Abstract

Intensification of the synthesis of the microbial exopolysaccharide ethapolan by Acinetobacter sp. B-7005 was shown to occur on a mixture of energy-deficient growth substrates (acetate + glucose). When the bacterium grew on the substrate mixture, both substrates were utilized simultaneously; acetate was taken up by means of active transport at the expense of the energy of the proton-motive force. When acetate was present in the form of a sodium salt, the activities of acetyl-CoA synthetase and phosphoenolpyruvate synthetase (the key enzyme of gluconeogenesis) were tenfold higher than in the presence of potassium acetate, and the indexes of ethapolan synthesis were two times higher. The positive effect of Na+ on ethapolan synthesis is supposed to consist in the creation of ion gradients on the membrane, necessary for the generation of the proton-motive force. Simultaneous functioning of the glyoxylate cycle and pyruvate carboxylase reaction, as well as an increase in the activity of isocitrate lyase, malate synthease, and phosphoenolpyruvate synthetase, provide evidence of increased gluconeogenesis in the presence of the acetate + glucose mixture (as compared to gluconeogenesis on the corresponding monosubstrates).

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