| Literature DB >> 26833659 |
Manon Morin1,2,3,4, Delphine Ropers4, Fabien Letisse1,2,3, Sandrine Laguerre1,2,3, Jean-Charles Portais1,2,3, Muriel Cocaign-Bousquet1,2,3, Brice Enjalbert1,2,3.
Abstract
Metabolic control in Escherichia coli is a complex process involving multilevel regulatory systems but the involvement of post-transcriptional regulation is uncertain. The post-transcriptional factor CsrA is stated as being the only regulator essential for the use of glycolytic substrates. A dozen enzymes in the central carbon metabolism (CCM) have been reported as potentially controlled by CsrA, but its impact on the CCM functioning has not been demonstrated. Here, a multiscale analysis was performed in a wild-type strain and its isogenic mutant attenuated for CsrA (including growth parameters, gene expression levels, metabolite pools, abundance of enzymes and fluxes). Data integration and regulation analysis showed a coordinated control of the expression of glycolytic enzymes. This also revealed the imbalance of metabolite pools in the csrA mutant upper glycolysis, before the phosphofructokinase PfkA step. This imbalance is associated with a glucose-phosphate stress. Restoring PfkA activity in the csrA mutant strain suppressed this stress and increased the mutant growth rate on glucose. Thus, the carbon storage regulator system is essential for the effective functioning of the upper glycolysis mainly through its control of PfkA. This work demonstrates the pivotal role of post-transcriptional regulation to shape the carbon metabolism.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26833659 DOI: 10.1111/mmi.13343
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Microbiol ISSN: 0950-382X Impact factor: 3.501