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Staphylococcus aureus Does Not Synthesize Arginine from Proline under Physiological Conditions

Bohyun Jeong, Majid Ali Shah, Eunjung Roh, Kyeongkyu Kim, Indal Park, Taeok Bae

2022Journal of Bacteriology16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile Gram-positive human pathogen infecting various human organs. The bacterium's versatility is partly due to efficient metabolic regulation via the carbon catabolite repression system (CCR). S. aureus is known to interconvert proline and arginine, and CCR represses the synthesis of both amino acids. However, when CCR is released by a nonpreferred carbon source, S. aureus can synthesize proline but not arginine. In this study, we show that, in S. aureus, the intracellular concentration of pyrroline-5-carboxylate (P5C), the degradation product of proline and the substrate of proline synthesis, is too low to synthesize arginine from proline. These results call into question the notion that S. aureus synthesizes arginine from proline.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyStaphylococcus aureusArginineMicrobiologyProlineStaphylococcusStaphylococcal infectionsBiochemistryBacteriaAmino acidGeneticsRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsBiochemical and Molecular ResearchEnzyme Structure and Function
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