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.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

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