Novel insights into the role of potassium for osmoregulation in Halomonas elongata

The role of K(+) in osmoregulation of the halophilic bacterium Halomonas elongata was investigated. At lower salinities (0.51 M NaCl), K(+) was the predominant cytoplasmic solute (1.25 micro mol mg protein(-1)). At higher salinities (1.03 M NaCl) ectoine became the main cytoplasmic solute (1.57 micr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Extremophiles : life under extreme conditions 2002-12, Vol.6 (6), p.453-462
Hauptverfasser: KRAEGELOH, Annette, KUNTE, Hans Jörg
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The role of K(+) in osmoregulation of the halophilic bacterium Halomonas elongata was investigated. At lower salinities (0.51 M NaCl), K(+) was the predominant cytoplasmic solute (1.25 micro mol mg protein(-1)). At higher salinities (1.03 M NaCl) ectoine became the main cytoplasmic solute (1.57 micro mol mg protein(-1)), while the K(+) content remained unchanged. In response to osmotic upshock, cells of H. elongata simultaneously accumulated ectoine and K(+) glutamate. The ectoine and K(+) glutamate levels in osmotically stressed cells exceeded the level of cells adapted to high salinities. The increase in K(+) glutamate was long lasting (>120 min) and not transient, as described for non-halophiles. Regulation of the synthesis of ectoine and glutamate was proven to occur mainly at the level of enzyme activity. Limitation of K(+) inhibited the growth of salt-adapted H. elongata cells, especially at high salinities, and caused a decrease of the intracellular organic solute content, inhibition of respiration, and an abolition of the cell's ability to respond to osmotic stress. The saturation constant K(S) for K(+) was estimated to be 105 micro M at a salinity of 0.51 M NaCl, indicating that an uptake system of medium affinity is responsible for K(+) accumulation in H. elongata.
ISSN:1431-0651
1433-4909
DOI:10.1007/s00792-002-0277-4