Transport of branched-chain amino acids in Corynebacterium glutamicum

Abstract
The transport of branched-chain amino acids was characterized in intact cells of Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13032. Uptake and accumulation of these amino acids occur via a common specific carrier with slightly different affiniteis for each substrate (Km[Ile]=5.4 μM, Km[Leu]=9.0 μM, Km[Val]=9.5 μM). The maximal uptake rates for all three substrates were very similar (0.94–1.30 nmol/mg dw · min). The optimum of amino acid uptake was at pH 8.5 and the activation energy was determined to be 80 kJ/mol. The transport activity showed a marked dependence on the presence of Na+ ions and on the membrane potential, but was independent of an existing proton gradient. It is concluded, that uptake of branched-chain amino acid transport proceeds via a secondary active Na+-coupled symport mechanism.