Abstract
Pseudomonas putida mt-2(pWWO) exhibited a carbon starvation response in the presence of toluene, a utilizable carbon source. When growth-supporting (4-mg/liter), inhibitory (130-mg/liter), and lethal (267-mg/ liter) levels of toluene were provided as the sole carbon source, P. putida responded by rapidly inhibiting protein synthesis and by producing 26 new proteins, 22 of which overlapped with those induced by carbon starvation. P. putida produced the same proteins when cultures were starved by depleting their carbon source or were downshifted into a carbon-free medium. Carbon supplementation of toluene-exposed cells suppressed the production of the toluene-induced proteins. The level of toluene provided as the sole carbon source influenced the length of time that this response was observed. Following 1.5 to 3 h in a basal salts medium with 4 mg of toluene per liter, protein synthesis increased, the production of the majority of the toluene-induced proteins ceased, and the cells began to grow. In cells provided with 130 mg of toluene per liter, protein synthesis remained inhibited over a 6.5-h experimental period. At this concentration, the production of 15 toluene-induced proteins was prolonged, with nine still detectable in the profiles at 6.5 h. In cells provided with 267 mg of toluene per liter, there was a rapid loss of viability and the toluene-induced proteins were detected prior to death. In cells provided with 4 mg of toluene per liter, the carbon starvation response is transient and likely reflects a period of induction and/or adaptation prior to growth on toluene. At the toluene concentrations which inhibit growth, P. putida exhibits a prolonged starvation response despite the presence of an excess of a utilizable carbon source.