Effect of amino acids on steady-state growth of a group A hemolytic streptococcus

HC Davies, F Karush, JH Rudd - Journal of bacteriology, 1965 - Am Soc Microbiol
HC Davies, F Karush, JH Rudd
Journal of bacteriology, 1965Am Soc Microbiol
Davies, Helen C.(University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia), Fred Karush, and Joanne h.
Rudd. Effect of amino acids on steady-state growth of a group A hemolytic streptococcus. J.
Bacteriol. 89: 421–427. 1965.—A study has been made of amino acid utilization by a strain
of type 4, group A streptococcus growing under steady-state conditions in a continuous-
culture device and supplied with a completely synthetic medium. At a fixed growth rate,
corresponding to a generation of time of 84 min, and with the p H maintained constant at 7.4 …
Davies, Helen C. (University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia), Fred Karush, and Joanne H. Rudd. Effect of amino acids on steady-state growth of a group A hemolytic streptococcus. J. Bacteriol. 89:421–427. 1965.—A study has been made of amino acid utilization by a strain of type 4, group A streptococcus growing under steady-state conditions in a continuous-culture device and supplied with a completely synthetic medium. At a fixed growth rate, corresponding to a generation of time of 84 min, and with the pH maintained constant at 7.4, the bacterial turbidity was made dependent on the concentration of one of the amino acids of the defined medium. Under these conditions, the extracellular concentration of the limiting amino acid is fixed by the preset growth rate. The steady-state concentration of each of 14 essential l-amino acids was measured by means of C14-labeled amino acids in such limited cultures. At approximately equal turbidities, these concentrations ranged from 1.6 × 10−6m for methionine to 4.3 × 10−4m for glutamic acid. The rates of utilization of the amino acids ranged from 26 mμmoles per mg (dry weight) of bacteria per hr for histidine to 310 mμmoles per mg (dry weight) of bacteria per hr for glutamic acid. The percentage of the limiting amino acid used varied from 95% for threonine and methionine to 43% for gluamic acid. The rate of utilization of the limiting amino acid at unit concentration (tmoles per gram per hour per m) differed by a factor of 27 between extremes. These observations reflect the variation in the capacity of this streptococcal cell to take up and use different amino acids.
American Society for Microbiology