Title: Cerulenin resistance in a cerulenin-producing fungus
Abstract: Cerulenin, an antifungal antibiotic isolated from a culture filtrate of Cephalosporium caerulens, is a potent inhibitor of fatty acid synthetase systems. This antibiotic specifically blocks the activity of β-ketoacyl thioester synthetase (condensing enzyme). The mechanism of the resistance of C. caerulens to cerulenin was investigated. The rate of growth in medium containing up to 100 gmg/ml cerulenin was as rapid as that in cerulenin-free medium. At a cerulenin concentration of 300 μg/ml, the rate of growth was still more than half that of the control. The addition of cerulenin (200 μg/ml) to a culture of growing cells has almost no effect on the incorporation of [14C]acetate into cellular lipids. Fatty acid synthetase was purified from C. caerulens to homogeneity. Properties of this fatty acid synthetase were almost the same as those of yeast fatty acid synthetase except for the sensitivity to cerulenin. C. caerulens synthetase is much less sensitive to cerulenin than fatty acid synthetases from other sources. These findings suggested that the insensitivity of C. caerulens fatty acid synthetase plays an important role in the cerulenin resistance of this fungus.
Publication Year: 1979
Publication Date: 1979-10-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref', 'pubmed']
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 32
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