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Dive into the research topics where Juke S. Lolkema is active.

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Featured researches published by Juke S. Lolkema.


Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 1995

Role of Scalar Protons in Metabolic Energy Generation in Lactic Acid Bacteria

Juke S. Lolkema; Berend Poolman; Wn Konings

Lactic acid bacteria are able to generate a protonmotive force across the cytoplasmic membrane by various metabolic conversions without involvement of substrate level phosphorylation or proton pump activity. Weak acids like malate and citrate are taken up in an electrogenic process in which net negative charge is translocated into the cell thereby generating a membrane potential. The uptake is either an exchange process with a metabolic end-product (precursor/ product exchange) or a uniporter mechanism. Subsequent metabolism of the internalized substrate drives uptake and results in the generation of a pH gradient due to the consumption of scalar protons. The generation of the membrane potential and the pH gradient involve separate steps in the pathway. Here it is shown that they are nevertheless coupled. Analysis of the pH gradient that is formed during malolactic fermentation and citrate fermentation shows that a pH gradient, inside alkaline, is formed only when the uptake system forms a membrane potential, inside negative. These secondary metabolic energy generating systems form a pmf that consists of both a membrane potential and a pH gradient, just like primary proton pumps do. It is concluded that the generation of a pH gradient, inside alkaline, upon the addition of a weak acid to cells is diagnostic for an electrogenic uptake mechanism translocating negative charge with the weak acid.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2000

Catabolite repression and induction of the Mg2+-citrate transporter CitM of Bacillus subtilis

Jessica B. Warner; Bastiaan P. Krom; Christian Magni; Wil N. Konings; Juke S. Lolkema

In Bacillus subtilis the citM gene encodes the Mg(2+)-citrate transporter. A target site for carbon catabolite repression (cre site) is located upstream of citM. Fusions of the citM promoter region, including the cre sequence, to the beta-galactosidase reporter gene were constructed and integrated into the amyE site of B. subtilis to study catabolic effects on citM expression. In parallel with beta-galactosidase activity, the uptake of Ni(2+)-citrate in whole cells was measured to correlate citM promoter activity with the enzymatic activity of the CitM protein. In minimal media, CitM was only expressed when citrate was present. The presence of glucose in the medium completely repressed citM expression; repression was also observed in media containing glycerol, inositol, or succinate-glutamate. Studies with B. subtilis mutants defective in the catabolite repression components HPr, Crh, and CcpA showed that the repression exerted by all these medium components was mediated via the carbon catabolite repression system. During growth on inositol and succinate, the presence of glutamate strongly potentiated the repression of citM expression by glucose. A reasonable correlation between citM promoter activity and CitM transport activity was observed in this study, indicating that the Mg(2+)-citrate uptake activity of B. subtilis is mainly regulated at the transcriptional level.


Microbiology | 2002

Growth of Bacillus subtilis on citrate and isocitrate is supported by the Mg2+-citrate transporter CitM.

Jessica B. Warner; Juke S. Lolkema

Bacillus subtilis 168 was assayed for its growth on tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediates and related compounds as the sole carbon sources. Growth of the organism was supported by citrate, D-isocitrate, succinate, fumarate and L-malate, whereas no growth was observed in the presence of cis-aconitate,2-oxoglutarate, D-malate, oxaloacetate and tricarballylate. Growth of the organism on the tricarboxylates citrate and D-isocitrate required the presence of functional CitM, an Mg(2+)-citrate transporter, whereas its growth on succinate, fumarate and L-malate appeared to be CitM-independent. Interestingly, the naturally occurring enantiomer D-isocitrate was favoured over L-isocitrate by the organism. Like citrate, D-isocitrate was shown to be an inducer of citM expression in B. subtilis. The addition of 1 mM Mg(2+) to the growth medium improved growth of the organism on both citrate and D-isocitrate, suggesting that D-isocitrate was taken up by CitM in complex with divalent metal ions. Subsequently, the ability of CitM to transport D-isocitrate was demonstrated by competition experiments and by heterologous exchange in right-side-out membrane vesicles prepared from E. coli cells expressing citM. None of the other TCA cycle intermediates and related compounds tested were recognized by CitM. Uptake experiments using radioactive (63)Ni(2+) provided direct evidence that D-isocitrate is transported in complex with divalent metal ions.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2003

