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Control of acid production and β-galactosidase synthesis in lactic streptococci

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Title Control of acid production and β-galactosidase synthesis in lactic streptococci
Names Citti, James Edward (creator)
Sandine, William E. (advisor)
Date Issued 1965-05-14 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1965
Abstract The public health and economic significance of rapid acid production
by lactic streptococci in controlled dairy fermentations is well
known. However, the fast acid-producing characteristic of these organisms
is not stable, and cultures of fast organisms have been shown
to contain slow cells. These studies were carried out to characterize
slow and fast acid-producing cells isolated from Streptococcus lactis.
Since growth and acid production by lactic streptococci are dependent
on their ability to metabolize lactose, the enzymes β-galactosidase,
which hydrolyizes lactose, and galactoside-permease, which is responsible
for the entry and intracellular accumulation of lactose,
were also studied.
From Streptococcus lactis C2, a fast strain which produced sufficient
acid to coagulate sterile nonfat milk in 18 hours at 21 C, a
slow mutant was isolated which required incubation for at least 48
hours to effect coagulation. Nonfat milk cultures of these two
organisms were compared to find causes for the reduced acid production
by the slow strain. These two bacteria had the same generation
time (1.4 hours) in the exponential growth phase, and produced the
same amount of acid per cell. The average viable population of the
fast culture after 18 hours at 21 C, however, was about four times as
great as the slow. Also, the fast culture was four times more proteolytic in nonfat milk than the slow. The slow organism appeared to
have lost its capacity to synthesize proteolytic enzymes. Tryptic and
pancreatic hydroysates of casein stimulated acid production in milk
by the slow and fast strains; acid hydrolyized casein was not an effective
stimulant. There was, therefore, a direct relationship between
available nitrogen, in the form of peptides, and total growth and
acid production in milk. Acid development in milk by the fast strain
was also enhanced by adenine, hypoxanthine, adenosine, or inosine.
Therefore, there appeared also to be a relationship between the synthesis
of proteolytic enzymes in the fast strain and the availability of
purine bases or nucleosides. The slow strain, however, having lost
its ability to synthesize proteolytic enzymes, derived no benefit from
these nucleic acid derivatives.
Synthesis of β-galactosidase by several strains of lactic streptococci
was induced by lactose. The rate of hydrolysis of orthonitrophenyl-β-D-galactopyranoside was used to measure enzyme activity.
The enzyme of all but one strain was unstable when whole cells were sonicated or treated with toluene; the enzyme of one strain,
Streptococcus lactis 7962, was stable to these treatments, which resulted
in at least a five-fold increase in activity over that found in
whole cells. The optimal assay conditions for toluene-treated cells
of this strain were 37 C and pH 7.0 in sodium phosphate buffer.
Lactose was the most effective inducer of enzyme synthesis. Methyl-β-D-thiogalactopyranoside, isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactopyranoside,
and galactose were also inducers of the enzyme, but were not as effective
as lactose. Melibiose, maltose, calcium lactobionate, and
glucose were poor inducers of enzyme synthesis. Exogenously supplied
glucose repressed induced β-galactosidase synthesis; galactose
only slightly inhibited induced enzyme synthesis.
Lactose-C¹⁴ uptake by S. lactis 7962 was mediated by a β-galactoside-permease. Synthesis of this enzyme was induced by lactose.
Maltose induced synthesis of this enzyme, but less effectively
than lactose. Glucose was not an inducer. Glucose also repressed
synthesis of induced β-galactoside-permease. The means of control
of induced β-galactosidase and β-galactoside-permease synthesis in
S. lactis was similar to that in Escherichia coli.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Galactosidase
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/48122

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