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Volume 65,
Issue 3,
1971
Volume 65, Issue 3, 1971
- Biochemistry
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The Metabolic Stability of Carbohydrates in Walls of Hyphae of Aspergillus clavatus
More LessSUMMARY: The metabolic stability of carbohydrates in walls of hyphae of Aspergillus clavatus was investigated through measurements of mycelial isotope distribution from [U14C]glucose and the 3H/14C ratios of re-isolated monosaccharides, when the organism was grown on labelled glucose as sole carbon source. The results suggest that glucose and glucosamine became metabolically inert once they had been incorporated into the wall polymers, and that the biosynthesis of glucosamine and its incorporation into the cell wall as N-acetyl-glucosamine were direct processes not subject to metabolic randomization at the precursor level.
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Purification and Properties of Endopolygalacturonase from Ganoderma lucidum
More LessSUMMARY: The enzyme endopolygalacturonase secreted by the fungus Ganoderma lucidum was purified by a three-step procedure until pectin methylesterase was no longer detectable. The endopolygalacturonase activity was inhibited by divalent metal ions. The enzyme had a peak of activity at pH 5.4 and two temperature optima: one at 50° and the other at 70°.
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Electron Transport in Phosphorylating Mitochondria from Tetrahymena pyriformis Strain ST
More LessSUMMARY: Mitochondria isolated from Tetrahymena pyriformis carried out oxidative phosphorylation with succinate and 2-oxoglutarate as substrates. Electron transport was inhibited by rotenone, piericidin A, antimycin A and cyanide. Succinate-cytochrome c and ferricyanide oxidoreductases were antimycin A sensitive. NADH-cytochrome c and ferricyanide oxidoreductases were only partially inhibited by high concentrations of rotenone. Externally added NADH gave no oxygen uptake in the absence of artificial electron acceptors. The mitochondria contained haems a, c and protohaem, and difference spectra revealed the presence of cytochromes b, c, c1 and a pigment with an extinction maximum at 620 nm. Steady-state and kinetic measurements of cytochrome components were made. Several kinetically distinct flavoprotein components were present. Kinetic measurements suggested that the reduced 620 nm. component reacted sufficiently rapidly with molecular oxygen to have been the terminal oxidase.
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- Development And Structure
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Induction of Yeastlike Development in Aspergillus parasiticus
More LessSUMMARY: Vegetative development of Aspergillus parasiticus may follow either one of two patterns of morphogenesis (hyphal-yeastlike dimorphism) depending upon the presence or absence of manganese ions in the culture medium. The addition of exogenous amino acids, vitamins and other trace metals had no significant effect upon morphogenetic development or aflatoxin B1 synthesis. The yeastlike forms are capable of continuous aflatoxin B1 synthesis under non-proliferating conditions. Varying the Mn2+ concentration from 7.3 × 10−4 to 7.3 × 10−3 mM causes a morphological change from yeastlike to hyphal development in a synthetic medium. The yeastlike forms are stable and resist osmotic shock.
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- Ecology
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Extracellular Polysaccharides of Rhizobium Strains Associated with Lotus Species
More LessSUMMARY: The monosaccharide composition of extracellular polysaccharides isolated from 101 strains of rhizobia, principally associated with the lotus group of legumes, have been examined. Polysaccharides from 43 fast-growing, acid-producing strains (17 lotus) gave a substantially consistent monosaccharide pattern of glucose, uronic acid and galactose with little or no mannose. Polysaccharides from lucerne and goat's rue strains (four) of this class of rhizobia differed in that they contained almost no uronic acid. Fifty-eight slow-growing, non-acid-producing strains (52 lotus) were also investigated. On centrifuging, 36 of them gave a mucilagenous clot of cells and polysaccharide and required dilute alkali treatment to separate the polysaccharide. No polysaccharide was produced by four non-acid-producing strains. Polysaccharides from the non-acid-producing rhizobia gave much more complex monosaccharide patterns. Glucose and mannose were nearly always present in large amounts; galactose and uronic acid were frequently absent while fucose, rhamnose and three unidentified sugars were occasionally present. Electron micrograph studies showed extracellular material which, in strains giving a clot, was not removed by centrifuging. Monosaccharide composition of the polysaccharides appeared to be correlated with the division into acid-and non-acid-producing classes of rhizobia. Both classes of rhizobial strains associated with Lotus species conformed to this correlation apart from one strain which was intermediate.
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The Ecology of Saprolegniaceae in Lentic and Littoral Muds with a General Theory of Fungi in the Lake Ecosystem
More LessSUMMARY: The occurrence and distribution of Saprolegniaceae in and around Marion Lake, British Columbia, Canada, has been investigated by single-core samples and transects in order to determine the principal sites of activity of these fungi. The lentic muds under 1 m. or more of water are generally very poor both in number of species and abundance. The marginal lentic muds are richer but reflect the flora of the emergent littoral muds. It is probable that many of the lentic mud records are for alien spores originating either from the open water community or the emergent littoral flora. These findings are discussed in relation to a general theory of fungi in the lake ecosystem. The majority of Saprolegniaceae are to be regarded as fungi of the emergent littoral. The distinctive acidophile community has again been recognized.
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A Uninucleate Wheat-infecting Strain of the Stem Rust Fungus Isolated from Axenic Cultures
More LessSUMMARY: Four monokaryotic axenic cultures derived from a dikaryotic isolate of Puccinia graminis tritici race 126-ANZ-6, 7 were tested for pathogenicity on wheat leaves. Only two rust cultures were pathogenic, one of which was propagated on wheat for six uredial generations. Cytological examination showed that cells of this culture were uninucleate and apparently haploid. This isolate may have arisen by somatic recombination.
