| Literature DB >> 28240279 |
Alexandru Dumitrache1,2, Dawn M Klingeman1,2, Jace Natzke1,2, Miguel Rodriguez1,2, Richard J Giannone1,3, Robert L Hettich1,3, Brian H Davison1,2, Steven D Brown1,2.
Abstract
Clostridium (Ruminiclostridium) thermocellum is a model organism for its ability to deconstruct plant biomass and convert the cellulose into ethanol. The bacterium forms biofilms adherent to lignocellulosic feedstocks in a continuous cell-monolayer in order to efficiently break down and uptake cellulose hydrolysates. We developed a novel bioreactor design to generate separate sessile and planktonic cell populations for omics studies. Sessile cells had significantly greater expression of genes involved in catabolism of carbohydrates by glycolysis and pyruvate fermentation, ATP generation by proton gradient, the anabolism of proteins and lipids and cellular functions critical for cell division consistent with substrate replete conditions. Planktonic cells had notably higher gene expression for flagellar motility and chemotaxis, cellulosomal cellulases and anchoring scaffoldins, and a range of stress induced homeostasis mechanisms such as oxidative stress protection by antioxidants and flavoprotein co-factors, methionine repair, Fe-S cluster assembly and repair in redox proteins, cell growth control through tRNA thiolation, recovery of damaged DNA by nucleotide excision repair and removal of terminal proteins by proteases. This study demonstrates that microbial attachment to cellulose substrate produces widespread gene expression changes for critical functions of this organism and provides physiological insights for two cells populations relevant for engineering of industrially-ready phenotypes.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28240279 PMCID: PMC5327387 DOI: 10.1038/srep43583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Concentration and yield (normalized to initial mass of cellulose) of fermentation products (a) and soluble sugars (*total glucose and xylose include the soluble oligomeric forms) in the culture supernatant (b). Cellulose rapidly converted to products (in ~12 h), while planktonic cells had very limited access to soluble sugars. Starting cellulose (filter paper) concentration of 3 g/L. Vertical red line marks the corresponding time for RNAseq and proteomic sample collection in subsequent replicate fermentations. Averaged data of biological duplicate fermentations.
Figure 2Alkali titration (mL) and rate of titration (mL/h) of biological replicate fermentations (solid and dash-line, respectively).
Cell fraction collection for RNA-Seq analysis (red circle) was made at peak titration rate, analogous to a high rate of culture fermentative activity.
Figure 3Number of differentially expressed genes grouped by minimum fold-differences of sessile (biofilm) compared to planktonic cell populations.
Summary of synthesis pathways and cellular functions with notable and significant higher gene expression (minimum two-fold) in the sessile (biofilm) or planktonic cell populations.
| Sessile (SS) | Planktonic (PL) |
|---|---|
| Intracellular cellodextrin glycolysis and fermentation | Chemotaxis |
| Hydrogen metabolism with four hydrogenase systems | Flagellar & pili assembly |
| ATP regeneration by proton-dependent ATPases | Cellulosomal cellulases and anchoring scaffoldins |
| NAD/NADP | |
| Antioxidants (e.g., thioredoxins, peroxiredoxins) | |
| Biosynthesis for 15 of the 20 primary amino acids | Flavoproteins (FAD, FMN) – antioxidant co-factors |
| Ribosomal protein synthesis and the tRNA charging | Methionine repair by MsrA |
| Translation initiation and elongation factors | Fe-S cluster assembly and repair for redox proteins |
| Chaperones for correct protein folding | Iron and sulfate uptake and assimilatory reduction |
| Protein secretion and maturation (‘Sec’ pathway) | Sulfur amino acids biosynthesis |
| Polyamines for fidelity control of protein synthesis | |
| Fatty acids initiation/elongation & glycerophospholipids | |
| tRNA thiolation for regulation at translation level | |
| Indole synthesis for a variety of cellular stress responses | |
| Cell division and septation proteins | Sporulation proteins |
| DNA damage repair by nucleotide excision repair | |
| Biosynthesis of folates for one-carbon metabolism | Removal of damaged proteins by LON and CLP proteases |
| Homologous recombination (RecFOR and RuvABC) | |
Figure 4Central metabolism from intracellular cellodextrin sugars to end-point pyruvate fermentation products with gene annotation by product name and locus tag.
Differential expression values in parentheses are represented by the logarithm (base two) of the fold-change in gene expression between biofilm and planktonic cell populations. Positive or negative values denote higher expression in biofilm or planktonic samples, respectively. Orange (higher in biofilm) and blue (higher in planktonic) color-codes denote minimum two-fold differential expression, while gray marks below two-fold differences.
Figure 5Bioreactor with stainless steel meshes adapted to baffles that support cellulose and biofilms, and were used for quick collection of sessile cells for RNA-Seq analysis.