| Literature DB >> 25310003 |
Zhiping Wang1, Feng Guo2, Lili Liu3, Tong Zhang2.
Abstract
Autotrophic CO2 fixation is the most important biotransformation process in the biosphere. Research focusing on the diversity and distribution of relevant autotrophs is significant to our comprehension of the biosphere. In this study, a draft genome of a bacterium from candidate phylum SBR1093 was reconstructed with the metagenome of an industrial activated sludge. Based on comparative genomics, this autotrophy may occur via a newly discovered carbon fixation path, the hydroxypropionate-hydroxybutyrate (HPHB) cycle, which was demonstrated in a previous work to be uniquely possessed by some genera from Archaea. This bacterium possesses all of the thirteen enzymes required for the HPHB cycle; these enzymes share 30∼50% identity with those in the autotrophic species of Archaea that undergo the HPHB cycle and 30∼80% identity with the corresponding enzymes of the mixotrophic species within Bradyrhizobiaceae. Thus, this bacterium might have an autotrophic growth mode in certain conditions. A phylogenetic analysis based on the 16S rRNA gene reveals that the phylotypes within candidate phylum SBR1093 are primarily clustered into 5 clades with a shallow branching pattern. This bacterium is clustered with phylotypes from organically contaminated environments, implying a demand for organics in heterotrophic metabolism. Considering the types of regulators, such as FnR, Fur, and ArsR, this bacterium might be a facultative aerobic mixotroph with potential multi-antibiotic and heavy metal resistances. This is the first report on Bacteria that may perform potential carbon fixation via the HPHB cycle, thus may expand our knowledge of the distribution and importance of the HPHB cycle in the biosphere.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25310003 PMCID: PMC4195664 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Genome binning of the dominant population with a plot of assembly contigs (based on coverage versus GC ratio).
The circles represent the contigs with the size of the square root of their length. Clusters of contigs with similar color present potential genome bins, and contigs cluster with a coverage of approximately 80 (enclosed with black line) were collected for genome binning in this study.
Figure 2Phylogeny of phylotypes affiliated with the candidate phylum SBR1093.
This phylogenetic tree is constructed with 16S rRNA gene sequences based on the neighbor-joining method with Jukes and Cantor distances. The main clades with nodes supported by a bootstrap value of >50% are labeled and marked with different background colors (Clade I green, Clade II blue, Clade III yellow, Clade IV pink and Clade V purple). The phylotypes derived from different sources are labeled with the following: dark red, activated sludge; orange, soil; blue, sediments; dark green, ocean crust; pink, lava; purple, seawater; green, mine tailings; brown, marine organisms; black, others. The phylotype SRB1093 HKSP obtained in this study is enclosed with a solid red line, whereas the first reported phylotype is enclosed with a red dashed line. The scale bar represents 0.05 nucleotide substitutions per site.
Figure 3Putative metabolic pathway of SBR1093 HKSP (based on the genetic analysis).
Carbon fixation with the HPHB cycle is used for the biomass synthesis via the transfer of acetyl-CoA to the citrate cycle or gluconeogenesis, and the genes responsible for each step are marked with green words. Intermediates connected with colored lines represent different metabolic pathways.
Genes responsible for the HPHB cycle in the identified genomes and their identity with those in SBR1093.
