| Literature DB >> 30728080 |
Ke Yu1,2,3,4, Shan Yi5, Bing Li6,7, Feng Guo6,8, Xingxing Peng6,9, Zhiping Wang6,10, Yang Wu11, Lisa Alvarez-Cohen5,12, Tong Zhang13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Understanding microbial interactions in engineering bioprocesses is important to enhance and optimize performance outcomes and requires dissection of the multi-layer complexities of microbial communities. However, unraveling microbial interactions as well as substrates involved in complex microbial communities is a challenging task. Here, we demonstrate an integrated approach of metagenomics, metatranscriptomics, and targeted metabolite analysis to identify the substrates involved in interspecies interactions from a potential cross-feeding model community-bisphenol A (BPA)-biodegrading community, aiming to establish an identification method of microbial interactions in engineering or environmental bioprocesses.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial interactions; Biodegradation; Bisphenol A; Integrated meta-omics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30728080 PMCID: PMC6366072 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-019-0634-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Fig. 1Scheme of the experimental design and analytical pipeline used in this study. Targeted metabolite analysis (green lines) was used to investigate the biodegradation intermediates and dynamics, which were integrated with metagenomic annotation (blue lines) to construct the community-wide BPA-mineralizing pathways. Integrated analyses of 16S-sequencing (light blue lines), metagenomics, and metatranscriptomics (orange lines) identified functionally active populations and metabolic pathways of individual strains in the community. Correlation of individual activities and overall community-wide BPA mineralization revealed the interactions of major community populations (thick red line) which was confirmed by the genomic and metabolite analysis of bacterial isolates from the community (fine blue line and fine red line, respectively)
Fig. 2Community-level BPA biodegradation dynamics and pathways. Biodegradation of BPA and intermediates in the enrichment culture amended with (a) 50 mg L−1 BPA, (b) 40 mg L−1 1-BP, (c) 40 mg L−1 4-DM, or (d) 10 mg L−1 2-BP. (a-1) 1-BP pathway and (a-2) 2-BP metabolites detected in the enrichment culture amended 50 mg L−1 BPA. * The concentrations are indicated using the secondary Y-axis. (e) Proposed BPA-mineralization pathways of the enrichment culture. Intermediates marked by orange indicate the degradation products detected by LC-MS/MS from enrichment culture. The details on detection of degradation products are summarized in Additional file 9: Table S1. Genes colored blue were deduced from metagenomic analysis. Abbreviations, BPA, bisphenol A; 1-BP, 1,2-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-propanol; 2-BP, 2,2-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)-1-propanol; 4-DM, 4,4′-dihydroxyl-α-methylstilbene; 2,4-BP: 2,2-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)-propanoate; 3,4-BP, 2,3-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)-1,2-propanediol; 4-HBD, 4-hydroxybenzaldehyde; 4-HBZ, 4-hydroxybenzoate; 4-HAP, 4-hydroxy-acetophenone; 4-HPAT, 4′-hydroxyphenyl acetate; 4-HPAH, 4-hydroxyphenacyl alcohol; HQN, hydroquinone; 3,4-DHB, 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate; 4-CHS, 4-carboxy-2-hydroxymuconate semialdehyde; 2-HHD, 2-hydroxy-2-hydropyrone-4,6-dicarboxylate; 2-PD, 2-pyrone-4,6-dicarboxylate; 4-OS, 4-oxalome-saconate; 4-CHM, 4-carboxy-2-hydroxy-cis,cis-muconate; 4-CHO, 4-carboxy-4-hydroxy-2-oxoadipate; PYV, pyruvate; OLA, oxaloacetate; HMS, 4-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde; MLL, maleylacetate; β-CM, β-carboxy-muconate; γ-CL, gamma-carboxymucono-lactone; 3-OEL, 3-oxoadipate-enol-lactone; 3-ODP, 3-oxoadipate; 3-OAC, 3-oxoadipyl-CoA; SCC, succinyl-CoA. Gene names are summarized in Additional file 10: Table S6
Fig. 3Genomes of dominant species recovered from binning analysis using bi-dimensional coverage plots on metagenomic datasets. Percentage suggests the relative abundance of 16S rRNA gene of the recovered genome in the community
Fig. 4Differential expression of genes involved in the BPA-mineralization process and the pattern of substrate cross-feeding between BPA-degrading Sphingomonas spp. and BPA non-degraders Pseudomonas sp. and Pusillimonas sp. Specific label “S,” “1,” and “2” indicates Sph-1 and Sph-2 share the same sequence between each other, Sph-1 unique sequence and Sph-2 unique sequence, respectively
Fig. 5Biodegradation behavior and growth of Sph-2 in axenic culture and in co-culture with Pseudomonas sp. Biodegradation of BPA by Sph-2 axenic culture (a) or Sph-2/Pseudomonas sp. co-culture (b); total organic carbon detected in Sph-2 axenic culture and co-culture with Pseudomonas sp. (c); cell growth detected in Sph-2 axenic culture and co-culture with Pseudomonas sp. (d). Error bars indicate the standard deviation of biological triplicates
Fig. 6Proposed substrate cross-feeding between BPA-degrading Sphingomonas sp. and non-degrading Pseudomonas sp. or Pusillimonas sp. A simplified pathway presentation of major substrates found in the bulk community environment (a); Sphingomonas sp. in the community transformed BPA to 1-BP, 4-DM, and 2-BP during the initial stage of biodegradation (b); then further transformed 1-BP and 4-DM to either 4-HBD or 4-HAP; 4-HBD was quickly converted to 4-HBZ; both of 4-HBD and 4-HBZ were used by Pseudomonas sp. and Pusillimonas sp. (c); and Sphingomonas started consuming 2-BP after 4-HBD/4-HBZ depletion, while Pseudomonas coverts 4-HAP to 4-HPAT and then HQN (d); HQN was degraded by the Pusillimonas. Lines with green arrow suggests the interaction was confirmed by experiment by using isolates