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542nd MEETING, SOUTHAMPTON 1291 Specilk Activities of Enzymes of the Serine Pathway of Carbon Assimilation in Pseudomonas aminovorans and Pseudomonas MS grown on Methylamine PETER J. LARGE and ROBERT H. CARTER Department of Biochemistry, University of Hull, Hull HU6 7RX, U.K. Very little is known about the pathway of carbon assimilation during growth on C, compounds of Pseudomonas aminovorans, a facultative methylotroph that will grow on methylamine, dimethylamine, trimethylamine or trimethylamine N-oxide as sole carbon source, although the pathways by which the amines are oxidized are being studied (Large, 1971). We decided to examine extracts of bacteria grown on methylamine for enzymes of the serine pathway of carbon assimilation (Quayle, 1972) and to compare the specific activities with corresponding values for cells grown on succinate, where these enzymes would have either no role or a quantitatively less important role in growth. Wagner & QuayIe (1972) have suggested that Pseudomonas MS, a similar facultative methylotroph, does not use the serine pathway for growth on methylamine. They based this conclusion on two observations: (a) that the first labelled product of [14C]methylamineassimilation was N-methylglutamate, not serine, and (b)that they were unable to detect hydroxypyruvate reductase (glycerate dehydrogenase) in extracts of methylamine-grown Pseudomonas MS. I n view of evidence (Bellion & Hersh, 1972) that N-methylglutamate is an intermediate in the oxidation rather than the assimilation of methylamine (a view for which we have evidence in Ps. aminovorans also), we decided to examine enzyme specific activities in extracts of methylamine- and succinate-grown Pseudomonas MS at the same time. The pH-dependence of the enzymes hydroxypyruvate reductase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and serine-glyoxylate amhotransferase were examined in Ps. aminovorans, and the optima were respectively pH6.0, 7.0 and 7.5. Table 1 shows that both organisms when grown on methylamine possessed elevated activities of the enzymes serine hydroxymethyltransferase, hydroxypyruvate reductase, malate dehydrogenase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, serineglyoxylate aminotransferase and ATP malate lyase (Hersh & Bellion, 1972). The ratio of specific activities (methylamine-grown cells/ succinate-grown cells) was above 40 in each case. These enzymes can account for the net conversion of a reduced C1 unit and COz into acetyl-CoA via serine. The results also suggest that serine dehydratase is not involved in this sequence of reactions. The ATP malate lyase activity detected was not very high, compared with that in other amineutilizing organisms (Bellion & Hersh, 1972; Cox & Zatman, 1973), but was absolutely dependent on CoA. ATP and Mg2+,although the identity of glyoxylate as reaction product was not conclusively established. We have not yet looked for a malyl-CoA-cleavage enzyme, but its presence is a possibility in view of the observations made by Salem et al. (1973). The evidence supports the concept of a cyclic mechanism for the generation of acetyl-CoA in these two organisms from formaldehyde (produced by oxidation of methylamine via N-methylglutamate) and COz via serine and hydroxypyruvate, as postulated for Pseudomonas AM1 (Salem et al., 1972) and bacterium 5H2 (Cox & Zatman, 1973), with the glyoxylate required for the cycle probably arising via cleavage of malate. We propose that in both Pseudomonas MS and Ps. aminovorans carbon is assimilated via the serine pathway, the route from methylamine to C, acids being similar to that proposed by Bellion & Hersh (1972) for Pseudornonas MA, but proceeding from serine via glycerate and phosphoenolpyruvate (Large & Quayle, 1963), as in Scheme 1, rather than involving serine dehydratase and ‘malic’ enzyme. The failure of Wagner & Quayle (1972) to detect hydroxypyruvatereductase is due to their performing the assay at pH4.5. At this pH we also were unable to detect activity, but very high activities were apparent at pH5.5-6.0. Our failure to detect serine hydroxymethyltransferase in succinate-grown bacteria, where it is presumably required for glycine biosynthesis (Harder & Quayle, Vol. 1 ymethyltransferase (EC 2.1.2.1) yruvate carboxylase 1) rogenase (EC 1.1.1.27) rogenase (EC 1.1.1.37) yase (EC 4.1.3.