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Elucidating the molecular physiology of lantibiotic NAI-107 production in Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024

BACKGROUND: The filamentous actinomycete Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024 produces the lantibiotic NAI-107, which is an antibiotic peptide effective against multidrug-resistant Gram-positive bacteria. In actinomycetes, antibiotic production is often associated with a physiological differentiation program...

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Autores principales: Gallo, Giuseppe, Renzone, Giovanni, Palazzotto, Emilia, Monciardini, Paolo, Arena, Simona, Faddetta, Teresa, Giardina, Anna, Alduina, Rosa, Weber, Tilmann, Sangiorgi, Fabio, Russo, Alessandro, Spinelli, Giovanni, Sosio, Margherita, Scaloni, Andrea, Puglia, Anna Maria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4709908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26754974
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-016-2369-z
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author Gallo, Giuseppe
Renzone, Giovanni
Palazzotto, Emilia
Monciardini, Paolo
Arena, Simona
Faddetta, Teresa
Giardina, Anna
Alduina, Rosa
Weber, Tilmann
Sangiorgi, Fabio
Russo, Alessandro
Spinelli, Giovanni
Sosio, Margherita
Scaloni, Andrea
Puglia, Anna Maria
author_facet Gallo, Giuseppe
Renzone, Giovanni
Palazzotto, Emilia
Monciardini, Paolo
Arena, Simona
Faddetta, Teresa
Giardina, Anna
Alduina, Rosa
Weber, Tilmann
Sangiorgi, Fabio
Russo, Alessandro
Spinelli, Giovanni
Sosio, Margherita
Scaloni, Andrea
Puglia, Anna Maria
author_sort Gallo, Giuseppe
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The filamentous actinomycete Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024 produces the lantibiotic NAI-107, which is an antibiotic peptide effective against multidrug-resistant Gram-positive bacteria. In actinomycetes, antibiotic production is often associated with a physiological differentiation program controlled by a complex regulatory and metabolic network that may be elucidated by the integration of genomic, proteomic and bioinformatic tools. Accordingly, an extensive evaluation of the proteomic changes associated with NAI-107 production was performed on Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024 by combining two-dimensional difference in gel electrophoresis, mass spectrometry and gene ontology approaches. RESULTS: Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024 cultivations in a complex medium were characterized by stages of biomass accumulation (A) followed by biomass yield decline (D). NAI-107 production started at 90 h (A stage), reached a maximum at 140 h (D stage) and decreased thereafter. To reveal patterns of differentially represented proteins associated with NAI-107 production onset and maintenance, differential proteomic analyses were carried-out on biomass samples collected: i) before (66 h) and during (90 h) NAI-107 production at A stage; ii) during three time-points (117, 140, and 162 h) at D stage characterized by different profiles of NAI-107 yield accumulation (117 and 140 h) and decrement (162 h). Regulatory, metabolic and unknown-function proteins, were identified and functionally clustered, revealing that nutritional signals, regulatory cascades and primary metabolism shift-down trigger the accumulation of protein components involved in nitrogen and phosphate metabolism, cell wall biosynthesis/maturation, lipid metabolism, osmotic stress response, multi-drug resistance, and NAI-107 transport. The stimulating role on physiological differentiation of a TetR-like regulator, originally identified in this study, was confirmed by the construction of an over-expressing strain. Finally, the possible role of cellular response to membrane stability alterations and of multi-drug resistance ABC transporters as additional self-resistance mechanisms toward the lantibiotic was confirmed by proteomic and confocal microscopy experiments on a Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024 lantibiotic-null producer strain which was exposed to an externally-added amount of NAI-107 during growth. CONCLUSION: This study provides a net contribution to the elucidation of the regulatory, metabolic and molecular patterns controlling physiological differentiation in Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024, supporting the relevance of proteomics in revealing protein players of antibiotic biosynthesis in actinomycetes. