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Clostridium sticklandii, a specialist in amino acid degradation:revisiting its metabolism through its genome sequence

BACKGROUND: Clostridium sticklandii belongs to a cluster of non-pathogenic proteolytic clostridia which utilize amino acids as carbon and energy sources. Isolated by T.C. Stadtman in 1954, it has been generally regarded as a "gold mine" for novel biochemical reactions and is used as a mode...

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Autores principales: Fonknechten, Nuria, Chaussonnerie, Sébastien, Tricot, Sabine, Lajus, Aurélie, Andreesen, Jan R, Perchat, Nadia, Pelletier, Eric, Gouyvenoux, Michel, Barbe, Valérie, Salanoubat, Marcel, Le Paslier, Denis, Weissenbach, Jean, Cohen, Georges N, Kreimeyer, Annett
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3091704/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20937090
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-555
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author Fonknechten, Nuria
Chaussonnerie, Sébastien
Tricot, Sabine
Lajus, Aurélie
Andreesen, Jan R
Perchat, Nadia
Pelletier, Eric
Gouyvenoux, Michel
Barbe, Valérie
Salanoubat, Marcel
Le Paslier, Denis
Weissenbach, Jean
Cohen, Georges N
Kreimeyer, Annett
author_facet Fonknechten, Nuria
Chaussonnerie, Sébastien
Tricot, Sabine
Lajus, Aurélie
Andreesen, Jan R
Perchat, Nadia
Pelletier, Eric
Gouyvenoux, Michel
Barbe, Valérie
Salanoubat, Marcel
Le Paslier, Denis
Weissenbach, Jean
Cohen, Georges N
Kreimeyer, Annett
author_sort Fonknechten, Nuria
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Clostridium sticklandii belongs to a cluster of non-pathogenic proteolytic clostridia which utilize amino acids as carbon and energy sources. Isolated by T.C. Stadtman in 1954, it has been generally regarded as a "gold mine" for novel biochemical reactions and is used as a model organism for studying metabolic aspects such as the Stickland reaction, coenzyme-B12- and selenium-dependent reactions of amino acids. With the goal of revisiting its carbon, nitrogen, and energy metabolism, and comparing studies with other clostridia, its genome has been sequenced and analyzed. RESULTS: C. sticklandii is one of the best biochemically studied proteolytic clostridial species. Useful additional information has been obtained from the sequencing and annotation of its genome, which is presented in this paper. Besides, experimental procedures reveal that C. sticklandii degrades amino acids in a preferential and sequential way. The organism prefers threonine, arginine, serine, cysteine, proline, and glycine, whereas glutamate, aspartate and alanine are excreted. Energy conservation is primarily obtained by substrate-level phosphorylation in fermentative pathways. The reactions catalyzed by different ferredoxin oxidoreductases and the exergonic NADH-dependent reduction of crotonyl-CoA point to a possible chemiosmotic energy conservation via the Rnf complex. C. sticklandii possesses both the F-type and V-type ATPases. The discovery of an as yet unrecognized selenoprotein in the D-proline reductase operon suggests a more detailed mechanism for NADH-dependent D-proline reduction. A rather unusual metabolic feature is the presence of genes for all the enzymes involved in two different CO(2)-fixation pathways: C. sticklandii harbours both the glycine synthase/glycine reductase and the Wood-Ljungdahl pathways. This unusual pathway combination has retrospectively been observed in only four other sequenced microorganisms. CONCLUSIONS: Analysis of the C. sticklandii genome and additional experimental procedures have improved our understanding of anaerobic amino acid degradation. Several specific metabolic features have been detected, some of which are very unusual for anaerobic fermenting bacteria. Comparative genomics has provided the opportunity to study the lifestyle of pathogenic and non-pathogenic clostridial species as well as to elucidate the difference in metabolic features between clostridia and other anaerobes.
