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Vesicles Prepared from Streptococcus Mutans Demonstrate the Presence of a Second Glucose Transport System

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Specialty Microbiology
Date 1994 Oct 1
PMID 8000534
Citations 8
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Abstract

Streptococcus mutans, an important aetiological agent of dental caries, is known to transport glucose via the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) phosphotransferase system (PTS). An alternative non-PTS glucose transport system in S. mutans Ingbritt was suggested by the increased ATP-dependent phosphorylation of glucose and the presence of higher cellular concentrations of free glucose in cells grown in continuous culture under PTS-repressed conditions compared to those resulting in optimal PTS activity. A method was developed for the preparation of membrane vesicles in order to study this system in the absence of PTS activity. These vesicles had very low activity of the cytoplasmic enzymes, glucokinase, pyruvate kinase and lactate dehydrogenase. This, coupled with the lack of glycolytic activity and the inability to transport glucose, suggested that the vesicles would also be deficient in PTS activity because of the absence of the general soluble PTS proteins, Enzyme I and HPr, required for the transport of all PTS sugars. Freeze-fracture electron microscopy and membrane H(+)-ATPase analysis indicated that over 90% of the vesicles had a right-side-out orientation. Vesicles from cells grown in continuous culture under PTS-dominant and PTS-repressed conditions both exhibited glucose counterflow. This indicates the presence of a constitutive non-PTS carrier in the organism capable of transporting glucose and utilizing ATP for glucose phosphorylation. Analysis of growth yields of cells grown under PTS-repressed and PTS-optimal conditions suggests that ATP, or an equivalent high energy molecule, must be involved in the actual transport process. This analysis is consistent with an ATP-binding protein model such as the Msm transport system reported by R. R. B. Russell and coworkers (J Biol Chem 267, 4631-4637), but it does not exclude the possibility of a separate permease for glucose.

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