Trimethylamine oxide respiration of Alteromonas putrefaciens NCMB 1735: Na+-stimulated anaerobic transport in cells and membrane vesicles.

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RESUMO

Alteromonas putrefaciens NCMB 1735 required the presence of NaCl for anaerobic growth with serine, cysteine, and formate as substrate and trimethylamine oxide ( TMAO ) as external electron acceptor. When lactate was substrate, the organism grew equally well in the absence of NaCl. Anaerobic uptake of glutamate, aspartate, serine, cysteine, and lactate in resting cells was strongly stimulated with NaCl, and cytoplasmic membrane vesicles energized by electron transfer from formate to TMAO displayed active Na+-dependent uptake of serine. The data suggested that participation in transport processes was the only vital function of Na+ in A. putrefaciens. Formate- and TMAO -dependent anaerobic serine uptake in vesicles was sensitive to the protonophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl-hydrazone and the ionophores valinomycin and gramicidin. Transport-active vesicles contained cytochromes of b and c type, and both serine uptake and TMAO reduction with formate were inhibited with the electron transfer inhibitor 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide. Thus, reduction of TMAO to trimethylamine in A. putrefaciens appeared to be coupled with a chemiosmotic mechanism of energy conversion.

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