Q.54 In a bacterium, a mutation resulted in an increase of KS (substrate-specific constant) for ammonium
from 50 μM to 5000 μM without affecting μ max . The specific growth rate (μ) of the mutant growing
on 0.5 mM ammonium in the medium decreases by a factor of ________.
Introduction to KS Mutation Impact
In bacterial growth kinetics, a mutation raising the KS (substrate-specific constant) for ammonium from 50 μM to 5000 μM reduces affinity without altering μmax, slashing specific growth rate (μ) on 0.5 mM ammonium by a factor of 10 per Monod equation.
This CSIR NET-style problem tests Monod model application in microbial physiology.
Understanding KS reveals why mutants struggle at low substrate levels.
Monod Kinetics Basics
Bacterial growth follows the Monod equation: μ = μmax × [S] / (KS + [S]), where μ is the specific growth rate, μmax is unchanged, [S] is substrate concentration, and KS is the substrate-specific constant (half-saturation constant).
A higher KS reduces substrate affinity, lowering μ at fixed [S] since the denominator increases.
Here, ammonium [S] = 0.5 mM = 500 μM, original KS = 50 μM, mutant KS = 5000 μM.
Original Strain Calculation
For wild-type: μ / μmax = 500 / (50 + 500) = 500 / 550 ≈ 0.909.
Thus, μoriginal ≈ 0.909 μmax.
Growth occurs near maximum since [S] >> original KS.
Mutant Strain Calculation
For mutant: μ / μmax = 500 / (5000 + 500) = 500 / 5500 ≈ 0.091.
Thus, μmutant ≈ 0.091 μmax.
Growth slows as [S] << mutant KS, resembling substrate limitation.
Decrease Factor
The ratio μoriginal / μmutant = 0.909 / 0.091 = 10.
μ decreases by a factor of 10 exactly, since 550 / 55 = 10 and 5550 / 550 = 10.
No options provided, but answer fills numerical blank as 10.
Monod Equation Explained
The Monod equation μ = μmax × [S] / (KS + [S]) mirrors Michaelis-Menten kinetics for growth-limited substrates like ammonium.
KS signifies [S] yielding half μmax; low KS means high affinity.
At [S] = 500 μM, original strain nears μmax (90.9%), mutant hits 9.1%.
Step-by-Step Solution
Original: μ = μmax × 500/550 = 0.909 μmax.
Mutant: μ = μmax × 500/5500 = 0.091 μmax.
Factor: 0.909/0.091 = 10, exact due to 100-fold KS rise vs. fixed [S].
Biological Implications
- Higher KS mutants grow poorly at typical ammonium levels (e.g., 63-170 μM in chemostats), favoring wild-types in nature.
- Impacts bioremediation, wastewater treatment where ammonia-oxidizers compete.
- For CSIR NET, master via practice: compute μ ratios directly from parameters.


