Differentiation of Rhizobium japonicum, III. Inhibition of nitrogenase derepression by chloramphenicol and rifampicin concentrations, not inhibiting growth. 1978

D Werner

Development of nitrogenase (40--140 nmol C2H4.mg protein-1.h-1) in Rhizobium japonicum 61-A-101 after transfer to special culture conditions (medium 20 P, 2% O2, 10% CO2, 88% N2 in the gas phase) is inhibited by chloramphenicol (6 X 10(-4)--10(-3) M) and by rifampicin (10(-5) M). These concentrations do not inhibit the slow growth of the cells under these conditions with a doubling time of the cell protein and living cell number of 3--5 d. Nitrogenase activity of previously derepressed cells is not inhibited by chloramphenicol. Growth of the cells under air in yeast extract-mannitol-glycerol medium (8 h doubling time) is affected significantly more by chloramphenicol (2.5 X 10(-4) M) than growth under nitrogenase derepressed culture conditions.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007700 Kinetics The rate dynamics in chemical or physical systems.
D009591 Nitrogenase An enzyme system that catalyzes the fixing of nitrogen in soil bacteria and blue-green algae (CYANOBACTERIA). EC 1.18.6.1. Dinitrogenase,Vanadium Nitrogenase,Nitrogenase, Vanadium
D002701 Chloramphenicol An antibiotic first isolated from cultures of Streptomyces venequelae in 1947 but now produced synthetically. It has a relatively simple structure and was the first broad-spectrum antibiotic to be discovered. It acts by interfering with bacterial protein synthesis and is mainly bacteriostatic. (From Martindale, The Extra Pharmacopoeia, 29th ed, p106) Cloranfenicol,Kloramfenikol,Levomycetin,Amphenicol,Amphenicols,Chlornitromycin,Chlorocid,Chloromycetin,Detreomycin,Ophthochlor,Syntomycin
D004794 Enzyme Repression The interference in synthesis of an enzyme due to the elevated level of an effector substance, usually a metabolite, whose presence would cause depression of the gene responsible for enzyme synthesis. Repression, Enzyme
D012231 Rhizobium A genus of gram-negative, aerobic, rod-shaped bacteria that activate PLANT ROOT NODULATION in leguminous plants. Members of this genus are nitrogen-fixing and common soil inhabitants.
D012293 Rifampin A semisynthetic antibiotic produced from Streptomyces mediterranei. It has a broad antibacterial spectrum, including activity against several forms of Mycobacterium. In susceptible organisms it inhibits DNA-dependent RNA polymerase activity by forming a stable complex with the enzyme. It thus suppresses the initiation of RNA synthesis. Rifampin is bactericidal, and acts on both intracellular and extracellular organisms. (From Gilman et al., Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 9th ed, p1160) Rifampicin,Benemycin,Rifadin,Rimactan,Rimactane,Tubocin
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