Occurrence and Properties of Lactic Dehydrogenases of Fermentative Mycoplasmas

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RESUMO

Eight fermentative mycoplasmas differing in genome size, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) base composition, or sterol dependence were examined for lactic dehydrogenase composition by spectrophotometric assay and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Three completely different patterns of lactic dehydrogenase composition were found. (i) A nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD)-dependent l(+)-lactic dehydrogenase was found in Mycoplasma pneumoniae, M. gallisepticum, M. mycoides var. mycoides, mycoplasma UM 30847, M. neurolyticum, and Acholeplasma axanthum. Electrophoresis of cell-free extracts of each of these mycoplasmas produced, with the exception of M. mycoides var. mycoides and UM 30847, single, different enzyme bands. M. mycoides var. mycoides and UM 30847 were similar and formed multiple bands of enzyme activity. We were unable to establish whether these multiple bands were due to lactic dehydrogenase isoenzymes or artifacts. (ii) An NAD-dependent d(−)-lactic dehydrogenase which could not be reversed to oxidize lactate was found in M. fermentans. (iii) A. laidlawii A possessed an NAD-independent d(−)-lactic dehydrogenase capable of reducing dichlorophenol-indophenol, and an NAD-dependent l(+)-lactic dehydrogenase which is specifically activated by fructose-1,6-diphosphate. Heretofore, this enzyme regulatory mechanism was known to occur only among the Lactobacillaceae. No yeast-type lactic dehydrogenase activity was found in any of the mycoplasmas examined. The stereoisomer of lactic acid accumulated during growth correlated perfectly with the type of NAD-dependent lactic dehydrogenase found in each mycoplasma. The types of lactic dehydrogenase activity found in these mycoplasmas were not related to genome size, DNA base composition, or sterol dependence.

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