TRYPTOPHAN-NIACIN RELATIONSHIP IN XANTHOMONAS PRUNI
- 1 January 1963
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Bacteriology
- Vol. 85 (1) , 221-+
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.85.1.221-229.1963
Abstract
Wilson , R. G. (Oklahoma State University, Stillwater) and L. M. Henderson . Tryptophan-niacin relationship in Xanthomonas pruni . J. Bacteriol. 85: 221–229. 1963.—The observation that Xanthomonas pruni , a bacterial pathogen for the peach, requires niacin for growth and can use tryptophan or 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid as a substitute was confirmed. To determine whether niacin is synthesized via the tryptophan-3-hydroxyanthranilic acid pathway, experiments using labeled metabolites were undertaken. Labeled tryptophan, 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, quinolinic acid, and nicotinic acid were supplied in the basal medium in amounts sufficient to insure maximal growth. Nicotinic and quinolinic acids were isolated from the cells after the growth period. The isotope was incorporated from the first three labeled compounds into niacin with dilutions approximately the same in all cases, ranging from 7.6 to 17.1. The dilution of isotopic niacin was 3.1- to 5.9-fold. Only labeled quinolinic acid gave rise to labeled quinolinic acid in the cell, but this acid gave rise to niacin with 10- to 12-fold reduction in specific activity. The results indicate that if quinolinate participates as an obligatory intermediate in the synthesis of niacin from tryptophan, its concentration within the cell is very small and it does not equilibrate readily with exogenous quinolinate. The results confirm the conclusion, drawn from growth studies, that niacin is needed to permit tryptophan synthesis at a sufficient rate to promote growth. In the absence of an external source of niacin, tryptophan or some of its metabolites can promote growth by acting as precursors of niacin.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- LIQUID SCINTILLATION COUNTINGThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1959
- Synthesis and Metabolism of Tritium-Labeled DL-Kynurenine.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1958
- The Pyridine Ring and the Problem of its BiosynthesisNature, 1958
- TRITIUM-LABELING BY EXPOSURE OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS TO TRITIUM GAS1Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1957
- Isolation and Examination of Urinary Metabolites Containing an Aromatic SystemJournal of Clinical Pathology, 1955
- Intermediates in the Synthesis of Carboxyl-C14-Labeled 3-Hydroxyanthranilic Acid1Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1954
- Quinolinic Acid Accumulation in the Conversion of 3-Hydroxyanthranilic Acid to Niacin in NeurosporaProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1949
- Nutrition of Phytopathogenic Bacteria: I. Minimal Nutritive Requirements of Genus Xanthomonas.1946
- A contribution to the chemistry of proteidsThe Journal of Physiology, 1901
- Oxydation des Cinchoninchinolins mittelst KaliumpermanganatEuropean Journal of Inorganic Chemistry, 1879