Effects of lysine analogs on Penicillium chrysogenum. 1977

C G Friedrich, and A L Demain

Compounds structurally related to lysine were tested against Penicillium chrysogenum Wis. 54-1255 for inhibition of growth, sporulation, and penicillin formation. This strain is relatively resistant to lysine analogs. The compounds that were the more active inhibitors of growth and whose activities were reversed by L-lysine were diaminohexynoic acid, N-epsilon-methyllysine, N-alpha-methyllysine, and diaminopimelic acid. These four compounds also inhibited sporulation, which was more sensitive to inhibition than growth was. Analogs strongly inhibiting benzyl-penicillin formation by resting mycelia were diaminohexynoic acid and N-epsilon-methyllysine. The action of the most active analog (diaminohexynoic acid) on penicillin synthesis was reversed by DL-alpha-aminoadipic acid.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008239 Lysine An essential amino acid. It is often added to animal feed. Enisyl,L-Lysine,Lysine Acetate,Lysine Hydrochloride,Acetate, Lysine,L Lysine
D010406 Penicillins A group of antibiotics that contain 6-aminopenicillanic acid with a side chain attached to the 6-amino group. The penicillin nucleus is the chief structural requirement for biological activity. The side-chain structure determines many of the antibacterial and pharmacological characteristics. (Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 8th ed, p1065) Antibiotics, Penicillin,Penicillin,Penicillin Antibiotics
D010407 Penicillium A mitosporic Trichocomaceae fungal genus that develops fruiting organs resembling a broom. When identified, teleomorphs include EUPENICILLIUM and TALAROMYCES. Several species (but especially PENICILLIUM CHRYSOGENUM) are sources of the antibiotic penicillin. Penicilliums
D010408 Penicillium chrysogenum A mitosporic fungal species used in the production of penicillin. Penicillium chrysogeum,Penicillium notatum
D004336 Drug Antagonism Phenomena and pharmaceutics of compounds that inhibit the function of agonists (DRUG AGONISM) and inverse agonists (DRUG INVERSE AGONISM) for a specific receptor. On their own, antagonists produce no effect by themselves to a receptor, and are said to have neither intrinsic activity nor efficacy. Antagonism, Drug,Antagonisms, Drug,Drug Antagonisms
D013172 Spores, Fungal Reproductive bodies produced by fungi. Conidia,Fungal Spores,Conidium,Fungal Spore,Spore, Fungal
D013237 Stereoisomerism The phenomenon whereby compounds whose molecules have the same number and kind of atoms and the same atomic arrangement, but differ in their spatial relationships. (From McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms, 5th ed) Molecular Stereochemistry,Stereoisomers,Stereochemistry, Molecular,Stereoisomer
D015074 2-Aminoadipic Acid A metabolite in the principal biochemical pathway of lysine. It antagonizes neuroexcitatory activity modulated by the glutamate receptor, N-METHYL-D-ASPARTATE; (NMDA). alpha-Aminoadipic Acid,2 Aminoadipic Acid,2-Aminohexanedioic Acid,2 Aminohexanedioic Acid,Acid, 2 Aminoadipic,Acid, 2-Aminoadipic,Acid, 2-Aminohexanedioic,Acid, alpha-Aminoadipic,Aminoadipic Acid, 2,alpha Aminoadipic Acid

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