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-016-2369-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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spelling pubmed-47099082016-01-13 Elucidating the molecular physiology of lantibiotic NAI-107 production in Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024 Gallo, Giuseppe Renzone, Giovanni Palazzotto, Emilia Monciardini, Paolo Arena, Simona Faddetta, Teresa Giardina, Anna Alduina, Rosa Weber, Tilmann Sangiorgi, Fabio Russo, Alessandro Spinelli, Giovanni Sosio, Margherita Scaloni, Andrea Puglia, Anna Maria BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: The filamentous actinomycete Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024 produces the lantibiotic NAI-107, which is an antibiotic peptide effective against multidrug-resistant Gram-positive bacteria. In actinomycetes, antibiotic production is often associated with a physiological differentiation program controlled by a complex regulatory and metabolic network that may be elucidated by the integration of genomic, proteomic and bioinformatic tools. Accordingly, an extensive evaluation of the proteomic changes associated with NAI-107 production was performed on Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024 by combining two-dimensional difference in gel electrophoresis, mass spectrometry and gene ontology approaches. RESULTS: Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024 cultivations in a complex medium were characterized by stages of biomass accumulation (A) followed by biomass yield decline (D). NAI-107 production started at 90 h (A stage), reached a maximum at 140 h (D stage) and decreased thereafter. To reveal patterns of differentially represented proteins associated with NAI-107 production onset and maintenance, differential proteomic analyses were carried-out on biomass samples collected: i) before (66 h) and during (90 h) NAI-107 production at A stage; ii) during three time-points (117, 140, and 162 h) at D stage characterized by different profiles of NAI-107 yield accumulation (117 and 140 h) and decrement (162 h). Regulatory, metabolic and unknown-function proteins, were identified and functionally clustered, revealing that nutritional signals, regulatory cascades and primary metabolism shift-down trigger the accumulation of protein components involved in nitrogen and phosphate metabolism, cell wall biosynthesis/maturation, lipid metabolism, osmotic stress response, multi-drug resistance, and NAI-107 transport. The stimulating role on physiological differentiation of a TetR-like regulator, originally identified in this study, was confirmed by the construction of an over-expressing strain. Finally, the possible role of cellular response to membrane stability alterations and of multi-drug resistance ABC transporters as additional self-resistance mechanisms toward the lantibiotic was confirmed by proteomic and confocal microscopy experiments on a Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024 lantibiotic-null producer strain which was exposed to an externally-added amount of NAI-107 during growth. CONCLUSION: This study provides a net contribution to the elucidation of the regulatory, metabolic and molecular patterns controlling physiological differentiation in Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024, supporting the relevance of proteomics in revealing protein players of antibiotic biosynthesis in actinomycetes. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-016-2369-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. BioMed Central 2016-01-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4709908/ /pubmed/26754974 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-016-2369-z Text en © Gallo et al. 2016 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gallo, Giuseppe
Renzone, Giovanni
Palazzotto, Emilia
Monciardini, Paolo
Arena, Simona
Faddetta, Teresa
Giardina, Anna
Alduina, Rosa
Weber, Tilmann
Sangiorgi, Fabio
Russo, Alessandro
Spinelli, Giovanni
Sosio, Margherita
Scaloni, Andrea
Puglia, Anna Maria
Elucidating the molecular physiology of lantibiotic NAI-107 production in Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024
title Elucidating the molecular physiology of lantibiotic NAI-107 production in Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024
title_full Elucidating the molecular physiology of lantibiotic NAI-107 production in Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024
title_fullStr Elucidating the molecular physiology of lantibiotic NAI-107 production in Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024
title_full_unstemmed Elucidating the molecular physiology of lantibiotic NAI-107 production in Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024
title_short Elucidating the molecular physiology of lantibiotic NAI-107 production in Microbispora ATCC-PTA-5024
title_sort elucidating the molecular physiology of lantibiotic nai-107 production in microbispora atcc-pta-5024
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4709908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26754974
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-016-2369-z
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