-) atase (EC 4.2.1.I 3) e (EC 4.1.3.1) Enzyme ate reductase (glycerate ase) (EC 1.1.1.29) late aminotransferase Bellion & Hersh (1972) Kornberg (1955) Scrimgeour & Huennekens (1962) Large et al. (1962) Blackmore & Quayle (1970) Assay method Large & Quayle (1 963) 0.2 340 125 100 2.3 442 0 16.6 5.5 0 0 0 Grown on succinate 113 . PS.aminovorans Grown on methylamine 4640 I 0.3 1170 8.1 2.4 10.6 320 157 1.3 314 0 22 1.3 0.8 27 4150 127 Grown on succinate Grown on methylamine Pseiidomonas MS arison of speci3c activities of enzymes of the serinepathway in extracts ofPs. aminovorans andPseudomonas MSgrown on methylamine te Specific activity (nmol/min per mg of protein) cl r: 3 E 0 v) R En Y 542nd MEETING, SOUTHAMPTON Hydroxypyruvate c1u - 1293 Glycerate + Phosphoglycerate n i t < L r H Glyoxylate d I 21 Acetyl-CoA----., - Oxaloacetate A C O , / / , /' v \ I \ \ ,R I Malate 1 Phosphoenolpyruvate '. Isocitrate +------- Citrate A I J. Succinate Scheme 1. Proposedpathway of C,assimilation in Ps. aminovorans andpseudomonas MS 1971), may be due to theactivities being too low for detection by the relatively insensitive assay method used (Scrimgeour & Huennekens, 1962). The possibility that the acetyl-CoA formed by this pathway may condense with oxaloacetate to yield citrate and isocitrate followed by cleavage to succinate and glyoxylate, as inpseudomonas MA and bacterium 5H2 (Bellion & Hersh, 1972; Cox & Zatman, 1973), has also been investigated, but the relatively small (twofold) difference in specificactivity of isocitrate lyase in extracts ofPseudomonas aminovoransgrown on methylamine and on succinate does not allow a firm conclusion to be drawn, and this pathway is indicated by broken lines in Scheme 1. We thank Professor J. R. Quayle for the gift of a culture of Pseudomonas MS. Bellion, E. & Hersh, L. B. (1972) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 153, 368-374 Blackmore, M. A. & Quayle, J. R. (1970) Biochem. J. 118,53-59 Cox, R. B. & Zatman, L. J. (1973) Biochem. SOC.Trans. 1, 669-671 Harder, W. & Quayle, J. R. (1971) Biochem. J. 121, 753-762 Hersh, L. B. & Bellion, E. (1972) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 48, 712-719 Kornberg, A. (1955) Methods Enzymol. 1, 441443 Large, P. J. (1971) Xenobiotica 1,457467 Large, P. J. & Quayle, J. R. (1963) Biochem. J. 87, 386-396 Large, P. J., Peel, D. &. Quayle, J. R. (1962) 85, 243-250 Quayle, J. R. (1972) Aduan. Microbial Physiol. 7, 119-203 Salem, A. R., Large, P. J. & Quayle, J. R. (1972) Biochem. J . 128, 1203-1211 Salem, A. R., Hacking, A. J. & Quayle, J. R. (1973) J . Gen. Microbiol. 77, xii Scrimgeour, K. G. & Huemekens, F. M. (1962) Methods Enzymol. 5, 838-843 Wagner, C. & Quayle, J. R. (1972) J. Gen. Microbiol. 72, 485-491 Dextransucrase from Streptococcus sanguis 804 : Characterization of the Products JOSIE A. BEELEY and PHYLLIS M. AYRES Departments of Biochemistry and Oral Biology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 SQQ, U.K. Dextransucrase [c+(l-+6)-glucan-~-fructose 2-glucosyltransferase, EC 2.4.1.51 is a constitutive extracellular enzyme synthesized by Streptococcus sanguis 804, N.C.T.C. 10904 (Hehre & Neill, 1946; Carlsson et al., 1969), that polymerizes the glucose moiety of sucrose to form dextran (Eisenberg & Hestrin, 1963). Vol. 1