Cargando…

Metabolic Exchange with Non-Alkane-Consuming Pseudomonas stutzeri SLG510A3-8 Improves n-Alkane Biodegradation by the Alkane Degrader Dietzia sp. Strain DQ12-45-1b

Biodegradation of alkanes by microbial communities is ubiquitous in nature. Interestingly, the microbial communities with high hydrocarbon-degrading performances are sometimes composed of not only hydrocarbon degraders but also nonconsumers, but the synergistic mechanisms remain unknown. Here, we fo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hu, Bing, Wang, Miaoxiao, Geng, Shuang, Wen, Liqun, Wu, Mengdi, Nie, Yong, Tang, Yue-Qin, Wu, Xiao-Lei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7117941/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32033953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02931-19
_version_ 1783514462043504640
author Hu, Bing
Wang, Miaoxiao
Geng, Shuang
Wen, Liqun
Wu, Mengdi
Nie, Yong
Tang, Yue-Qin
Wu, Xiao-Lei
author_facet Hu, Bing
Wang, Miaoxiao
Geng, Shuang
Wen, Liqun
Wu, Mengdi
Nie, Yong
Tang, Yue-Qin
Wu, Xiao-Lei
author_sort Hu, Bing
collection PubMed
description Biodegradation of alkanes by microbial communities is ubiquitous in nature. Interestingly, the microbial communities with high hydrocarbon-degrading performances are sometimes composed of not only hydrocarbon degraders but also nonconsumers, but the synergistic mechanisms remain unknown. Here, we found that two bacterial strains isolated from Chinese oil fields, Dietzia sp. strain DQ12-45-1b and Pseudomonas stutzeri SLG510A3-8, had a synergistic effect on hexadecane (C(16) compound) biodegradation, even though P. stutzeri could not utilize C(16) individually. To gain a better understanding of the roles of the alkane nonconsumer P. stutzeri in the C(16)-degrading consortium, we reconstructed a two-species stoichiometric metabolic model, iBH1908, and integrated in silico prediction with the following in vitro validation, a comparative proteomics analysis, and extracellular metabolomic detection. Metabolic interactions between P. stutzeri and Dietzia sp. were successfully revealed to have importance in efficient C(16) degradation. In the process, P. stutzeri survived on C(16) metabolic intermediates from Dietzia sp., including hexadecanoate, 3-hydroxybutanoate, and α-ketoglutarate. In return, P. stutzeri reorganized its metabolic flux distribution to fed back acetate and glutamate to Dietzia sp. to enhance its C(16) degradation efficiency by improving Dietzia cell accumulation and by regulating the expression of Dietzia succinate dehydrogenase. By using the synergistic microbial consortium of Dietzia sp. and P. stutzeri with the addition of the in silico-predicted key exchanged metabolites, diesel oil was effectively disposed of in 15 days with a removal fraction of 85.54% ± 6.42%, leaving small amounts of C(15) to C(20) isomers. Our finding provides a novel microbial assembling mode for efficient bioremediation or chemical production in the future. IMPORTANCE Many natural and synthetic microbial communities are composed of not only species whose biological properties are consistent with their corresponding communities but also ones whose chemophysical characteristics do not directly contribute to the performance of their communities. Even though the latter species are often essential to the microbial communities, their roles are unclear. Here, by investigation of an artificial two-member microbial consortium in n-alkane biodegradation, we showed that the microbial member without the n-alkane-degrading capability had a cross-feeding interaction with and metabolic regulation to the leading member for the synergistic n-alkane biodegradation. Our study improves the current understanding of microbial interactions. Because “assistant” microbes showed importance in communities in addition to the functional microbes, our findings also suggest a useful “assistant-microbe” principle in the design of microbial communities for either bioremediation or chemical production.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7117941
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher American Society for Microbiology
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-71179412020-04-10 Metabolic Exchange with Non-Alkane-Consuming Pseudomonas stutzeri SLG510A3-8 Improves n-Alkane Biodegradation by the Alkane Degrader Dietzia sp. Strain DQ12-45-1b Hu, Bing Wang, Miaoxiao Geng, Shuang Wen, Liqun Wu, Mengdi Nie, Yong Tang, Yue-Qin Wu, Xiao-Lei Appl Environ Microbiol Environmental Microbiology Biodegradation of alkanes by microbial communities is ubiquitous in nature. Interestingly, the microbial communities with high hydrocarbon-degrading performances are sometimes composed of not only hydrocarbon degraders but also nonconsumers, but the synergistic mechanisms remain unknown. Here, we found that two bacterial strains isolated from Chinese oil fields, Dietzia sp. strain DQ12-45-1b and Pseudomonas stutzeri SLG510A3-8, had a synergistic effect on hexadecane (C(16) compound) biodegradation, even though P. stutzeri could not utilize C(16) individually. To gain a better understanding of the roles of the alkane nonconsumer P. stutzeri in the C(16)-degrading consortium, we reconstructed a two-species