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Contrasting effects of isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDH) deletion on fluxes through enzymes of central metabolism in Escherichia coli.

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Flux analysis is central to understanding cellular metabolism and successful manipulation of metabolic fluxes in microbial cell-factories. ICDH deletion conferred contrasting effects on fluxes through substrate-level phosphorylation (SLP) reactions. While… Click to show full abstract

Flux analysis is central to understanding cellular metabolism and successful manipulation of metabolic fluxes in microbial cell-factories. ICDH deletion conferred contrasting effects on fluxes through substrate-level phosphorylation (SLP) reactions. While significantly increasing flux through pyruvate kinase, it diminishes flux through succinyl CoA synthetase and upregulates phosphotransacetylase (PTA) and acetate kinase (AK). In addition to acetate, the ICDH-less strain excretes pyruvate, citrate, and isocitrate. While efflux to acetate excretion by the Escherichia coli parental strain and its ICDH-less derivative is a reflection of high throughput of glycolytic intermediates, excretion of pyruvate is a reflection of high throughput via pyruvate kinase. On the other hand, citrate and isocitrate excretion is a reflection of truncating the Krebs cycle at the level of ICDH. Furthermore, another striking finding is the inability of the ICDH-less cultures to utilize acetate as a source of carbon despite the availability of adequate supply of extracellular glutamate (for biosynthesis) and elevated levels of AK and PTA (for acetate uptake). This striking observation is now explicable in the light of the newly proposed hypothesis that the expression of the ace operon enzymes is controlled in response to a minimum threshold signal (ATP), which could not be realized in the ICDH-less strain.

Keywords: escherichia coli; metabolism; icdh less; contrasting effects; icdh deletion

Journal Title: FEMS microbiology letters
Year Published: 2019

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