EFFECT OF l -CYSTINE ON INITIATION OF ANAEROBIC GROWTH OF ESCHERICHIA COLI AND AEROBACTER AEROGENES
- 1 August 1961
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Bacteriology
- Vol. 82 (2) , 305-+
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.82.2.305-312.1961
Abstract
Under anaerobic conditions Escherichia coli and Aerobacter aerogenes, inoculated in a mineral-citrate-glucose medium at densities up to 106 bacteria per ml, exhibit a long lag, or fail to initiate growth at all. Growth is initiated rapidly if the medium is supplemented with various SH or SS compounds. Of these the most active is L-cystine, which is fully effective at 1 to 2 [mu][image]. In a heavily seeded semisolid medium without cystine, turbidity rapidly appears at the aerobic surface and then slowly extends throughout the anaerobic region of the culture. This finding implies that a sufficiently dense anaerobically growing culture creates conditions in the medium which eliminate the requirement for cystine. The nature of this effect on the medium has not been determined, but certain possibilities (pH, pCO2) have been eliminated. The anaerobic cystine requirement becomes more pronounced in the presence of Cu++, at concentrations far lower than those required for inhibition under aerobic conditions. While it is possible that cystine is acting by complexing the toxic metal ion, it seems more likely that L-cystine is an essential metabolite, poorly produced under anaerobic conditions, and that the marked toxicity of Cu++ under anaerobic conditions depends on its complexing of cystine.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- SH compounds in mitosis: II. The effect of mercaptoethanol on the structure of the mitotic apparatus in sea urchin eggsExperimental Cell Research, 1958
- Nécessité des orthodiphénols pour la croissance de coccus P (Sarcina sp.)Biochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1956
- MUTANTS OF ESCHERICHIA COLI REQUIRING METHIONINE OR VITAMIN B 12Journal of Bacteriology, 1950