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spelling pubmed-30917042011-05-11 Clostridium sticklandii, a specialist in amino acid degradation:revisiting its metabolism through its genome sequence Fonknechten, Nuria Chaussonnerie, Sébastien Tricot, Sabine Lajus, Aurélie Andreesen, Jan R Perchat, Nadia Pelletier, Eric Gouyvenoux, Michel Barbe, Valérie Salanoubat, Marcel Le Paslier, Denis Weissenbach, Jean Cohen, Georges N Kreimeyer, Annett BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Clostridium sticklandii belongs to a cluster of non-pathogenic proteolytic clostridia which utilize amino acids as carbon and energy sources. Isolated by T.C. Stadtman in 1954, it has been generally regarded as a "gold mine" for novel biochemical reactions and is used as a model organism for studying metabolic aspects such as the Stickland reaction, coenzyme-B12- and selenium-dependent reactions of amino acids. With the goal of revisiting its carbon, nitrogen, and energy metabolism, and comparing studies with other clostridia, its genome has been sequenced and analyzed. RESULTS: C. sticklandii is one of the best biochemically studied proteolytic clostridial species. Useful additional information has been obtained from the sequencing and annotation of its genome, which is presented in this paper. Besides, experimental procedures reveal that C. sticklandii degrades amino acids in a preferential and sequential way. The organism prefers threonine, arginine, serine, cysteine, proline, and glycine, whereas glutamate, aspartate and alanine are excreted. Energy conservation is primarily obtained by substrate-level phosphorylation in fermentative pathways. The reactions catalyzed by different ferredoxin oxidoreductases and the exergonic NADH-dependent reduction of crotonyl-CoA point to a possible chemiosmotic energy conservation via the Rnf complex. C. sticklandii possesses both the F-type and V-type ATPases. The discovery of an as yet unrecognized selenoprotein in the D-proline reductase operon suggests a more detailed mechanism for NADH-dependent D-proline reduction. A rather unusual metabolic feature is the presence of genes for all the enzymes involved in two different CO(2)-fixation pathways: C. sticklandii harbours both the glycine synthase/glycine reductase and the Wood-Ljungdahl pathways. This unusual pathway combination has retrospectively been observed in only four other sequenced microorganisms. CONCLUSIONS: Analysis of the C. sticklandii genome and additional experimental procedures have improved our understanding of anaerobic amino acid degradation. Several specific metabolic features have been detected, some of which are very unusual for anaerobic fermenting bacteria. Comparative genomics has provided the opportunity to study the lifestyle of pathogenic and non-pathogenic clostridial species as well as to elucidate the difference in metabolic features between clostridia and other anaerobes. BioMed Central 2010-10-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3091704/ /pubmed/20937090 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-555 Text en Copyright ©2010 Fonknechten et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fonknechten, Nuria
Chaussonnerie, Sébastien
Tricot, Sabine
Lajus, Aurélie
Andreesen, Jan R
Perchat, Nadia
Pelletier, Eric
Gouyvenoux, Michel
Barbe, Valérie
Salanoubat, Marcel
Le Paslier, Denis
Weissenbach, Jean
Cohen, Georges N
Kreimeyer, Annett
Clostridium sticklandii, a specialist in amino acid degradation:revisiting its metabolism through its genome sequence
title Clostridium sticklandii, a specialist in amino acid degradation:revisiting its metabolism through its genome sequence
title_full Clostridium sticklandii, a specialist in amino acid degradation:revisiting its metabolism through its genome sequence
title_fullStr Clostridium sticklandii, a specialist in amino acid degradation:revisiting its metabolism through its genome sequence
title_full_unstemmed Clostridium sticklandii, a specialist in amino acid degradation:revisiting its metabolism through its genome sequence
title_short Clostridium sticklandii, a specialist in amino acid degradation:revisiting its metabolism through its genome sequence
title_sort clostridium sticklandii, a specialist in amino acid degradation:revisiting its metabolism through its genome sequence
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3091704/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20937090
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-555
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