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J. Bacteriol., Jan 1996, 403-409, Vol 178, No. 2
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology

Ammonium/urea-dependent generation of a proton electrochemical potential and synthesis of ATP in Bacillus pasteurii

T Jahns
Universitat des Saarlandes, Saarbrucken, Germany.

The influence of ammonium and urea on the components of the proton electrochemical potential (delta p) and de novo synthesis of ATP was studied with Bacillus pasteurii ATCC 11859. In washed cells grown at high urea concentrations, a delta p of -56 +/- 29 mV, consisting of a membrane potential (delta psi) of -228 +/- 19 mV and of a transmembrane pH gradient (delta pH) equivalent to 172 +/- 38 mV, was measured. These cells contained only low amounts of potassium, and the addition of ammonium caused an immediate net decrease of both delta psi and delta pH, resulting in a net increase of delta p of about 49 mV and de novo synthesis of ATP. Addition of urea and its subsequent hydrolysis to ammonium by the cytosolic urease also caused an increase of delta p and ATP synthesis; a net initial increase of delta psi, accompanied by a slower decrease of delta pH in this case, was observed. Cells grown at low concentrations of urea contained high amounts of potassium and maintained a delta p of -113 +/- 26 mV, with a delta psi of -228 +/- 22 mV and a delta pH equivalent to 115 +/- 20 mV. Addition of ammonium to such cells resulted in the net decrease of delta psi and delta pH without a net increase in delta p or synthesis of ATP, whereas urea caused an increase of delta p and de novo synthesis of ATP, mainly because of a net increase of delta psi. The data reported in this work suggest that the ATP-generating system is coupled to urea hydrolysis via both an alkalinization of the cytoplasm by the ammonium generated in the urease reaction and a net increase of delta psi that is probably due to an efflux of ammonium ions. Furthermore, the findings of this study show that potassium ions are involved in the regulation of the intracellular pH and that ammonium ions may functionally replace potassium to a certain extent in reducing the membrane potential and alkalinizing the cytoplasm.


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