AVAILABILITY OF O-2 AS A SUBSTRATE IN THE CYTOPLASM OF BACTERIA UNDERAEROBIC AND MICROAEROBIC CONDITIONS

Citation
T. Arras et al., AVAILABILITY OF O-2 AS A SUBSTRATE IN THE CYTOPLASM OF BACTERIA UNDERAEROBIC AND MICROAEROBIC CONDITIONS, Journal of bacteriology, 180(8), 1998, pp. 2133-2136
Citations number
25
Categorie Soggetti
Microbiology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00219193
Volume
180
Issue
8
Year of publication
1998
Pages
2133 - 2136
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-9193(1998)180:8<2133:AOOAAS>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
The growth rates of Pseudomonas putida KT2442 and mt-2 on benzoate, 4- hydroxybenzoate, or 4-methylbenzoate showed an exponential decrease wi th decreasing oxygen tensions (partial O-2 tension [pO(2)] values). Th e oxygen tensions resulting in half-maximal growth rates were in the r ange of 7 to 8 mbar of O-2 (corresponding to 7 to 8 mu M O-2) (1 bar = 10(5) Pa) for aromatic compounds, compared to 1 to 2 mbar for nonarom atic compounds like glucose or succinate, The decrease in the growth r ates coincided with excretion of catechol or protocatechuate, suggesti ng that the activity of the corresponding oxygenases became limiting. The experiments directly establish that under aerobic and microaerobic conditions (about 10 mbar of O-2), the diffusion of O-2 into the cyto plasm occurs at high rates sufficient for catabolic processes. This is in agreement with calculated O-2 diffusion rates. Below 10 mbar of O- 2, oxygen became limiting for the oxygenases, probably due to their hi gh K-m values, but the diffusion of O-2 into the cytoplasm presumably should be sufficiently rapid to maintain ambient oxygen concentrations at oxygen tensions as low as 1 mbar of O-2. The consequences of this finding for the availability of O-2 as a substrate or as a regulatory signal in the cytoplasm of bacterial cells are discussed.