| Literature DB >> 31818955 |
Samuel H Light1,2, Raphaël Méheust3,4, Jessica L Ferrell5, Jooyoung Cho5, David Deng1,2, Marco Agostoni6, Anthony T Iavarone6,7, Jillian F Banfield3,4, Sarah E F D'Orazio5, Daniel A Portnoy8,2.
Abstract
Mineral-respiring bacteria use a process called extracellular electron transfer to route their respiratory electron transport chain to insoluble electron acceptors on the exterior of the cell. We recently characterized a flavin-based extracellular electron transfer system that is present in the foodborne pathogen Listeria monocytogenes, as well as many other Gram-positive bacteria, and which highlights a more generalized role for extracellular electron transfer in microbial metabolism. Here we identify a family of putative extracellular reductases that possess a conserved posttranslational flavinylation modification. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that divergent flavinylated extracellular reductase subfamilies possess distinct and often unidentified substrate specificities. We show that flavinylation of a member of the fumarate reductase subfamily allows this enzyme to receive electrons from the extracellular electron transfer system and support L. monocytogenes growth. We demonstrate that this represents a generalizable mechanism by finding that a L. monocytogenes strain engineered to express a flavinylated extracellular urocanate reductase uses urocanate by a related mechanism and to a similar effect. These studies thus identify an enzyme family that exploits a modular flavin-based electron transfer strategy to reduce distinct extracellular substrates and support a multifunctional view of the role of extracellular electron transfer activities in microbial physiology.Entities:
Keywords: bacterial pathogenesis; cellular respiration; electromicrobiology; exoelectrogen; fumarate/urocanate
Year: 2019 PMID: 31818955 PMCID: PMC6936397 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1915678116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205