Abstract
The possible changes in the fatty acid profile of Escherichia coli during heat-shock have been investigated. Bacteria growing in steady-state at 30°C were subjected to an abrupt temperature upshift to 45°C and held at the high temperature for various periods of time in order to elicit the heat-shock response. Fatty acid compositions of lipids extracted from samples taken at different times after the temperature upshift, as well as from cultures in steady-state at 30 and 45°C, were determined by gas-chromatography. It has been found that the total unsaturates to total saturates ratio decreases gradually during heat-shock and that 30 min after the temperature jump, the reduction is equivalent to 57% of the difference between ratios corresponding to steady-state cultures at 30 and 45°C. Consistent with this remodeling of lipid acyl chains, there is a decrease in the excimerization rate of the fluidity probe dipyrenylpropane incorporated into sonicated E. coli lipid extracts. Such modifications occur within the time-span of the heat-shock response, as judged from our previous measurements of the kinetics of change in heat-shock proteins induction ratio. Together, these results indicate that the control of membrane fluidity during the heat-shock response can be accounted for, at least in part, by an important change in the fatty acid composition of Escherichia coli lipids.
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Mejía, R., Gómez-Eichelmann, M. C., & Fernández, M. S. (1999). Fatty acid profile of Escherichia coli during the heat-shock response. Biochemistry and Molecular Biology International, 47(5), 835–844. https://doi.org/10.1080/15216549900201923
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