MOLECULAR BASIS AND ENZYMOLOGY OF MICROBIAL BIOSYNTHESIS
Project Number5R01GM045404-03
Contact PI/Project LeaderTABITA, F ROBERT
Awardee OrganizationOHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
The pentose phosphate pathway is an important metabolic scheme required
for the metabolism of virtually all living organisms. The addition of
two unique enzymes, ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO)
and phosphoribulokinase (PRK), allows this pathway to function in a
purely biosynthetic mode, such that organisms gain the capacity to use
carbon dioxide as the sole source of carbon. Under these conditions,
other enzymes of the pathway, including ubiquitous catalysts found in
both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, function as biosynthetic enzymes, in the
opposite direction form their usual role in vivo.
Recent work from our laboratory has shown that the structural genes for
the above enzymes, along with genes encoding fructose bisphosphatase
(FBPase), glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase, and transketolase, are
found in two distinct chromosomal operons in the facultatively anaerobic
purple nonsulfur bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Both recombinant
proteins in Escherichia coli, and many of the recombinant proteins
purified to homogeneity. Thus, one of the major goals of this project is
to study structure-function relationships of PRK, FBPase and
transketolase, using the techniques of protein chemistry and molecular
biology, the first time that this dual approach has become feasible for
these important proteins.
The second major thrust of this project will be to study the molecular
basis for differential regulation of the two operons. Control is
manifested at both the transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels.
Since exposure to increasing or decreasing levels of carbon and oxygen
has a major effect on gene expression, we will probe the mechanism of
control and its relation to intracellular regulatory systems known to be
mechanism of control and its relation to intracellular regulatory systems
known to be responsive to external stimuli. This research also focuses
on the role of nucleolytic processing of polycistronic transcripts and
its relation to differential gene expression, a key factor important for
regulating expression of both prokaryotic and eukaryotic genes.
These studies thus present an excellent opportunity to relate control at
both the enzymic and molecular levels, to increase our general
understanding of intermediary metabolism.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01GM045404-03
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