Tai Siew Leng, Daran-Lapujade Pascale, Luttik Marijke A H, Walsh Michael C, Diderich Jasper A, Krijger Gerard C, van Gulik Walter M, Pronk Jack T, Daran Jean-Marc
Department of Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology, Julianalaan 67, 2628BC Delft, The Netherlands.
J Biol Chem. 2007 Apr 6;282(14):10243-51. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M610845200. Epub 2007 Jan 24.
Growth temperature has a profound impact on the kinetic properties of enzymes in microbial metabolic networks. Activities of glycolytic enzymes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae were up to 7.5-fold lower when assayed at 12 degrees C than at 30 degrees C. Nevertheless, the in vivo glycolytic flux in chemostat cultures (dilution rate: 0.03 h(-1)) grown at these two temperatures was essentially the same. To investigate how yeast maintained a constant glycolytic flux despite the kinetic challenge imposed by a lower growth temperature, a systems approach was applied that involved metabolic flux analysis, transcript analysis, enzyme activity assays, and metabolite analysis. Expression of hexose-transporter genes was affected by the growth temperature, as indicated by differential transcription of five HXT genes and changed zero trans-influx kinetics of [(14)C]glucose transport. No such significant changes in gene expression were observed for any of the glycolytic enzymes. Fermentative capacity (assayed off-line at 30 degrees C), which was 2-fold higher in cells grown at 12 degrees C, was therefore probably controlled predominantly by glucose transport. Massive differences in the intracellular concentrations of nucleotides (resulting in an increased adenylate energy charge at low temperature) and glycolytic intermediates indicated a dominant role of metabolic control as opposed to gene expression in the adaptation of glycolytic enzyme activity to different temperatures. In evolutionary terms, this predominant reliance on metabolic control of a central pathway, which represents a significant fraction of the cellular protein of the organism, may be advantageous to limit the need for protein synthesis and degradation during adaptation to diurnal temperature cycles.
生长温度对微生物代谢网络中酶的动力学特性具有深远影响。在12℃下测定时,酿酒酵母中糖酵解酶的活性比在30℃下测定时低至7.5倍。然而,在这两个温度下生长的恒化器培养物(稀释率:0.03 h⁻¹)中的体内糖酵解通量基本相同。为了研究酵母如何在较低生长温度带来的动力学挑战下维持恒定的糖酵解通量,采用了一种系统方法,该方法涉及代谢通量分析、转录分析、酶活性测定和代谢物分析。己糖转运蛋白基因的表达受生长温度影响,五个HXT基因的差异转录以及[¹⁴C]葡萄糖转运的零转流入动力学变化表明了这一点。对于任何糖酵解酶,均未观察到如此显著的基因表达变化。因此,在12℃下生长的细胞中发酵能力(在30℃离线测定)高出2倍,可能主要受葡萄糖转运控制。核苷酸细胞内浓度的巨大差异(导致低温下腺苷酸能荷增加)和糖酵解中间体表明,在使糖酵解酶活性适应不同温度方面,代谢控制而非基因表达起主导作用。从进化角度来看,这种对代表生物体细胞蛋白质很大一部分的中心途径的代谢控制的主要依赖,可能有利于在适应昼夜温度循环期间限制蛋白质合成和降解的需求。