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- Genetics And Molecular Biology
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Regulation and Characterization of Acid and Alkaline Phosphatase in Yeast
More LessSUMMARY: The activity of acid and alkaline phosphatase in baker's yeast is de-repressed when the organisms are starved of phosphate. Mutants lacking phosphatase activity and mutants with constitutive phosphatase synthesis were isolated. In all of them acid and alkaline phosphatases were affected simultaneously. Nevertheless, characterization of these two enzymes by sensitivity to inhibition by orthophosphate, temperature inactivation, proteolytic digestion and cation dependence showed that they were clearly distinct. It is suggested that these two enzymes share a common genetic and structural component.
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Cell Division in a Mutant of Salmonella typhimurium which is Temperature-sensitive for DNA Synthesis
More LessSUMMARY: In Salmonella typhimurium PG154 the time taken for a round of DNA replication (C) at 37° is approximately 48 min. The time between the end of a round of DNA replication and the following cell division (D) is approximately 25 min. at 37°. In a temperature-sensitive mutant of S. typhimurium defective in the initiation of DNA synthesis, cell division at the restrictive temperature occurs at an approximately normal rate for 75 min., suggesting that C+D = 75 min.; the cells then elongate and form filaments. After about a further 1 h. in minimal medium at 38° cell division recommences at the ends of the filaments to form small cells. Filaments can divide at each end to produce more than one small cell. Once formed, small cells do not grow further. They do not synthesize DNA, RNA or protein and contain little DNA. Complete inhibition of DNA synthesis at the time of the shift stops cell division within about D min. and almost completely stops the production of small cells. A period of growth at 38° before the inhibition of DNA synthesis allows more division and the production of an almost normal number of small cells. Both the early divisions and the production of small cells are considered to be the result of the termination of rounds of DNA replication in the absence of new initiations.
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Detection of Resistance Factors in Fish Pathogen Aeromonas liquefaciens
More LessSUMMARY: Thirty-nine out of 72 drug-resistant strains of Aeromonas liquefaciens isolated from cultured fish and soft-shelled turtles (Trionyx sinensis japonicus) in various districts of Japan carried transferable drug resistance factors. The fish included eel (Anguilla japonica), carp (Cyprinus carpio), ayu (Plecoglossus altivelis) and goldfish (Carassius auratus). The most common type of resistance factors had the markers of resistance to sulphanilamide and tetracycline and all belonged to the fi-type. Transferable drug resistance was not found in any of 12 strains of A. liquefaciens isolated from wild eels. The high incidence of resistance factors in A. liquefaciens from cultured fish is assumed to be due to the selective pressure exerted by chemotherapeutics used in fish culturing.
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- Physiology And Growth
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The Effect of Oxygen Tension in the Medium on the Morphology and Growth Kinetics of Aspergillus nidulans
More LessSUMMARY: In glucose-limited continuous-flow cultures of Aspergillus nidulans, the mean length of hyphal segments and the degree of branching were independent of the dissolved oxygen tension. However, at dissolved oxygen tensions below 18 mmHg a few large isodiametric cells were observed, and at oxygen tensions below 3.5 mmHg free conidia appeared in the medium (although differentiated conidiophores were not produced).
The critical oxygen tension for Aspergillus nidulans, cultured at 30° in air-saturated glucose-limited medium (dilution rate (D) = 0.05 h.−1), was 7 mmHg, which suggested that after growth at air saturation the mould could grow without adaptation at oxygen tensions in the medium as low as 7 mmHg. However, when the oxygen tension of air-saturated steady-state cultures of the mould was lowered to 30 mmHg, or from 30 mmHg to a lesser oxygen tension, a period of adaptation was necessary before the mould culture could again achieve steady-state growth. This adaptation to lower oxygen tensions involved an increased cellular oxidative capacity and a lowered critical oxygen tension for growth. This latter result was indicative of an increased synthesis of the terminal oxidase at low oxygen tensions in the medium.
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Effect of Incubation with Bacterial Extract on the Survival of X-irradiated Bacteria
More LessSUMMARY: X-irradiated Escherichia coli B, a filament-forming strain, showed improved survival of X-rays after treatment with its own extract, either in liquid or on solid media. Extract-promoted recovery was not shown by a non-filament-forming strain E. coli Bs-1. We failed to observe liquid holding recovery of X-irradiated bacteria in the absence of extract. Most experiments were performed in liquid medium where the increased number of survivors depended on the incubation period and the extract concentration. In about 30 min. the increase reached a saturation value; the maximum number of survivors was obtained using a certain (optimal) concentration of extract which was then employed in all subsequent experiments. The activity of the extract was completely destroyed by heating at 52° for 40 min. No activity was detected in the DNA, RNA or ribosomal fractions of the extract. The soluble remainder, however, was fully active, suggesting that soluble protein was the active principle.
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- Society For General Microbiology: Proceedings
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- Short Communications
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- Taxonomy
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Electrophoresis of Glucose-6-phosphate Dehydrogenase, Cell Wall Composition and the Taxonomy of Heterofermentative Lactobacilli
More LessSUMMARY: Thirty-one strains of heterofermentative lactobacilli have been examined by routine physiological tests, starch-gel electrophoresis of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and by qualitative analysis of cell wall amino acids. Two major subdivisions are apparent, corresponding to Lactobacillus fermenti with L. cellobiosus on one hand, and L. brevis with L. buchneri and L. viridescens on the other.
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