Abstract

The ptsG gene encodes the high-affinity glucose receptor component of the PEP:glucose phosphotransferase system. PtsG is the major glucose transporter in Escherichia coli under glucose-excess conditions but its regulation under glucose limitation or anaerobiosis is poorly defined. Using a ptsG– lacZ transcriptional fusion, ptsG expression was found to peak with low (micromolar) external glucose levels in glucose-limited chemostats, so PtsG is primed to contribute to glucose scavenging under hunger response conditions. This regulatory pattern was confirmed using methyl-α-glucoside transport assays of PtsG-dependent transport. The regulation of ptsG by cAMP contributed to the optimal expression with micromolar glucose but ptsG was actually repressed to levels below that in glucose-excess batch cultures at very slow growth rates and submicromolar glucose concentrations. RpoS contributed to repression of ptsG in slow-growing bacteria but not under glucose-excess conditions. Also, Mlc increasingly contributed to the repression of ptsG at residual glucose concentrations too low to saturate PtsG. A similar pattern of ptsG regulation was observed in anaerobic cultures with either glucose-excess or glucose-limiting situations.

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