| Literature DB >> 26204448 |
Alessandro G Franchini1, Julian Ihssen1, Thomas Egli1.
Abstract
For heterotrophic microbes, limited availability of carbon and energy sources is one of the major nutritional factors restricting the rate of growth in most ecosystems. Physiological adaptation to this hunger state requires metabolic versatility which usually involves expression of a wide range of different catabolic pathways and of high-affinity carbon transporters; together, this allows for simultaneous utilization of mixtures of carbonaceous compounds at low concentrations. In Escherichia coli the stationary phase sigma factor RpoS and the signal molecule cAMP are the major players in the regulation of transcription under such conditions; however, their interaction is still not fully understood. Therefore, during growth of E. coli in carbon-limited chemostat culture at different dilution rates, the transcriptomes, expression of periplasmic proteins and catabolomes of strains lacking one of these global regulators, either rpoS or adenylate cyclase (cya), were compared to those of the wild-type strain. The inability to synthesize cAMP exerted a strong negative influence on the expression of alternative carbon source uptake and degradation systems. In contrast, absence of RpoS increased the transcription of genes belonging to high-affinity uptake systems and central metabolism, presumably due to reduced competition of σ(D) with σ(S). Phenotypical analysis confirmed this observation: The ability to respire alternative carbon substrates and to express periplasmic high-affinity binding proteins was eliminated in cya and crp mutants, while these properties were not affected in the rpoS mutant. As expected, transcription of numerous stress defence genes was negatively affected by the rpoS knock-out mutation. Interestingly, several genes of the RpoS stress response regulon were also down-regulated in the cAMP-negative strain indicating a coordinated global regulation. The results demonstrate that cAMP is crucial for catabolic flexibility during slow, carbon-limited growth, whereas RpoS is primarily involved in the regulation of stress response systems necessary for the survival of this bacterium under hunger conditions.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26204448 PMCID: PMC4512719 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0133793
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Effect of global regulatory mutations on growth kinetic parameters and specific hydroperoxidase activity of E. coli in glucose mineral medium cultures at 37°C.
The dilution rate in glucose-limited chemostat cultures was set at a value of approximately half the maximum specific growth rate (D = 0.3 h-1 for wild-type and ΔrpoS strains, D = 0.16 h-1 for the Δcya strain and D = 0.14 h-1 for the Δcrp strain). Values represent the average of replicate measurements (n ≥ 3), standard deviations are given in parentheses.
| strain | genotype | μmax | Ks | Yield | HPI+II | HPII |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [h-1] | [mg L-1] | [g dr. wt. g glc. -1] | [μmol H2O2 min-1 mgprotein -1] | |||
| MG1655 (wt) |
| 0.63 | 0.54 | 0.46 | 62.9 | 27.7 |
| (± 0.01) | (± 0.12) | (± 0.01) | (± 8.1) | (± 3.9) | ||
|
| MG1655 | 0.69 | 0.29 | 0.37 | 67.0 | 1.1 |
| (± 0.01) | (± 0.03) | (± 0.06) | (± 3.4) | (± 0.2) | ||
|
| MG1655 | 0.35 | 5.7 | 0.33 | 51.0 | 23.3 |
| (± 0.03) | (± 1.2) | (± 0.04) | (± 16) | (± 4.7) | ||
|
| MG1655 | 0.28 | 19.6 | 0.31 | n. d. | n. d. |
| (± 0.03) | (± 1.8) | (± 0.02) | ||||
a combined activities of heat labile hydroperoxidase I (KatG) and heat stable hydroperoxidase II (KatE)
b heat stable hydroperoxidase II activity (KatE)
c data from [18]
d data from [25]
e not determined
Genes coding for proteins involved in transport and metabolism of carbon substrate with significant up- or down-regulation in ΔrpoS and Δcya strains (difference in average signal intensity compared to wild-type E. coli K12 ≥ 3 or ≤ -3, p-value ≤ 0.2) in glucose-limited continuous culture cultivated at D = 0.3 h-1.
