| Literature DB >> 30546350 |
Anna Burrichter1,2, Karin Denger1, Paolo Franchini1, Thomas Huhn2,3, Nicolai Müller1, Dieter Spiteller1,2, David Schleheck1,2.
Abstract
Sulfoquinovose (Entities:
Keywords: anaerobic bacterial metabolism; biogeochemical carbon and sulfur cycle; gut microbiome; human health and disease; organosulfonate respiration; plant sulfolipid; sulfidogenesis; sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol
Year: 2018 PMID: 30546350 PMCID: PMC6278857 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.02792
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1Anaerobic two-step degradation of SQ to H2S, as demonstrated in this study using a defined two-member bacterial co-culture. (A) Fermentation of sulfoquinovose (SQ) to 2,3-dihydoxypropane-1-sulfonate (DHPS), formate, acetate and succinate by E. coli K-12. SQ is metabolized and cleaved into DHAP and 3-sulfolactaldehyde (SLA) by a reaction sequence (enzymes YihS, V and T) analogous to the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway, as demonstrated previously for aerobic growth of E. coli (Denger et al., 2014). The C3-organosulfonate DHPS is excreted and available as substrate to other bacteria. Under anaerobic growth conditions, E. coli funnels most of the DHAP-carbon into mixed-acid fermentation (see schematic in the gray inset on the right) to succinate, formate and acetate as fermentation products. In addition, the reduction of the SLA to DHPS, as catalyzed by the previously characterized NADH-dependent SLA reductase YihU (Denger et al., 2014), serves as additional fermentation step (gray inset in the middle). (B) Fermentation of the DHPS to acetate and H2S by Desulfovibrio sp. strain DF1. As revealed in this study, DHPS is oxidized to 3-sulfolactate (SL) by two subsequent dehydrogenase reactions and the SL is cleaved into pyruvate and (bi)sulfite (). The pyruvate is utilized for ATP generation concomitant with acetate excretion (and as carbon source for biomass formation, not shown). The sulfite is utilized as electron acceptor for sulfite respiration, as catalyzed by dissimilatory sulfite reductase (Dsr), and reduced to H2S (gray inset; for comparison, the ATP-consuming activation of sulfate is also shown). (C) The genes for DHPS-degradative enzymes identified by differential proteomics in Desulfovibrio sp. strain DF1 cells are indicated by the color coding (B,C) and/or by their IMG locus tag numbers; they are located on different contigs of the draft-genome sequence. In addition to the DHPS-desulfonation pathway genes, a candidate DHPS-transporter gene was identified by differential proteomics, i.e., for the soluble substrate binding protein (indicated in brown), which is co-encoded with candidate ABC-transporter permease and ATP-binding component genes (indicated in white), and a candidate aldehyde:ferredoxin oxidoreductase gene (oxidored.; IMG locus tag no. 130621) (see text). Other abbreviations used: SF, 6-deoxy-6-sulfofructose; SFP, 6-deoxy-6-sulfofructose phosphate; PEP, phosphoenolpyruvate; YihO, SQ importer; YihP, DHPS exporter; PFL, pyruvate-formate lyase; PFOR, pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase; Pta, phosphotransacetylase; Ack, acetate kinase; Sat, ATP sulfurylase; Apr, adenylyl-sulfate reductase.
FIGURE 2Total proteomic analysis comparing abundant soluble proteins in cell-free extracts of SQ- and glucose-fermenting E. coli cells. Shown are metabolic enzymes grouped according to the SQ Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas (SQ-EMP) pathway, the EMP pathway for glucose (G6P-EMP pathway) and to mixed-acid fermentation. Constitutively expressed proteins are shown for comparison (control). IMG locus tag numbers are given for each protein. Shown are data of a proteomic analysis replicated once. A higher score represents a more abundant protein.
FIGURE 3(A–D) E. coli K-12 growing in pure culture under fermentative conditions with SQ (A,C) and glucose (B,D). For the growth experiment shown, 12 mM SQ or 6 mM glucose was used, so that both cultures had access to the same amount of C3-carbon (DHAP/GAP) for growth through the SQ-EMP and G6P-EMP pathways, respectively (i.e., 1 mol DHAP per mol of SQ, compared to 2 mol DHAP/GAP per mol of glucose; see Figure 1). (A,B) Biomass formation shown here as optical density (OD580), open circles; SQ or glucose disappearance, solid circles. (C,D) product formation (mM); formate, open square; acetate, open circle; ethanol, solid circle; succinate, open triangle; DHPS, solid triangle. For both cultures, lactate and H2 production was not detectable and therefore this data was omitted in this illustration. The cultures were incubated in 60 ml serum flasks with rubber stoppers containing, initially, 25 ml culture fluid and 35 ml N2/CO2 gas in the headspace. At each time interval, 1.0 ml of sample was removed with a syringe. The growth experiment was replicated once when sampled in such detail, and at least three times in smaller scale when evaluating only the outgrown cultures (t) (see Figure 4 and Supplementary Table S1).
