Abstract
Transposon insertion into Listeria monocytogenes lmo2665, which encodes an EIIC of the phosphoenolpyruvate:carbohydrate phosphotransferase system (PTS), was found to prevent <smlcap>D</smlcap>-arabitol utilization. We confirm this result with a deletion mutant and show that Lmo2665 is also required for <smlcap>D</smlcap>-xylitol utilization. We therefore called this protein EIIC<sup>Axl</sup>. Both pentitols are probably catabolized via the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) because lmo2665 belongs to an operon, which encodes the three PTS<sup>Axl</sup> components, two sugar-P dehydrogenases, and most PPP enzymes. The two dehydrogenases oxidize the pentitol-phosphates produced during PTS-catalyzed transport to the PPP intermediate xylulose-5-P. L. monocytogenes contains another PTS, which exhibits significant sequence identity to PTS<sup>Axl</sup>. Its genes are also part of an operon encoding PPP enzymes. Deletion of the EIIC-encoding gene (lmo0508) affected neither <smlcap>D</smlcap>-arabitol nor <smlcap>D</smlcap>-xylitol utilization, although <smlcap>D</smlcap>-arabitol induces the expression of this operon. Both operons are controlled by MtlR/LicR-type transcription activators (Lmo2668 and Lmo0501, respectively). Phosphorylation of Lmo0501 by the soluble PTS<sup>Axl</sup> components probably explains why <smlcap>D</smlcap>-arabitol also induces the second pentitol operon. Listerial virulence genes are submitted to strong repression by PTS sugars, such as glucose. However, <smlcap>D</smlcap>-arabitol inhibited virulence gene expression only at high concentrations, probably owing to its less efficient utilization compared to glucose.
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