Literature DB >> 30446552

Diversity in CO2-Concentrating Mechanisms among Chemolithoautotrophs from the Genera Hydrogenovibrio, Thiomicrorhabdus, and Thiomicrospira, Ubiquitous in Sulfidic Habitats Worldwide.

Kathleen M Scott1, Juliana M Leonard2, Rich Boden3,4, Dale Chaput5, Clare Dennison2, Edward Haller2, Tara L Harmer6, Abigail Anderson2, Tiffany Arnold2, Samantha Budenstein2, Rikki Brown2, Juan Brand2, Jacob Byers2, Jeanette Calarco2, Timothy Campbell2, Erica Carter2, Max Chase2, Montana Cole2, Deandra Dwyer2, Jonathon Grasham2, Christopher Hanni2, Ashlee Hazle2, Cody Johnson2, Ryan Johnson2, Brandi Kirby2, Katherine Lewis2, Brianna Neumann2, Tracy Nguyen2, Jonathon Nino Charari2, Ooreoluwa Morakinyo2, Bengt Olsson2, Shanetta Roundtree2, Emily Skjerve2, Ashley Ubaldini2, Robert Whittaker2.   

Abstract

Members of the genera Hydrogenovibrio, Thiomicrospira, and Thiomicrorhabdus fix carbon at hydrothermal vents, coastal sediments, hypersaline lakes, and other sulfidic habitats. The genome sequences of these ubiquitous and prolific chemolithoautotrophs suggest a surprising diversity of mechanisms for the uptake and fixation of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC); these mechanisms are verified here. Carboxysomes are apparent in the transmission electron micrographs of most of these organisms but are lacking in Thiomicrorhabdus sp. strain Milos-T2 and Thiomicrorhabdus arctica, and the inability of Thiomicrorhabdus sp. strain Milos-T2 to grow under low-DIC conditions is consistent with the absence of carboxysome loci in its genome. For the remaining organisms, genes encoding potential DIC transporters from four evolutionarily distinct families (Tcr_0853 and Tcr_0854, Chr, SbtA, and SulP) are located downstream of carboxysome loci. Transporter genes collocated with carboxysome loci, as well as some homologs located elsewhere on the chromosomes, had elevated transcript levels under low-DIC conditions, as assayed by reverse transcription-quantitative PCR (qRT-PCR). DIC uptake was measureable via silicone oil centrifugation when a representative of each of the four types of transporter was expressed in Escherichia coli The expression of these genes in the carbonic anhydrase-deficient E. coli strain EDCM636 enabled it to grow under low-DIC conditions, a result consistent with DIC transport by these proteins. The results from this study expand the range of DIC transporters within the SbtA and SulP transporter families, verify DIC uptake by transporters encoded by Tcr_0853 and Tcr_0854 and their homologs, and introduce DIC as a potential substrate for transporters from the Chr family.IMPORTANCE Autotrophic organisms take up and fix DIC, introducing carbon into the biological portion of the global carbon cycle. The mechanisms for DIC uptake and fixation by autotrophic Bacteria and Archaea are likely to be diverse but have been well characterized only for "Cyanobacteria" Based on genome sequences, members of the genera Hydrogenovibrio, Thiomicrospira, and Thiomicrorhabdus have a variety of mechanisms for DIC uptake and fixation. We verified that most of these organisms are capable of growing under low-DIC conditions, when they upregulate carboxysome loci and transporter genes collocated with these loci on their chromosomes. When these genes, which fall into four evolutionarily independent families of transporters, are expressed in E. coli, DIC transport is detected. This expansion in known DIC transporters across four families, from organisms from a variety of environments, provides insight into the ecophysiology of autotrophs, as well as a toolkit for engineering microorganisms for carbon-neutral biochemistries of industrial importance.
Copyright © 2019 American Society for Microbiology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CO2-concentrating mechanism; autotroph; carbon fixation; chemolithoautotroph

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30446552      PMCID: PMC6344615          DOI: 10.1128/AEM.02096-18

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol        ISSN: 0099-2240            Impact factor:   4.792


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