Abstract
One of the vitamin B12 antimetabolites produced by Bacillus cereus 439 has been identified as N5-hydroxy-L-arginine on the basis of its mass-spectrum, 13C-NMR, and mobilities in thin-layer chromatography and paper chromatography in comparison with standard material. The inhibition of growth of Escherichia coli (Davis 113-3)by this compound was reversed by vitamin B12 and was potentiated by L-lysine and 4-hydroxy-L-lysine. Vitamin B12 also partially reversed the inhibition of growth by N5-hydroxy-L-arginine of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, other strains of E. coli, and Klebsiella pneumoniae. While neither N5-hydroxy-L-arginine nor L-lysine affected the growth in tissue culture of KB cells, the mixture of these two amino acids was quite inhibitory. © 1974, JAPAN ANTIBIOTICS RESEARCH ASSOCIATION. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Perlman, D., Vlietinck, A. J., Lo Florence, F., & Matthews, H. W. (1974). McIrobial production of vitamin B12 antimetabolites. I. N5-hydroxy-l-arginine from bacillus cereus 439. The Journal of Antibiotics, 27(11), 826–832. https://doi.org/10.7164/antibiotics.27.826
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