Patel Himatkumar V, Vyas Kavita A, Li Xibing, Savtchenko Regina, Roseman Saul
Department of Biology, The Johns Hopkins University, 3400 North Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2004 Dec 14;101(50):17486-91. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0407865101. Epub 2004 Nov 22.
The phosphoenolpyruvate:glycose phosphotransferase system (PTS) participates in important functions in the bacterial cell, including the phosphorylation/uptake of PTS sugars. Enzyme I (EI), the first protein of the PTS complex, accepts the phosphoryl group from phosphoenolpyruvate, which is then transferred through a chain of proteins to the sugar. In these studies, a mutant GFP, enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (YFP), was linked to the N terminus of EI, giving Y-EI. Y-EI was active both in vitro (>/=90% compared with EI) and in vivo. Unexpectedly, the subcellular distribution of Y-EI varied significantly. Three types of fluorescence were observed: (i) diffuse (dispersed throughout the cell), (ii) punctate (concentrated in numerous discrete spots throughout the cell), and (iii) polar (at one or both ends of the cell). Cells from dense colonies grown on agar plates with LB broth or synthetic (Neidhardt) medium showed primarily bipolar or punctate fluorescence. In liquid culture, under carefully defined carbon-limiting growth conditions [ribose (non-PTS), mannitol (PTS sugar), or dl-lactate], cellular levels of enzymatically active Y-EI remain essentially constant for each carbon source, but fluorescence distribution depends on C source, cell density, growth phase, and apparently on "conditioned medium." Fluorescence was diffuse during exponential growth on LB or ribose/Neidhardt medium. On ribose they became punctate in the stationary phase, reverting to diffuse when more ribose was added. In LB, both Y-EI and a nonphosphorylatable mutant, H189Q-Y-EI, showed a diffuse fluorescence during growth, but, shortly after the addition of isopropyl beta-d-thiogalactopyranoside, Y-EI became bipolar; H189Q-Y-EI did not. The functions of EI sequestration remain to be determined.
葡萄糖磷酸转移酶系统(PTS)在细菌细胞中发挥着重要作用,包括PTS糖类的磷酸化/摄取。PTS复合体的首个蛋白酶I(EI)从磷酸烯醇丙酮酸接受磷酰基,然后通过一系列蛋白质将其转移至糖类。在这些研究中,一种突变型绿色荧光蛋白(GFP)、增强型黄色荧光蛋白(YFP)与EI的N端相连,形成Y-EI。Y-EI在体外(与EI相比≥90%)和体内均具有活性。出乎意料的是,Y-EI的亚细胞分布差异显著。观察到三种荧光类型:(i)弥散型(分散于整个细胞)、(ii)点状型(集中于细胞内众多离散的斑点)和(iii)极型(位于细胞的一端或两端)。在添加了LB肉汤或合成(Neidhardt)培养基的琼脂平板上生长的密集菌落中的细胞主要呈现双极或点状荧光。在液体培养中,在精心定义的碳限制生长条件下[核糖(非PTS)、甘露醇(PTS糖类)或dl-乳酸],每种碳源的酶活性Y-EI的细胞水平基本保持恒定,但荧光分布取决于碳源、细胞密度、生长阶段,显然还取决于“条件培养基”。在LB或核糖/Neidhardt培养基上指数生长期间荧光呈弥散型。在核糖上,它们在稳定期变为点状型,当添加更多核糖时又恢复为弥散型。在LB中,Y-EI和一种不可磷酸化的突变体H189Q-Y-EI在生长期间均呈现弥散型荧光,但在添加异丙基β-D-硫代半乳糖苷后不久,Y-EI变为双极型;H189Q-Y-EI则没有。EI隔离的功能仍有待确定。