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Use of in Vivo13C Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy to Follow Sugar Uptake in Zymomonas mobilis

✍ Scribed by S.M. Schoberth; A.A. Degraaf


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Weight
467 KB
Volume
210
Category
Article
ISSN
0003-2697

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✦ Synopsis


A noninvasive, in situ, in vivo, and anomer-specific method for studying membrane transport of sugars in bacteria is presented. High-resolution ({ }^{13} \mathrm{C}) NMR was used to measure the distribution of (\alpha) - and (\beta)-xylose, maltose, Mes buffer, and ethanol in the extracellular and the cytoplasmic compartments in dense cell suspensions of Zymomonas mobilis, an aerotolerant bacterium that transports xylose but does not further metabolize it. The method relied on a difference in the magnetic susceptibility of the media inside and outside cells, induced with Dy-diethylenetriaminepentancetic acid. The applicability of this method was demonstrated (a) by showing that (x y l o s e) and ethanol crossed the inner membrane of (Z). mobilis while maltose and Mes buffer did not and (b) by a kinetic study of xylose uptake in this organism. After addition of xylose, both the extracellular decrease in the (\alpha) - and (\boldsymbol{\beta})-anomers in the medium and their intracellular accumulation could be followed. C (1993 \mathrm{Aca}) demic Press, Inc.


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## Abstract Dynamic nuclear polarization can be used to increase the sensitivity of solution state ^13^C magnetic resonance spectroscopy by four orders of magnitude. We show here that [1‐^13^C]glutamate can be polarized to 28%, representing a 35,000‐fold increase in its sensitivity to detection at