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Metabolic Consequences of Altered PhosphoenolpyruvateCarboxykinase Activity in Corynebacterium glutamicum Reveal Anaplerotic Regulation Mechanisms in Vivo

✍ Scribed by Sören Petersen; Christina Mack; Albert A. De Graaf; Christian Riedel; Bernhard J. Eikmanns; Hermann Sahm


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
314 KB
Volume
3
Category
Article
ISSN
1096-7176

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✦ Synopsis


Corynebacterium glutamicum possesses high in vivo activity of the gluconeogenic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCk) during growth on glucose, resulting together with anaplerotic carboxylation reactions in a PEP/pyruvate/oxaloacetate substrate cycle. The present study investigated the changes in intracellular fluxes and metabolite concentrations that are caused by altered PEPCk activity in l-lysine-producing C. glutamicum MH20-22B, applying a recently developed 13 C labeling-based strategy for anaplerotic flux resolution and quantification. Abolition of PEPCk activity by deletion of the respective pck gene resulted in increased intracellular concentrations of oxaloacetate, l-aspartate, a-ketoglutarate, pyruvate, and l-lysine and in a 60% enhanced flux toward l-lysine biosynthesis, whereas increasing the PEPCk activity by pck overexpression had opposite effects. The results of the combined measurements of enzyme activities, in vivo fluxes, and metabolite concentrations were exploited to elucidate the in vivo regulation of anaplerotic reactions in C. glutamicum, and implications for the metabolic engineering of amino-acid-producing strains are discussed.