| Gene | b no. | Gene product | Ratio cAMP | Ratio RpoS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
|
| b0019 | Na+/H antiporter, pH dependent | 4.1 | |
|
| b0427 | putative transport protein | -3.3 | |
|
| b0553 | outer membrane porin protein, locus of qsr prophage | 6.3 | -3.2 |
|
| b0574 | outer membrane transport protein involved in copper tolerance | -3.1 | |
|
| b0587 | ferric enterobactin (enterochelin) transport | -3.0 | |
|
| b0598 | carbon starvation protein | 7.6 | |
|
| b0655 | glutamate/aspartate periplasmic binding transport protein | 5.4 | |
|
| b0863 | arginine 3rd transport system periplasmic binding protein | 4.1 | |
|
| b0898 | putative transport protein | 4.4 | |
|
| b0929 | outer membrane protein 1a | 27.4 | |
|
| b0957 | outer membrane protein 3a | 4.0 | |
|
| b1006 | putative transport protein | 3.6 | |
|
| b1101 | PTS system, glucose-specific IIBC component | 4.0 | |
|
| b1186 | Na+/H+ antiporter, pH independent | -4.5 | -5.4 |
|
| b1440 | putative ABC transporter periplasmic binding protein | 8.9 | 9.8 |
|
| b1442 | putative transport system permease protein | 11.9 | 7.3 |
|
| b1492 | acid sensitivity protein, putative transporter | 34.1 | |
|
| b1513 | putative ATP-binding component of a transport system | 15.2 | 14.3 |
|
| b1817 | PTS enzyme IIAB, mannose-specific | 8.0 | |
|
| b1818 | PTS enzyme IIC, mannose-specific | 15.1 | |
|
| b1819 | PTS enzyme IID, mannose-specific | 5.8 | |
|
| b2092 | PTS system galactitol-specific enzyme IIC | 35.3 | |
|
| b2093 | galactitol-specific enzyme IIB of phosphotransferase system | 60.6 | |
|
| b2094 | galactitol-specific enzyme IIA of phosphotransferase system | 55.9 | |
|
| b2135 | putative transport protein | 10.1 | 7.8 |
|
| b2149 | ATP-binding component of methyl-galactoside transport | 3.9 | |
|
| b2150 | galactose-binding transport protein | 4.9 | |
|
| b3005 | uptake of enterochelin tonB-dependent uptake of B colicins | -3.0 | |
|
| b3291 | mechanosensitive channel | 6.0 | |
|
| b3408 | ferrous iron transport protein A | -4.9 | |
|
| b3511 | putative transporter protein | 11.5 | |
|
| b3544 | dipeptide transport protein | 11.9 | |
|
| b3748 | D-ribose high-affinity transport system, membrane-associated protein | 3.6 | |
|
| b3751 | D-ribose periplasmic binding protein | 9.4 | |
|
| b3927 | facilitated diffusion of glycerol | 9.6 | |
|
| b4020 | putative alpha helix protein | -3.6 | |
|
| b4032 | part of maltose permease, inner membrane | 5.9 | |
|
| b4033 | part of maltose permease, periplasmic | 6.9 | |
|
| b4034 | periplasmic maltose-binding protein | 7.5 | |
|
| b4035 | ATP-binding component of transport system for maltose | 4.2 | |
|
| b4036 | phage lambda receptor protein, maltose high-affinity receptor | 8.1 | |
|
| b4037 | periplasmic protein of mal regulon | 12.5 | |
|
| b4067 | acetate permease | 10.7 | |
|
| b4088 | D-allose-binding periplasmic protein | -3.2 | |
|
| b4208 | transport of D-alanine, D-serine, and glycine | 4.0 | |
|
| b4227 | putative D-ribose transport protein, ABC superfamily | 3.6 | |
|
| b4228 | putative ATP-binding component of a transport system | 5.2 | |
|
|
|
| -3.3 | -3.0 |
|
|
|
| 4.4 | |
|
| ||||
|
| b0118 | aconitate hydrase B | -3.0 | |
|
| b0331 | putative carboxyphosphoenolpyruvate mutase | 17.0 | 15.8 |
|
| b0333 | citrate synthase, propionate metabolism | 30.8 | 17.6 |
|
| b0334 | 2-methyl citrate dehydratase | 5.6 | 7.6 |
|
| b0335 | putative propionyl-CoA synthetase | 5.9 | |
|
| b0419 | putative NAD(P)H-dependent xylose reductase | 3.7 | |
|
| b0424 | 4-methyl-5(beta-hydroxyethyl)-thiazole monophosphate synthesis | 6.1 | |
|
| b0720 | citrate synthase | 6.9 | |
|
| b0722 | succinate dehydrogenase, hydrophobic subunit | -3.1 | |
|
| b0724 | succinate dehydrogenase, iron sulfur protein | 7.2 | |
|
| b0726 | 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase (decarboxylase component) | 3.7 | |
|
| b0728 | succinyl-CoA synthetase, beta subunit | 4.4 | |
|
| b0781 | molybdopterin biosynthesis, protein A | -6.2 | -7.4 |
|
| b0895 | anaerobic dimethyl sulfoxide reductase subunit B | -7.4 | -3.0 |
|
| b0963 | methylglyoxal synthase | 5.5 | |
|
| b1223 | nitrite extrusion protein | 4.7 | |
|
| b1415 | aldehyde dehydrogenase, NAD-linked | 6.5 | |
|
| b1417 | glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase C, interrupted | 5.6 | |
|
| b1747 | arginine succinyltransferase | 7.0 | |
|
| b1779 | glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase A | 3.5 | |
|
