake rates near anoxia were 25% higher for cells with VHb than those without. These results suggest that VHb-expressing cells have a higher microaerobic electron transport chain turnover rate. To examine how NAD(P)H utilization of VHb-expressing cells responds to rapidly changing oxygen tension, which is common in large-scale fermentations, we pulsed air intermittently into a cell suspension and recorded the fluorescence response to the imposed dissolved oxygen (DO) fluctuation. Relative to the control, cells containing VHb had a sluggish fluorescence response to sudden changes of oxygen tension, suggesting that VHb buffers intracellular redox perturbations caused by extracellular DO fluctuations.(c) John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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