Proteomic analysis of organic sulfur compound utilisation in Advenella mimigardefordensis strain DPN7T

Meinert C., Brandt U., Heine V., Beyert J., Schmidl S., Wübbeler J., Voigt B., Riedel K., Steinbüchel A.

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

2-Mercaptosuccinate (MS) and 3,3'-ditiodipropionate (DTDP) were discussed as precursor substance for production of polythioesters (PTE). Therefore, degradation of MS and DTDP was investigated in Advenella mimigardefordensis strain DPN7T, applying differential proteomic analysis, gene deletion and enzyme assays. Protein extracts of cells cultivated with MS, DTDP or 3-sulfinopropionic acid (SP) were compared with those cultivated with propionate (P) and/or succinate (S). The chaperone DnaK (ratio DTDP/P 9.2, 3SP/P 4.0, MS/S 6.1, DTDP/S 6.2) and a Do-like serine protease (DegP) were increased during utilization of all organic sulfur compounds. Furthermore, a putative bacterioferritin (locus tag MIM-c12960) showed high abundance (ratio DTDP/P 5.3, 3SP/P 3.2, MS/S 4.8, DTDP/S 3.9) and is probably involved in a thiol-specific stress response. The deletion of two genes encoding transcriptional regulators (LysR (MIM-c31370) and Xre (MIM-c31360)) in the close proximity of the relevant genes of DTDP catabolism (acdA, mdo and the genes encoding the enzymes of the methylcitric acid cycle; prpC,acnD, prpF and prpB) showed that these two regulators are essential for growth of A. mimigardefordensis strain DPN7T with DTDP and that they most probably regulate transcription of genes mandatory for this catabolic pathway. Furthermore, proteome analysis revealed a high abundance (ratio MS/S 10.9) of a hypothetical cupin-2-domain containing protein (MIM-c37420). This protein shows an amino acid sequence similarity of 60% to a newly identified MS dioxygenase from Variovorax paradoxus strain B4. Deletion of the gene and the adjacently located transcriptional regulator LysR, as well as heterologous expression of MIM-c37420, the putative mercaptosuccinate dioxygenase (Msdo) from A. mimigardefordensis, showed that this protein is the key enzyme of MS degradation in A. mimigardefordensis strain DPN7T (KM 0.2 mM, specific activity 17.1 μmol mg-1 min-1) and is controlled by LysR (MIM-c37410).

Details about the publication

JournalPloS one (PLoS One)
Volume12
Issue3
StatusPublished
Release year2017
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1371/journal.pone.0174256
Link to the full texthttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85017005417&origin=inward

Authors from the University of Münster

Steinbüchel, Alexander
Professur für Molekulare Mikrobiologie und Biotechnologie (Prof. Steinbüchel)