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Figure 9. A typical transport assay carried out
in the absence (·) or presence (o)
of D-lactate (left) and the demonstration that D-lactate is converted
stoichiometrically into pyruvate (right). The discovery that D-lactate is by
far the most effective energy source for active transport of a wide variety
of substrates in E. coli membrane vesicles took about 15 years, was totally
fortuitous and broke open the field (Left; Control, no energy source). In
addition to the fact that D-lactate is converted stoichiometrically to
pyruvate (Right; Total, lactate + pyruvate), all of the accumulated
substrate can be recovered from the vesicles in unmodified form which is
consistent with the observations showing that addition of excess
non-radioactive substrate (▲) or
inhibitors such as dinitrophenol (DNP;
∆) causes rapid release of accumulated radiolabeled lactose (Left).
Oxygen and an intact membrane-embedded electron transfer chain are required.
In order to observe accumulation of lactose or other galactosides, the
parent cells must be induced for the synthesis of lactose permease from the
lacY gene, the second structural gene in the lac operon. Other transport
systems such as those for many amino acids are constitutive. |