13C nuclear magnetic resonance studies of citrate and glucose cometabolism by Lactococcus lactis

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Abstract

13C nuclear magnetic resonance (13C-NMR) was used to investigate the metabolism of citrate plus glucose and pyruvate plus glucose by nongrowing cells of Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis 19B under anaerobic conditions. The metabolism of citrate plus glucose during growth was also monitored directly by in vivo NMR. Although pyruvate is a common intermediate metabolite in the metabolic pathways of both citrate and glucose, the origin of the carbon atoms in the fermentation products was determined by using selectively labeled substrates, e.g., [2,4-13C]citrate, [3-13C]pyruvate, and [2- 13C]glucose. The presence of an additional substrate caused a considerable stimulation in the rates of substrate utilization, and the pattern of end products was changed. Acetate plus acetoin and butanediol represented more than 80% (molar basis) of the end products of the metabolism of citrate (or pyruvate) alone, but when glucose was also added, 80% of the citrate (or pyruvate) was converted to lactate. This result can be explained by the activation of lactate dehydrogenase by fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, an intermediate in glucose metabolism. The effect of different concentrations of glucose on the metabolism of citrate by dilute cell suspensions was also probed by using analytical methods other than NMR. Pyruvate dehydrogenase (but not pyruvate formate-lyase) was active in the conversion of pyruvate to acetyl coenzyme A. α-Acetolactate was detected as an intermediate metabolite of citrate or pyruvate metabolism, and the labeling pattern of the end products agrees with the α-acetolactate pathway. It was demonstrated that the contribution of the acetyl coenzyme A pathway for the synthesis of diacetyl, should it exist, is lower than 10%. Evidence for the presence of internal carbon reserves in L. lactis is presented.

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Ramos, A., Jordan, K. N., Cogan, T. M., & Santos, H. (1994). 13C nuclear magnetic resonance studies of citrate and glucose cometabolism by Lactococcus lactis. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 60(6), 1739–1748. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.60.6.1739-1748.1994

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