A Crh‐specific function in carbon catabolite repression in Bacillus subtilis

Jessica B. Warner; Juke S. Lolkema

Carbon catabolite repression in Bacillus subtilis is mediated by phosphorylation of the phosphoenolpyruvate:carbohydrate phosphotransferase system intermediate HPr at a serine residue catalyzed by HPr kinase. The orthologous protein Crh functions in a similar way, but, unlike HPr, it is not functional in carbohydrate uptake. A specific function for Crh is not known. The role of HPr and Crh in repressing the citM gene encoding the Mg(2+)-citrate transporter was investigated during growth of B. subtilis on different carbon sources. In glucose minimal medium, full repression was supported by both HPr and Crh. Strains deficient in Crh or the regulatory function of HPr revealed the same repression as the wild-type strain. In contrast, in a medium containing succinate and glutamate, repression was specifically mediated via Crh. Repression was relieved in the Crh-deficient strain, but still present in the HPr mutant strain. The data are the first demonstration of a Crh-specific function in B. subtilis and suggest a role for Crh in regulation of expression during growth on substrates other than carbohydrates.


Archives of Microbiology | 2002

Impact of the Mg2+-citrate transporter CitM on heavy metal toxicity in Bacillus subtilis

Bastiaan P. Krom; Henry Huttinga; Jessica B. Warner; Juke S. Lolkema

Abstract.Bacillus subtilis possesses a secondary transporter, CitM, that is specific for the complex of citrate and Mg2+ but is also capable of transporting citrate in complex with the heavy metal ions Zn2+, Ni2+ and Co2+. We report on the impact of CitM activity on the toxicity of Zn2+, Ni2+ and Co2+ in B. subtilis. In a citM deletion mutant or under conditions in which CitM is not expressed, the toxic effects of the metals were reduced by the presence of citrate in the medium. In contrast, the presence of citrate dramatically enhanced toxicity when the Mg2+-citrate transporter was present in the membrane. It is demonstrated that the complex of Ni2+ and citrate is transported into the cell and that the uptake is responsible for the enhanced toxicity. At toxic concentrations of the metal ions, the cultures adapted by developing tolerance against these ions. Tolerant cells isolated by exposure to one of the metal ions remained tolerant after growth in the absence of toxic metal ions and were cross-tolerant against the other two toxic ions. Tolerant strains were shown to contain point mutations in the citM gene, which resulted in premature termination of translation.


Microbiology | 2002

LacZ-promoter fusions: the effect of growth

Jessica B. Warner; Juke S. Lolkema

coding for β-galactosidase to the promoterregion of a structural gene is a frequently used technique to study the expression of the gene.The rate of transcription, inferred from the β-galactosidase activity of the cells, is equated to‘intrinsic promoter strength but, more importantly, also measures the action of


Journal of Bacteriology | 1996

Proton motive force generation by citrolactic fermentation in Leuconostoc mesenteroides.

Claire Marty-Teysset; Clara Posthuma; Juke S. Lolkema; Philippe Schmitt; Charles Divies; Wil N. Konings


Journal of Bacteriology | 1999

Mechanism of citrate metabolism in Lactococcus lactis: resistance against lactate toxicity at low pH.

Christian Magni; Diego de Mendoza; Wil N. Konings; Juke S. Lolkema


Journal of Bacteriology | 1996

The proton motive force generated in Leuconostoc oenos by L-malate fermentation.

M. Salema; Juke S. Lolkema; M.V. San Romão; M. C. Loureiro Dias


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 1998

Mechanism of the Citrate Transporters in Carbohydrate and Citrate Cometabolism in Lactococcus and Leuconostoc Species

Michael Bandell; M.E. Lhotte; Claire Marty-Teysset; A. Veyrat; H. Prévost; V. Dartois; Charles Diviès; Wn Konings; Juke S. Lolkema

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Christian Magni

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Diego de Mendoza

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Bastiaan P. Krom

Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam

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Wn Konings

University of Groningen

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