RT Journal Article SR Electronic(1) A1 SHIH, J. C. H. A1 Rozo, MARTHA L. A1 WRIGHT, L. D. A1 Mccormick, D. B.YR 1975 T1 Characterization of the Growth of Pseudomonas Putida LP on Lipoate and its Analogues: Transport, Oxidation, Sulphur Source, and Enzyme Induction JF Microbiology, VO 86 IS 2 SP 217 OP 227 DO https://doi.org/10.1099/00221287-86-2-217 PB Microbiology Society, SN 1465-2080, AB SUMMARY: Pseudomonas putida LP, which grows on lipoate, NH4NO3 and mineral salts, converts most of the organic substrate to bisnor-lipoate (1,2-dithiolane-3-propanoic acid) and acetyl-CoA. d-, l-, or dl-lipoate serve equally well as carbon and sulphur sources. There was no growth on or bacterial oxidation of the chemically synthesized bisnor- or tetranor-(1,2-dithiolane-3-carboxylic acid) chain-shortened analogues, but these, as well as lipoate, could supply the sulphur needed for growth when acetate was provided as the sole source of carbon. The uptake of lipoate by the bacterium is very slow and non-inducible, while the uptake of acetate is faster than octanoate. The oxidation of octanoate is more rapid and extensive than that of lipoate. Levels of acyl-CoA synthetase are not affected by the source of carbon, but activities of isocitrate lyase and malate synthase are higher when the cells are grown in acetate, octanoate or lipoate and lower when glucose is the carbon source. The glyoxylate cycle is induced to facilitate utilization of acetyl-CoA derived from lipoate, which is also degraded to water-soluble catabolites that yield the much smaller amount of sulphur required for growth., UL https://www.microbiologyresearch.org/content/journal/micro/10.1099/00221287-86-2-217