Record Details

The effect of temperature and hydrostatic pressure on deamination of L-serine by Vibrio marinus an obligate psychrophile

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title The effect of temperature and hydrostatic pressure on deamination of L-serine by Vibrio marinus an obligate psychrophile
Names Albright, Lawrence John (creator)
Morita, Richard Y. (advisor)
Date Issued 1965-11-23 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1966
Abstract Vibrio marinus MP-1 (ATCC 15381) deaminated nine of seventeen
amino acids tested with L-glutamine being deaminated to the greatest
and L-serine to the second greatest extent in one hour. The optimum
pH for the L-serine deamination was 8.4.
The response of washed cells to temperature on the deamination
of L-serine depended upon the growth temperature of V. marinus
MP-1. Cells grown at 15 C had an optimum of deamination activity
at 40 C, and a shoulder at 15 C, while 4 C grown cells had greatest
activity at 38 and 11 C.
It is suggested that these peaks in deamination of L-serine at
different temperatures might be due to several different enzymes
deaminating the amino acid or the result of loss of permeability control
above the maximum growth temperature of the organism.
Hydrostatic pressure stimulated or suppressed L-serine
deamination by washed cells depending upon the temperature at which
the cells were grown and the incubation temperature of the reaction
mixture. Cells grown at 15 and 4 C had deamination stimulated under
hydrostatic pressure in the following cases: (1) cells grown at 15 C
and tested for deamination at 15 C, (2) cells grown at 4 C and tested
at 4 C and (3) cells grown at 4 C and tested at 15 C. When cells were
grown at 15 C and tested at 4 C no stimulation of deamination activity
due to hydrostatic pressure was observed.
These results adequately show that a very important part of the
nitrogen cycle, the deamination of an amino acid by a marine bacterium,
can occur in the ocean down to hydrostatic pressures of 400
atm and at temperatures below 20 C.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Serine
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/48159

© Western Waters Digital Library - GWLA member projects - Designed by the J. Willard Marriott Library - Hosted by Oregon State University Libraries and Press