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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

The L-arabinose-resistance test with Salmonella typhimurium strain SV3 selects forward mutations at several ara genes.

A new assay has been described for mutagenicity testing using an L-arabinose-sensitive strain of Salmonella typhimurium. The test strain SV3 and several L-arabinose-resistant mutants selected therefrom are characterized in the present study by 3 different criteria: inhibition of growth by L-arabinose, accumulation of keto-sugars, and activities of the enzymes involved in L-arabinose catabolism. Strain SV3 (ara-531) shows high levels of inducible L-arabinose isomerase (EC 5.3.1.4) and L-ribulokinase (EC 2.7.1.16) activities, but is deficient in L-ribulose-5-phosphate 4-epimerase (EC 5.1.3.4), the enzyme encoded in Escherichia coli by gene D in the araBAD operon. Addition of L-arabinose to SV3 growing in glycerol or casamino acids stops growth. D-Glucose only partially reverses this inhibition. Reversion of the ara-531 mutation restores different levels of epimerase activity and resistance to L-arabinose. However, the great majority of the L-arabinose-resistant mutants do not utilize L-arabinose. The physiological and enzymatic properties of these L-arabinose non-utilizing mutants suggest that L-arabinose resistance is due to forward mutations in at least 3 other genes, araA, araB and araC, blocking steps prior to L-ribulose 5-phosphate accumulation.[1]

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