1. Bacterial transporters for sulfate and organosulfur compounds.
- Author
-
Kertesz MA
- Subjects
- ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters metabolism, Amino Acid Transport Systems metabolism, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Biological Transport, Protein Binding, Sulfatases chemistry, Sulfatases metabolism, Sulfates chemistry, Bacteria metabolism, Membrane Transport Proteins metabolism, Sulfates metabolism, Sulfur metabolism
- Abstract
Microorganisms require sulfur for growth, and obtain it either from inorganic sulfate or from organosulfur compounds such as sulfonates, sulfate esters, or sulfur-containing amino acids. Transport of sulfate into the cell is catalyzed either by ATP binding cassette (ABC)-type transporters (SulT family) or by major facilitator superfamily-type transporters (SulP family). By contrast, the sulfonate and sulfate ester transporters identified to date are all ABC-type systems, whose synthesis is tightly regulated by the sulfur supply to the cell, mediated by the CysB protein and other transcriptional regulators of the LysR-family.
- Published
- 2001
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