Pseudocatabolite repression of type 1 fimbriae of Escherichia coli.

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RESUMO

Previous work on the control of fimbriation in bacteria has demonstrated the importance of environmental factors such as static versus shaking broth and the absence versus the presence of glucose on the degree of fimbriation. When the Pil+ K-12 strain of Escherichia coli CSH50 was grown in static broth, the bacteria grown with glucose were less fimbriate (as determined by electron microscopy) than those grown without glucose. In contrast, a derivative, the pil-lac operon fusion strain VL361, gave off similar proportions of Lac+ and Lac- colonies when grown with or without glucose. Introduction of delta cya into either CSH50 or VL361 did not affect synthesis of either fimbriae or beta-galactosidase, respectively. When total synthesis of fimbriae by strain CSH50 was assayed, using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent inhibition test, glucose-grown bacteria made less antigen when they were grown in static broth but not when they were grown in shaking broth. When results are taken together, we interpret them as showing that glucose does not suppress fimbrial synthesis by classic catabolite repression but rather merely prevents the outgrowth or fimbriate bacteria in static broth.

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