A genetic approach to the biosynthesis of the rifamycin-chromophore in Nocardia mediterranei. I. Isolation and characterization of a pentose-excreting auxotrophic mutant of Nocardia mediterranei with drastically reduced rifamycin production.
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Japan Antibiotics Research Association in The Journal of Antibiotics
- Vol. 31 (3) , 202-214
- https://doi.org/10.7164/antibiotics.31.202
Abstract
The mutant under study, designated A8, is derived from a N. mediterranei strain, N813, which is a high rifamycin B producer. A8 is auxotrophic for aromatic amino acids and produces much less rifamycin B than the parent. A mixture of pentoses with D (-)ribulose as the main product is accumulated in the fermentation broth of this mutant. It was affected in its transketolase activity as no formation of D-sedoheptulose-7P [phosphate] from pentose-phosphates could be detected in vitro using crude extracts. The only pathway so far known which is derived from D-sedoheptulose-7P is the shikimate pathway leading to aromatic amino acids and vitamins. Biochemical and genetic investigations with mutant A8, which is defective in both the biosynthesis of rifamycins and the biosynthesis of shikimate pathway products, show that the 7-C amino unit of the rifamycin-chromophore must be derived from an intermediate of the shikimate pathway.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
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