stoichiometric metabolic model, iBH1908, and integrated in silico prediction with the following in vitro validation, a comparative proteomics analysis, and extracellular metabolomic detection. Metabolic interactions between P. stutzeri and Dietzia sp. were successfully revealed to have importance in efficient C(16) degradation. In the process, P. stutzeri survived on C(16) metabolic intermediates from Dietzia sp., including hexadecanoate, 3-hydroxybutanoate, and α-ketoglutarate. In return, P. stutzeri reorganized its metabolic flux distribution to fed back acetate and glutamate to Dietzia sp. to enhance its C(16) degradation efficiency by improving Dietzia cell accumulation and by regulating the expression of Dietzia succinate dehydrogenase. By using the synergistic microbial consortium of Dietzia sp. and P. stutzeri with the addition of the in silico-predicted key exchanged metabolites, diesel oil was effectively disposed of in 15 days with a removal fraction of 85.54% ± 6.42%, leaving small amounts of C(15) to C(20) isomers. Our finding provides a novel microbial assembling mode for efficient bioremediation or chemical production in the future. IMPORTANCE Many natural and synthetic microbial communities are composed of not only species whose biological properties are consistent with their corresponding communities but also ones whose chemophysical characteristics do not directly contribute to the performance of their communities. Even though the latter species are often essential to the microbial communities, their roles are unclear. Here, by investigation of an artificial two-member microbial consortium in n-alkane biodegradation, we showed that the microbial member without the n-alkane-degrading capability had a cross-feeding interaction with and metabolic regulation to the leading member for the synergistic n-alkane biodegradation. Our study improves the current understanding of microbial interactions. Because “assistant” microbes showed importance in communities in addition to the functional microbes, our findings also suggest a useful “assistant-microbe” principle in the design of microbial communities for either bioremediation or chemical production. American Society for Microbiology 2020-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7117941/ /pubmed/32033953 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02931-19 Text en Copyright © 2020 Hu et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Environmental Microbiology
Hu, Bing
Wang, Miaoxiao
Geng, Shuang
Wen, Liqun
Wu, Mengdi
Nie, Yong
Tang, Yue-Qin
Wu, Xiao-Lei
Metabolic Exchange with Non-Alkane-Consuming Pseudomonas stutzeri SLG510A3-8 Improves n-Alkane Biodegradation by the Alkane Degrader Dietzia sp. Strain DQ12-45-1b
title Metabolic Exchange with Non-Alkane-Consuming Pseudomonas stutzeri SLG510A3-8 Improves n-Alkane Biodegradation by the Alkane Degrader Dietzia sp. Strain DQ12-45-1b
title_full Metabolic Exchange with Non-Alkane-Consuming Pseudomonas stutzeri SLG510A3-8 Improves n-Alkane Biodegradation by the Alkane Degrader Dietzia sp. Strain DQ12-45-1b
title_fullStr Metabolic Exchange with Non-Alkane-Consuming Pseudomonas stutzeri SLG510A3-8 Improves n-Alkane Biodegradation by the Alkane Degrader Dietzia sp. Strain DQ12-45-1b
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic Exchange with Non-Alkane-Consuming Pseudomonas stutzeri SLG510A3-8 Improves n-Alkane Biodegradation by the Alkane Degrader Dietzia sp. Strain DQ12-45-1b
title_short Metabolic Exchange with Non-Alkane-Consuming Pseudomonas stutzeri SLG510A3-8 Improves n-Alkane Biodegradation by the Alkane Degrader Dietzia sp. Strain DQ12-45-1b
title_sort metabolic exchange with non-alkane-consuming pseudomonas stutzeri slg510a3-8 improves n-alkane biodegradation by the alkane degrader dietzia sp. strain dq12-45-1b
topic Environmental Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7117941/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32033953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02931-19
work_keys_str_mv AT hubing metabolicexchangewithnonalkaneconsumingpseudomonasstutzerislg510a38improvesnalkanebiodegradationbythealkanedegraderdietziaspstraindq12451b
AT wangmiaoxiao metabolicexchangewithnonalkaneconsumingpseudomonasstutzerislg510a38improvesnalkanebiodegradationbythealkanedegraderdietziaspstraindq12451b
AT gengshuang metabolicexchangewithnonalkaneconsumingpseudomonasstutzerislg510a38improvesnalkanebiodegradationbythealkanedegraderdietziaspstraindq12451b
AT wenliqun metabolicexchangewithnonalkaneconsumingpseudomonasstutzerislg510a38improvesnalkanebiodegradationbythealkanedegraderdietziaspstraindq12451b
AT wumengdi metabolicexchangewithnonalkaneconsumingpseudomonasstutzerislg510a38improvesnalkanebiodegradationbythealkanedegraderdietziaspstraindq12451b
AT nieyong metabolicexchangewithnonalkaneconsumingpseudomonasstutzerislg510a38improvesnalkanebiodegradationbythealkanedegraderdietziaspstraindq12451b
AT tangyueqin metabolicexchangewithnonalkaneconsumingpseudomonasstutzerislg510a38improvesnalkanebiodegradationbythealkanedegraderdietziaspstraindq12451b
AT wuxiaolei metabolicexchangewithnonalkaneconsumingpseudomonasstutzerislg510a38improvesnalkanebiodegradationbythealkanedegraderdietziaspstraindq12451b