| SBR1093 HKSP | Functional enzymes |
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| Acc. No. | Identity | Acc. No. | Identity | Acc. No. | Identity | Acc. No. | Identity | Acc. No. | Identity | Acc. No. | Identity | Acc. No. | Identity | ||
| gene_764 | ACR | 58889 | 32% | 91508 | 31% | 78610 | 32% | 63583 | 37% | 19219 | 37% | 39404 | 35% | 31729 | 36% |
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| gene_2098 | HPCD | 58277 | 45% | 92065 | 47% | 77478 | 44% | 62785 | 46% | 19777 | 41% | 36654 | 42% | 32328 | 35% |
| gene_2045 | MCE | 59386 | 40% | 90738 | 38% | 76441 | 44% | 63084 | 43% | 18664 | 42% | 33379 | 38% | 33030 | 42% |
| gene_2581 | MSR | 59445 | 41% | 91505 | 41% | 78088 | 43% | 61994 | 39% | 21469 | 44% | 35006 | 54% | 34115 | 43% |
| gene_5 | MCM | 59385 | 47% | 90737 | 47% | 76440 | 48% | 63082 | 48% | // | // | 36638 | 63% | // | // |
| gene_1024 | HBCS | 58189 | 29% | 91107 | 31% | 77036 | 30% | 62874 | 25% | 20234 | 36% | 37419 | 37% | 31206 | 37% |
| gene_451 | HPCS | 58189 | 48% | 91435 | 53% | 78009 | 52% | 62874 | 54% | 20930 | 57% | 37438 | 59% | 31167 | 55% |
| gene_2450 | ACK | 59345 | 41% | 90755 | 43% | 76400 | 41% | 62339 | 28% | 21237 | 59% | 33768 | 59% | 31369 | 58% |
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| gene_213 | HBCD | 59205 | 30% | 91403 | 31% | 77631 | 30% | 64012 | 34% | 19793 | 82% | 33076 | 80% | 32741 | 82% |
| gene_2933 | SSR | 59446 | 31% | 91506 | 30% | 78341 | 29% | 63668 | 37% | 19498 | 32% | 38465 | 35% | 32182 | 30% |
The identified genomes are downloaded from NCBI FTP with the accession names Acidianus hospitalis W1 uid66875 (Ac. hospitalis), Metallosphaera sedula DSM 5348 uid58717 (M. sedula), Sulfolobus tokodaii 7 uid57807 (S. tokodaii), Candidatus Nitrososphaera gargensis Ga9 2 uid176707 (N. gargensis), Afipia felis ATCC 53690 uid179396 (Af. felis), Bradyrhizobium STM 3843 uid80711 (B. sp. STM3843), Oligotropha carboxidovorans OM5 uid72795 (O. carboxidovorans). The enzymes in bold are bifunctional enzymes in the HPHB pathway, and columns filled with//indicate that there were no hit enzymes in the genome. M. sedula, S. tokodaii and Ac. hospitalis are members of Sulfolobales and have the potential for autotrophic metabolism via the reported HPHB pathway, whereas B. sp. STM3843, Af. felis and O. carboxidovorans are members from Bradyrhizobiaceae with facultative autotrophic metabolism via an unknown carbon fixation pathway. The accession number for Acidianus hospitalis should have ‘YP0044’ before the presented numbers, and Metallosphaera should have ‘YP0011’, Sulfolobus ‘NP3’, Nitrososphaera ‘YP0068’, Afipia ‘ZP114’, Bradyrhizobium ‘ZP0943’, and Oligotropha ‘YP0046’.
Abbreviations for functional enzymes: Acryloyl-CoA reductase (ACR); Acetyl/propionyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC); 3-Hydroxypropionyl-CoA dehydratase (HPCD); Methylmalonyl-CoA epimerase (MCE); Malonic semialdehyde reductase (MSR); Methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MCM); 4-Hydroxybutyrate-CoA ligase (HBCS); 3-Hydroxypropionate-CoA ligase (HPCS); Acetoacetyl-CoA β-ketothiolase (ACK); Succinyl/Malonyl-CoA reductase (MCR); Crotonyl-CoA hydratase (CCH); 4-Hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydratase (HBCD); Succinic semialdehyde reductase (SSR).
Figure 4Phylogenetic tree of 4-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydratase proteins.
The 4-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydratases in this draft genome and others in identified autotrophic Achaea were retrieved from NCBI to build the phylogenetic tree. The hosts of these marked (in bold) are suspected autotrophic microbes that undergo the HPHB cycle. The number in front of the taxonomy presents the accession number in NCBI. The tree topography and evolutionary distances are given via the neighbor-joining method with a Poisson correction. The numbers at the nodes indicate the percentage bootstrap values for the clade of this group in 1,000 replications. The scale bar represents a difference of 0.1 substitutions per site.