Cargando…

A Tar aspartate receptor and Rubisco-like protein substitute biotin in the growth of rhizobial strains

Biotin is a key cofactor of metabolic carboxylases, although many rhizobial strains are biotin auxotrophs. When some of these strains were serially subcultured in minimal medium, they showed diminished growth and increased excretion of metabolites. The addition of biotin, or genetic complementation...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Vargas-Lagunas, Carmen, Mora, Yolanda, Aguilar, Alejandro, Reyes-González, Alma Ruth, Arteaga-Ide, Alejandra, Dunn, Michael F., Encarnación, Sergio, Girard, Lourdes, Peralta, Humberto, Mora, Jaime
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Microbiology Society 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8914248/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35077343
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.001130
_version_ 1784667664341270528
author Vargas-Lagunas, Carmen
Mora, Yolanda
Aguilar, Alejandro
Reyes-González, Alma Ruth
Arteaga-Ide, Alejandra
Dunn, Michael F.
Encarnación, Sergio
Girard, Lourdes
Peralta, Humberto
Mora, Jaime
author_facet Vargas-Lagunas, Carmen
Mora, Yolanda
Aguilar, Alejandro
Reyes-González, Alma Ruth
Arteaga-Ide, Alejandra
Dunn, Michael F.
Encarnación, Sergio
Girard, Lourdes
Peralta, Humberto
Mora, Jaime
author_sort Vargas-Lagunas, Carmen
collection PubMed
description Biotin is a key cofactor of metabolic carboxylases, although many rhizobial strains are biotin auxotrophs. When some of these strains were serially subcultured in minimal medium, they showed diminished growth and increased excretion of metabolites. The addition of biotin, or genetic complementation with biotin synthesis genes resulted in full growth of Rhizobium etli CFN42 and Rhizobium phaseoli CIAT652 strains. Half of rhizobial genomes did not show genes for biotin biosynthesis, but three-quarters had genes for biotin transport. Some strains had genes for an avidin homologue (rhizavidin), a protein with high affinity for biotin but an unknown role in bacteria. A CFN42-derived rhizavidin mutant showed a sharper growth decrease in subcultures, revealing a role in biotin storage. In the search of biotin-independent growth of subcultures, CFN42 and CIAT652 strains with excess aeration showed optimal growth, as they also did, unexpectedly, with the addition of aspartic acid analogues α- and N-methyl aspartate. Aspartate analogues can be sensed by the chemotaxis aspartate receptor Tar. A tar homologue was identified and its mutants showed no growth recovery with aspartate analogues, indicating requirement of the Tar receptor in such a phenotype. Additionally, tar mutants did not recover full growth with excess aeration. A Rubisco-like protein was found to be necessary for growth as the corresponding mutants showed no recovery either with high aeration or aspartate analogues; also, diminished carboxylation was observed. Taken together, our results indicate a route of biotin-independent growth in rhizobial strains that included oxygen, a Tar receptor and a previously uncharacterized Rubisco-like protein.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8914248
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Microbiology Society
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-89142482022-03-14 A Tar aspartate receptor and Rubisco-like protein substitute biotin in the growth of rhizobial strains Vargas-Lagunas, Carmen Mora, Yolanda Aguilar, Alejandro Reyes-González, Alma Ruth Arteaga-Ide, Alejandra Dunn, Michael F. Encarnación, Sergio Girard, Lourdes Peralta, Humberto Mora, Jaime Microbiology (Reading) Microbial Physiology, Biochemistry and Metabolism Biotin is a key cofactor of metabolic carboxylases, although many rhizobial strains are biotin auxotrophs. When some of these strains were serially subcultured in minimal medium, they showed diminished growth and increased excretion of metabolites. The addition of biotin, or genetic complementation with biotin synthesis genes resulted in full growth of Rhizobium etli CFN42 and Rhizobium phaseoli CIAT652 strains. Half of rhizobial genomes did not show genes for biotin biosynthesis, but three-quarters had genes for biotin transport. Some strains had genes for an avidin homologue (rhizavidin), a protein with high affinity for biotin but an unknown role in bacteria. A CFN42-derived rhizavidin mutant showed a sharper growth decrease in subcultures, revealing a role in biotin storage. In the search of biotin-independent growth of subcultures, CFN42 and CIAT652 strains with excess aeration showed optimal growth, as they also did, unexpectedly, with the addition of aspartic acid analogues α- and N-methyl aspartate. Aspartate analogues can be sensed by the chemotaxis aspartate receptor Tar. A tar homologue was identified and its mutants showed no growth recovery with aspartate analogues, indicating requirement of the Tar receptor in such a phenotype. Additionally, tar mutants did not recover full growth with excess aeration. A Rubisco-like protein was found to be necessary for growth as the corresponding mutants showed no recovery either with high aeration or aspartate analogues; also, diminished carboxylation was observed. Taken together, our results indicate a route of biotin-independent growth in rhizobial strains that included oxygen, a Tar receptor and a previously uncharacterized Rubisco-like protein. Microbiology Society 2022-01-25 /pmc/articles/PMC8914248/ /pubmed/35077343 http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.001130 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.
spellingShingle Microbial Physiology, Biochemistry and Metabolism
Vargas-Lagunas, Carmen
Mora, Yolanda
Aguilar, Alejandro
Reyes-González, Alma Ruth
Arteaga-Ide, Alejandra
Dunn, Michael F.
Encarnación, