Effect of inhibition of protein synthesis on lipid metabolism in Lactobacillus plantarum.

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RESUMO

In Lactobacillus plantarum 17-5, lipid synthesis appears to be correlated with protein synthesis. Inhibition of protein synthesis by chloramphenicol (50 mug/ml) caused the nearly simultaneous inhibition of incorporation of radioactive oleic acid into polar lipids before the cessation of growth. In addition, de novo fatty acid synthesis, as determined by the incorporation of radioactive acetate into cellular lipids, was also inhibited. Removal of the antibiotic resulted in the resumption of growth, protein synthesis, and polar lipid synthesis. Inhibition of protein synthesis by leucine deprivation also produced a marked reduction in the incorporation of radioactive oleic acid into the total polar lipids at about the same time that growth stopped (30 to 60 min after the removal of leucine). However, the different classes of lipids behaved differently. For example, the incorporation of oleic acid into cardiolipin was inhibited immediately upon removal of leucine from the cultures, whereas incorporation into phosphatidyl-glycerol was maintained at near normal rates for 60 min after the removal of leucine and then ceased. In contrast, the accumulation of radioactive oleic acid in a neutral lipid identified as diglyceride occurred to a much greater extent in leucine-deprived cultures than in control (+ leucine) cultures. Upon addition of leucine to leucine-deprived cultures, the rates of synthesis of phosphatidyl-glycerol and cardiolipin returned to normal; the amount of radioactivity in the diglyceride fraction decreased to normal levels concomitantly with increased phospholipid synthesis.

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