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Alterations of alkaline phosphatase activity during adaptation ofEscherichia colito phosphite and hypophosphite

✍ Scribed by A. M. Lauwers; W. Heinen


Publisher
Springer
Year
1977
Tongue
English
Weight
497 KB
Volume
112
Category
Article
ISSN
0302-8933

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✦ Synopsis


When Escherichia coli cells were grown in media containing either phosphite or hypophosphite as the sole source of phosphorus, they responded to this situation primarily in the same way as phosphatelimited cultures : The activity of alkaline phosphatase increased drastically, which under natural conditions would enable the cells to compensate for the shortage of phosphate. Subsequent transfers, however, resulted in a quite different response: While the phosphatase aetivity of phosphate-limited cells stays at a high derepressed level, its increase was followed by a gradual decline in organisms grown on phosphite or hypophosphite. After eight to ten transfers on these P-compounds, phosphatase activity was back to its initial, repressed, low level, indicating that the cells were fully adapted to these substrates. Adaptation to either PO3 3-or PO~-was completely abolished if the cells were again grown with PO3-as P-source, whereafter the entire process of adaptation had to be repeated. The observed adaptation pattern, reflected by the alterations of phosphatase activity, was qualitatively equal with PO~-and PO2 3-, but quantitatively different, because the response to hypophosphite gave much higher values than the increase obtained with phosphite.

Phosphite-adapted cells are not simultaneously adapted to hypophosphite, but their response to the latter was less intense than observed after direct transfers from PO3-to PO2 3-. Adaptation to hypophosphite, however, led simultaneously to phosphite adaptation, so that these cells can utilize both Pcompounds as a substitute for phosphate.