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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2001, p. 2234-2240, Vol. 183, No. 7
Department of Bacteriology, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706,1
and Departments of Chemistry and Biology, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts
021392
Received 8 December 2000/Accepted 11 January 2001
In Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, purine
nucleotides and thiamine are synthesized by a branched pathway. The
last known common intermediate, aminoimidazole ribonucleotide (AIR), is
formed from formylglycinamidine ribonucleotide (FGAM) and ATP by AIR
synthetase, encoded by the purI gene in S. enterica. Reduced flux through the first five steps of de novo
purine synthesis results in a requirement for purines but not
necessarily thiamine. To examine the relationship between the purine
and thiamine biosynthetic pathways, purI mutants were made
(J. L. Zilles and D. M. Downs, Genetics
143:37-44, 1996). Unexpectedly, some mutant
purI alleles (R35C/E57G and K31N/A50G/L218R) allowed growth
on minimal medium but resulted in thiamine auxotrophy when exogenous
purines were supplied. To explain the biochemical basis for this
phenotype, the R35C/E57G mutant PurI protein was purified and
characterized kinetically. The Km of the mutant
enzyme for FGAM was unchanged relative to the wild-type enzyme, but the
Vmax was decreased 2.5-fold. The
Km for ATP of the mutant enzyme was 13-fold
increased. Genetic analysis determined that reduced flux through the
purine pathway prevented PurI activity in the mutant strain, and
purR null mutations suppressed this defect. The data are
consistent with the hypothesis that an increased FGAM concentration has
the ability to compensate for the lower affinity of the mutant PurI
protein for ATP.
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.7.2234-2240.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Altered Pathway Routing in a Class of
Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium Mutants Defective in
Aminoimidazole Ribonucleotide Synthetase


*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Dept. of
Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin, 1550 Linden Dr., Madison, WI
53706. Phone: (608) 265-4630. Fax: (608) 262-9865. E-mail:
downs{at}bact.wisc.edu.
Present address: Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering,
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706.
Present address: Department of Chemistry, Washington University,
St. Louis, MO 63130.
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