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Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Rua da Quinta Grande 6, Apartado 127, 2780-156 Oeiras, Portugal,1 Department of Biology, University of Konstanz, D-78434 Konstanz, Germany2
Received 4 October 2007/ Accepted 23 December 2007
Trehalose uptake at 65°C in Rhodothermus marinus was characterized. The profile of trehalose uptake as a function of concentration showed two distinct types of saturation kinetics, and the analysis of the data was complicated by the activity of a periplasmic trehalase. The kinetic parameters of this enzyme determined in whole cells were as follows: Km = 156 ± 11 µM and Vmax = 21.2 ± 0.4 nmol/min/mg of total protein. Therefore, trehalose could be acted upon by this periplasmic activity, yielding glucose that subsequently entered the cell via the glucose uptake system, which was also characterized. To distinguish the several contributions in this intricate system, a mathematical model was developed that took into account the experimental kinetic parameters for trehalase, trehalose transport, glucose transport, competition data with trehalose, glucose, and palatinose, and measurements of glucose diffusion out of the periplasm. It was concluded that R. marinus has distinct transport systems for trehalose and glucose; moreover, the experimental data fit perfectly with a model considering a high-affinity, low-capacity transport system for trehalose (Km = 0.11 ± 0.03 µM and Vmax = 0.39 ± 0.02 nmol/min/mg of protein) and a glucose transporter with moderate affinity and capacity (Km = 46 ± 3 µM and Vmax = 48 ± 1 nmol/min/mg of protein). The contribution of the trehalose transporter is important only in trehalose-poor environments (trehalose concentrations up to 6 µM); at higher concentrations trehalose is assimilated primarily via trehalase and the glucose transport system. Trehalose uptake was constitutive, but the activity decreased 60% in response to osmotic stress. The nature of the trehalose transporter and the physiological relevance of these findings are discussed.
Published ahead of print on 11 January 2008.
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