| Literature DB >> 25823014 |
Lior Zelcbuch1, Manuel Razo-Mejia2, Elad Herz1, Sagit Yahav1, Niv Antonovsky1, Hagar Kroytoro1, Ron Milo1, Arren Bar-Even3.
Abstract
Apart from addressing humanity's growing demand for fuels, pharmaceuticals, plastics and other value added chemicals, metabolic engineering of microbes can serve as a powerful tool to address questions concerning the characteristics of cellular metabolism. Along these lines, we developed an in vivo metabolic strategy that conclusively identifies the product specificity of glycerate kinase. By deleting E. coli's phosphoglycerate mutases, we divide its central metabolism into an 'upper' and 'lower' metabolism, each requiring its own carbon source for the bacterium to grow. Glycerate can serve to replace the upper or lower carbon source depending on the product of glycerate kinase. Using this strategy we show that while glycerate kinase from Arabidopsis thaliana produces 3-phosphoglycerate, both E. coli's enzymes generate 2-phosphoglycerate. This strategy represents a general approach to decipher enzyme specificity under physiological conditions.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25823014 PMCID: PMC4378991 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0122957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Selection scheme for identifying the product specificity of glycerate kinase.
(A-D) By deleting phosphoglycerate mutase, central metabolism is divided into ‘upper’ and ‘lower’ metabolism, each requires its own carbon source for the bacterium to grow (glycerol and pyruvate, respectively). Glycerate can replace one of these carbon sources, depending on the product specificity of glycerate kinase.
Fig 2Product specificity of glycerate kinases from E. coli and A. thaliana.
(A) A ΔgpmA ΔgpmM ΔgarK ΔglxK strain was able to grow on a minimal medium supplemented with glycerol and glycerate when one of E. coli’s glycerate kinases were expressed, indicating that these enzymes generate 2-phosphoglycerate. (B) Growth on pyruvate and glycerate was possible only when A. thaliana’s glycerate kinase was expressed, indicating that this enzyme produces 3-phosphoglycerate. Cells were cultivated in 96-multiwell plates and OD measurements were taken automatically every 90 minutes. For each enzyme, we show the growth of one clone with standard errors (at each time point) that are based on three parallel cultivations. Other clones showed a similar qualitative dependence on the carbon sources with somewhat different growth yield and dynamics.
Summary of selection experiments on a minimal medium supplemented with different carbon sources.
| Carbon sources | Expressed enzymes | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Ec garK | Ec glxK | At glyK | |
| Glycerol | − | − | − |
| Pyruvate | − | − | − |
| Glycerate | − | − | − |
| Glycerol + Pyruvate | + | + | + |
| Glycerol + Glycerate | + | + | − |
| Pyruvate + Glycerate | − | − | + |
Different glycerate kinase variants were expressed in the ΔgpmA ΔgpmM ΔgarK ΔglxK strain and growth phenotypes on different carbon sources were measured. A ‘-’ sign corresponds to experiments that showed no growth, while a ‘+’ sign corresponds to growth. Cells were cultivated in 96-multiwell plates using an automated robotic platform (exact experimental setup is given in Materials and Methods).
| Ec garK Forward | ATGCATCATCACCATCACCACGCGTATTGCAATCCGGGCCTGGAATC |
| Ec garK Reverse | CTCTTACGTGCCCGATCAACGCTAGCTTACCCCGCGTTGCGCATTCCAATCG |
| Ec glxK Forward | ATGCATCATCACCATCACCACAAGATTGTCATTGCGCCAGACTC |
| Ec glxK Reverse | CTCTTACGTGCCCGATCAACGCTAGCTTATTTTTAATTCCCTGACCTATTTTAATGGCG |
| Ec glxK C435G Forward | GTGCGACGGTTGACGGCGGTATGGGCATGG |
| Ec glxK C435G Reverse | CCATGCCCATACCGCCGTCAACCGTCGCAC |
| At glyK Forward | ATGCATCATCACCATCACCACTCTTCTTATTTATCCTCCAAGCTT |
| At glyK Reverse | CTCTTACGTGCCCGATCAACGCTAGCTTAGTTTGCGAGTATCGGGTTCCTTTC |
| At glyK C314T Forward | TTTTGAATTTATATGCTCGGGTCCTCTCGT |
| At glyK C314T Reverse | ACGAGAGGACCCGAGCATATAAATTCAAAA |