| b2091 | galactitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase | 11.2 | |
|
| b2095 | putative tagatose 6-phosphate kinase 1 | 54.4 | |
|
| b2096 | tagatose-bisphosphate aldolase 1 | 50.5 | |
|
| b2097 | fructose-biphosphate aldolase | 4.0 | 5.6 |
|
| b2262 | dihydroxynaphtoic acid synthetase | -3.0 | |
|
| b2282 | NADH dehydrogenase I chain H | 3.7 | |
|
| b2285 | NADH dehydrogenase I chain E | 4.3 | |
|
| b2464 | transaldolase A | 8.6 | |
|
| b2779 | Enolase | 3.6 | |
|
| b2976 | malate synthase G | 4.1 | |
|
| b2978 | glycolate oxidase iron-sulfur subunit | 7.1 | |
|
| b2979 | glycolate oxidase subunit D | 7.0 | |
|
| b3236 | malate dehydrogenase | 4.1 | |
|
| b3403 | phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase | 8.7 | |
|
| b3732 | membrane-bound ATP synthase, F1 sector, beta-subunit | 4.7 | |
|
| b3735 | membrane-bound ATP synthase, F1 sector, delta-subunit | 4.0 | |
|
| b3737 | membrane-bound ATP synthase, F0 sector, subunit c | 4.6 | |
|
| b3738 | membrane-bound ATP synthase subunit a | 5.3 | |
|
| b4014 | malate synthase A | 4.1 | |
|
| b4015 | isocitrate lyase | 5.1 | |
|
| b4069 | acetyl-CoA synthetase | 19.5 | |
|
| b4151 | fumarate reductase, anaerobic, membrane anchor polypeptide | 4.1 | |
|
| b4153 | fumarate reductase, anaerobic, iron-sulfur protein subunit | -3.1 | -3.2 |
* p-value < 0.1,
** p-value < 0.05
References:
a[32]
b[33]
c[38]
d[35]
e[36]
f[52]
g[53]
h[37]
i[39]
Fig 1Expression of periplasmic proteins in carbon-limited chemostat cultures of wild-type (wt),Δcrp, Δcya and ΔrpoS E. coli strains.
Carbon-limited LB chemostat cultures were set at a dilution rate of 0.3 h-1, while the dilution rate of glucose-limited chemostat cultures was operated at approximately half the maximum specific growth rate (D = 0.3 h-1 for wild-type and rpoS strains, D = 0.16 h-1 for thecya strain and D = 0.14 h-1 for thecrp strain). The protein bands marked in the figure were identified in a previous study [15] as (A) dipeptide-binding protein DppA, (B) maltose-binding protein MalE, (C) galactose/glucose-binding protein MglB, (D) ribose-binding protein RbsB and (E) glutamine-binding protein GlnH. When two lanes per strain for a similar condition are shown, chloroform shock extracts from two separate chemostat cultures were loaded onto the gel. Loading volumes were normalized to the optical density of the culture samples. Protein size markers are shown in the first and ninth lane from the left.
Fig 2Substrate respiration rates of wild-type, Δcrp, Δcya and ΔrpoS strains of E. coli in glucose-limited chemostat cultures.
Respiration rates were determined with chloramphenicol-inhibited cells on BIOLOG AN MicroPlates and normalized to OD546 of the used cell suspension. Bars give average rates of ≥ 4 BIOLOG plates, for each strain cells were taken from two separate chemostat cultures. Error bars represent standard deviations.
Fig 3Substrate respiration rates of wild-type, Δcrp, Δcya and ΔrpoS strains of E. coli in carbon-limited LB chemostat cultures and substrates that supported growth in BIOLOG plates.
Respiration rates were determined as described in legend to Fig 2. For growth, all substrates leading to significant colour formation in any strain are shown. L-valine was included in the table as negative control.
Fig 4Growth of wild-type (■, □), ΔrpoS (●, ○), and Δcya (▲, Δ) strains of E. coli in batch cultures with modified LB medium buffered at pH 7.
Data from two individual experiments (black and white symbols).
Effect of global regulatory mutations on growth kinetic parameters and specific hydroperoxidase activity of E. coli MG1655 in modified LB complex medium cultures at 37°C.
Growth yield and specific hydroperoxidase activities were determined in carbon-limited LB chemostat cultures operated at a dilution rate of 0.3 h-1.
| strain | μmax | Yield | HPI+II | HPII |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [h-1] | [g dr. wt. g LB
-1] | [μmol H2O2 min-1 mgprotein -1] | ||
| MG1655 (wt) | 2.13 | 0.111 | 104 | 48.0 |
| (± 0.11) | (± 0.03) | (± 11) | (± 6.8) | |
| Δ | 2.04 | 0.092 | 50.7 | 0.7 |
| (± 0.04) | (± 0.011) | (± 13.0) | (± 0.3) | |
| Δ | 1.64 | 0.015 | 66.5 | 57.5 |
| (± 0.08) | (± 0.001) | (± 11) | (± 22) | |
a biomass yield per amount of tryptone and yeast extract (2:1) present in the feed medium of carbon-limited chemostat cultures
b combined activities of heat labile hydroperoxidase I (KatG) and heat stable hydroperoxidase II (KatE)
c heat stable hydroperoxidase II activity (KatE)