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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Dec 1995, 4334-4342, Vol 61, No. 12
C Lambert, A Erdmann, M Eikmanns and R Kramer
Corynebacterium glutamicum can be triggered to excrete glutamate by the
addition of local anesthetics, particularly tetracaine. Glutamate efflux is
a carrier-mediated process and not due to unspecific membrane
permeabilization. The concentration of local anesthetics triggering optimum
excretion depended on the type of anesthetic and varied, ranging from 0.1
(chlorpromazine), 1.3 (tetracaine), and 2.6 mM (butacaine) to 15 mM
(benzocaine), in close resemblance to the order of efficiency in anesthetic
effect. The onset of glutamate excretion was not correlated to a change in
the viscosity or fluidity of the membrane, as measured by electron spin
resonance spectroscopy, nor was it related to an action of the anesthetic
as an uncoupler. Tetracaine-triggered glutamate excretion was sensitive to
changes in the transmembrane osmotic gradient, although an osmotic gradient
alone could not trigger glutamate excretion. Tetracaine-triggered glutamate
efflux was inhibited by an external rise in osmolality and stimulated by a
corresponding decrease. The effects of osmotic gradients and the addition
of local anesthetics on glutamate excretion were mutually exchangeable,
indicating similar modes of action. We suggest that this common principle
is a change in the membrane strain. C. glutamicum cells which excrete
glutamate without manipulation of the membrane, e.g., biotin-limited cells
or glutamate production mutants, were not stimulated by the addition of
tetracaine.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Triggering Glutamate Excretion in Corynebacterium glutamicum by Modulating the Membrane State with Local Anesthetics and Osmotic Gradients
Institut fur Biotechnologie 1, Forschungszentrum Julich, GmbH, 52425 Julich, Germany
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