FIGURE 4Concentration of products detected after growth of E. coli in pure culture with glucose (white bars) or SQ (gray bars) and after growth with SQ in co-culture with a DHPS-degrading Desulfovibrio sp. strain (black bars). The cultures were incubated in 25 ml culture tubes containing 10 ml culture fluid containing 12 mM SQ or 6 mM glucose and 15 ml N2/CO2 gas in the headspace; samples were collected when the cultures had entered stationary phase (t). For a calculation of the carbon and electron recoveries for mixed-acid fermentation of SQ and glucose by E. coli in pure culture, see Supplementary Table S1. The data represents the mean of at least three growth experiments; the SD is indicated.
FIGURE 5Linearized growth plot illustrating substrate disappearance and formation of acetate and sulfide during growth of Desulfovibrio sp. strain DF1 with DHPS. Concentrations of DHPS (solid square), acetate (open square) and of dissolved sulfide/bisulfide in the culture fluid (open circle) were determined and the values plotted against biomass formation (OD 580 nm). Note that we did not determine the fraction of H2S dissolved in the gas phase of the culture vessel, which is thus missing in the overall sulfur quantitation. No sulfate or sulfite were detectable in the culture at any time during growth (not shown). This growth experiment was conducted once when sampled in such detail; the substrate disappearance, biomass and product formation were confirmed in smaller scale when evaluating only the outgrown cultures (t) (see Figure 4).
FIGURE 6Co-culture of E. coli K-12 and Desulfovibrio sp. strain DF1 growing with SQ under fermentative conditions. The culture was incubated in a 60 ml serum flask containing, initially, 25 ml culture fluid and 35 ml N2/CO2 gas in the headspace; at each time interval, 1.0 ml of sample was removed with a syringe. (A) Biomass formation as monitored by optical density (OD580), open circles; disappearance of SQ, solid circles. (B) Degradation products as detected in the culture supernatant; DHPS, solid triangles; acetate, open circles; dissolved sulfide, solid circles; succinate, open triangles; formate, open squares. The growth experiment was replicated once when sampled in such detail; substrate disappearance, biomass and product formation was confirmed in smaller scale when evaluating only the outgrown co-cultures (t) (see Figure 4).
FIGURE 7(A,B) Proteomic identification of DHPS-inducible proteins in cell-free extracts of DHPS-grown Desulfovibrio sp. strain DF1 in comparison to lactate/sulfate-grown cells. (A) Two-dimensional PAGE gels. All prominent protein spots (labeled D1–D8) that were found exclusively on the gel for DHPS-grown cells were excised and identified by peptide fingerprinting mass spectrometry. Their identities are described in the main text. The identification of the protein spots was done once. (B) Total-proteomics results. Shown are proteins which were highly abundant exclusively in DHPS-grown cell extracts in comparison to constitutively expressed proteins for sulfate reduction, sulfite reduction and other cellular functions (control). IMG locus tag numbers are given for each protein. The results were replicated once when starting from an independent growth experiment.
FIGURE 8NAD+-dependent DHPS oxidation by recombinant dehydrogenase DhpA. The reactions contained 0.85 μg/ml DhpA in 50 mM Tris–HCl buffer at pH 9.5. The DHPS concentration was varied in the presence of 10 mM NAD+ and the initial rates of NADH formation were determined spectrophotometrically as increase of absorbance at 340 nm. The data shown represents the mean ± SD of three technical replicates.
FIGURE 9NAD+-dependent SLA oxidation to SL by recombinant dehydrogenase SlaB. Substrate SLA for candidate SLA dehydrogenase SlaB was generated from DHPS by coupling of the DhpA reaction. The reactions contained 5 μg/ml DhpA, 16.5 μg/ml SlaB, 5 mM DHPS and 10 mM NAD+ in 50 mM Tris–HCl buffer at pH 9.0. Shown are HPLC-MS ion trace chromatograms (ITC) of samples taken after the reactions when screening for the quasimolecular ions of SLA (left panel) and SL (right panel). (A) Ion trace chromatograms demonstrating formation of SLA and SL in a reaction containing both enzymes, SlaB and DhpA. (B) Ion trace chromatograms of control reaction containing active DhpA and heat-inactivated SlaB. The results (A,B) were replicated once with independently prepared enzyme preparations. No quantitative measurements were possible for SLA due to the lack of an analytical standard.
FIGURE 10Cleavage of SL into pyruvate and sulfite by recombinant SuyAB proteins. The reactions contained 150 μg/ml SuyA and/or 600 μg/ml SuyB and 2.5 mM SL in 100 mM anoxic MOPS buffer at pH 7.0, containing 10% glycerol and 1 mM FeCl2. Formation of pyruvate and sulfite was detected by HPLC-UV/Vis in samples taken discontinuously and after derivatization with DNPH and NAM, respectively (see Section “Materials and Methods”). Left panel: pyruvate formation. Right panel: sulfite formation. Upward triangles, reaction containing SuyA; downward triangles, reaction containing SuyB; squares, reactions containing both subunits, SuyA and B. The results were replicated once with an independently prepared enzyme preparation.
FIGURE 11Distribution of SuyB in bacterial genomes. Pie charts illustrating the distribution of 397 BLAST hits retrieved from the non-redundant database when searching for SuyB homologs with a threshold of >70% on the phylum/class level (A) and in the order Desulfovibrionales (B).