Inducible Glutamate Transport in Mycobacteria and Its Relation to Glutamate Oxidation1

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Washed-cell preparations of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain H37Ra and M. smegmatis 607 grown in Sauton's medium demonstrated a lag in glutamate oxidation. Washed-cell preparations of M. fortuitum and M. phlei oxidized glutamate immediately and in a linear fashion. Glutamate was oxidized without a lag by washed cells of M. tuberculosis H37Ra and M. smegmatis 607 harvested from a modified medium containing glutamate. Chloramphenicol inhibited the oxidation of glutamate by washed cells grown in the absence of glutamate. These findings suggested the induction of either an enzyme system for glutamate oxidation or a glutamate transport system. The activity of glutamic dehydrogenase was not significantly greater in extracts prepared from cells grown with glutamate. However, the initial rate of glutamate uptake by induced cells was three to four times higher than in noninduced cells. The induction of the glutamate transport system in M. tuberculosis H37Ra and M. smegmatis 607 was shown to parallel the induction of glutamate oxidation. After a 60-min lag, the inducible glutamate transport system appeared. Chloramphenicol prevented the induction of glutamate uptake, although the antibiotic had no effect on glutamate uptake by previously induced cells. Some of the properties of this glutamate uptake system are described.

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