Abstract

In untreated cells of the marine pseudomonad studied here, alkaline phosphatase was found to be located in the periplasmic space, at the cell surface, and in the medium into which it had been shed during growth. Washing in 0.5 M NaCl, which removed the loosely bound outer layer, caused a shift of periplasmic enzyme to the outer aspect of the double-track layer and released some of the cell surface-associated enzyme. When the double-track layer of the cell wall was partially deranged, large amounts of this cell wall-associated enzyme were released, and, when the double-track was removed from the cells to produce mureinoplasts, alkaline phosphatase was released into the menstruum. There was no significant association of the enzyme with the peptidoglycan layer of the cell wall, which is the outermost structure of the mureinoplast, and no association of the enzyme with the cytoplasmic membrane of these modified cells. This study has shown that alkaline phosphatase is specifically associated with the outer layers of the cell walls of cells of this organism and is retained within the cell wall by virtue of this association.

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