The inability of lactic acid bacteria to synthesize many of the amino acids required for protein synthesis necessitates the active functioning of a proteolytic system in those environments where protein constitutes the main nitrogen source. Biochemical and genetic analysis of the pathway by which exogenous proteins supply essential amino acids for growth has been one of the most actively investigated aspects of the metabolism of lactic acid bacteria especially in those species which are of importance in the dairy industry, such as the lactococci. Much information has now been accumulated on individual components of the proteolytic pathway in lactococci, namely, the cell envelope proteinase(s), a range of peptidases and the amino acid and peptide transport systems of the cell membrane. Possible models of the proteolytic system in lactococci can be proposed but there are still many unresolved questions concerning the operation of the pathway in vivo. This review will examine current knowledge and outstanding problems regarding the proteolytic system in lactococci and also the extent to which the lactococcal system provides a model for understanding proteolysis in other groups of lactic acid bacteria.
The synthesis of proteolytic enzymes by starter bacteria is a fundamental requirement for rapid acid production in milk fermentations. These organisms possess a number of proteinases and peptidases which act in concert to hydrolyse milk protein to the free amino acids required for cell growth. The same enzymes have an important secondary role in cheese ripening contributing to rheological and organoleptic changes. A highly complex mixture of both enzymes and substrates is present. The strategic location of these enzymes, in the cell wall and membrane structures and in the cytoplasm, governs enzyme access to the substrates and is central to both roles. An overview of the above topics is presented.
L-Arginine, an amino acid found in significant quantities in grape juice and wine, is known to be catabolized by some wine lactic acid bacteria. The correlation between the occurrence of arginine deiminase pathway enzymes and the ability to catabolize arginine was examined in this study. The activities of the three arginine deiminase pathway enzymes, arginine deiminase, ornithine transcarbamylase, and carbamate kinase, were measured in cell extracts of 35 strains of wine lactic acid bacteria. These enzymes were present in all heterofermentative lactobacilli and most leuconostocs but were absent in all the homofermentative lactobacilli and pediococci examined. There was a good correlation among arginine degradation, formation of ammonia and citrulline, and the occurrence of arginine deiminase pathway enzymes. Urea was not detected during arginine degradation, suggesting that the catabolism of arginine did not proceed via the arginase-catalyzed reaction, as has been suggested in some earlier studies. Detection of ammonia with Nessler's reagent was shown to be a simple, rapid test to assess the ability of wine lactic acid bacteria to degrade arginine, although in media containing relatively high concentrations (>0.5%) of fructose, ammonia formation is inhibited.
The L-(+)-lactate dehydrogenase (L-lactate:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.27) ofStreptococcus lactis C10, like that of other streptococci, was activated by fructose 1,6-diphosphate (FDP). The enzyme showed some activity in the absence of FDP, with a pH optimum of 8.2; FDP decreased the K,,, for both pyruvate and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and shifted the pH optimum to 6.9. Enzyme activity showed a hyperbolic response to both NADH and pyruvate in all the buffers tried except phosphate buffer, in which the response to increasing NADH was sigmoidal. The FDP concentration required for half-maximal velocity (FDP0 .I) was markedly influenced by the nature of the assay buffer used. Thus the FDPO.5, was 0.002 mM in 90 mM triethanolamine buffer, 0.2 mM in 90 mM tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethanemaleate buffer, and 4.4 mM in 90 mM phosphate buffer. Phosphate inhibition of FDP binding is not a general property of streptococcal lactate dehydrogenase, since the FDPO.,v value for S. faecalis 8043 lactate dehydrogenase was not increased by phosphate. The S. faecalis and S. lactis lactate dehydrogenases also differed in that Mn2+ enhanced FDP binding in S. faecalis but had no effect on the S. lactis dehydrogenase. The FDP concentration (12 to 15 mM) found in S. lactis cells during logarithmic growth on a high-carbohydrate (3% lactose) medium would be adequate to give almost complete activation of the lactate dehydrogenase even if the high FDPO.5 value found in 90 mM phosphate were similar to the FDP requirement in vivo.
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