Abstract
A glycine auxotroph of Escherichia coli can utilize glycine oligopeptides as a source of its required amino acid. Glycylglycyl-β-alanine and β-alanylglycylglycine are both readily hydrolysed by intracellular peptidases, but only the former supports growth of the glycine auxotroph. Glycylglycyl-β-alanine is not nutritionally active towards a glycine mutant that is unable to transport oligopeptides. The nutritional responses to these β-alanine peptides are interpreted in terms of the structural requirements of the oligopeptide transport system, for which an α-peptide bond is required but the C-terminal α-carboxyl group is not essential. Dipeptides of β-alanine are generally poor sources of amino acids for auxotrophs of E. coli, although β-alanylhistidine (carnosine) is as effective as the free amino acid in supporting growth of a histidine auxotroph; this observation does not accord with the structural requirements established for dipeptide transport in general, and may indicate a separate uptake process. The results are related to the occurrence of β-alanyl peptides in the normal environment of enteric bacteria, and to the known ability of the intestine to transport carnosine.
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