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Title: Control of a pyrimidine ribonucleotide salvage pathway in Pseudomonas oleovorans. Author: Gill R, West TP. Journal: Arch Microbiol; 2022 Jun 10; 204(7):383. PubMed ID: 35689128. Abstract: The control of a pyrimidine ribonucleotide salvage pathway in the bacterium Pseudomonas oleovorans ATCC 8062 was studied. This bacterium is important for its ability to synthesize polyesters as well as for its increasing clinical significance in humans. The pyrimidine salvage pathway enzymes pyrimidine nucleotide N-ribosidase and cytosine deaminase were investigated in P. oleovorans ATCC 8062 under selected culture conditions. Initially, the effect of carbon source on the two pyrimidine salvage enzymes in ATCC 8062 cells was examined and it was observed that cell growth on the carbon source succinate generally produced higher enzyme activities than did glucose or glycerol as a carbon source when ammonium sulfate served as the nitrogen source. Using succinate as a carbon source, growth on dihydrouracil as nitrogen source caused a 1.9-fold increase in the pyrimidine nucleotide N-ribosidase activity and a 4.8-fold increase in cytosine deaminase activity compared to the ammonium sulfate-grown cells. Growth of ATCC 8062 cells on cytosine or dihydrothymine as a nitrogen source elevated deaminase activity by more than double that observed for ammonium sulfate-grown cells. The findings indicated a relationship between this pyrimidine salvage pathway and the pyrimidine reductive catabolic pathway since growth on dihydrouracil appeared to increase the degradation of the pyrimidine ribonucleotide monophosphates to uracil. The uracil produced could be degraded by the pyrimidine base reductive catabolic pathway to β-alanine as a source of nitrogen. This investigation could prove helpful to future work examining the metabolic relationship between pyrimidine salvage pathways and pyrimidine reductive catabolism in pseudomonads.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]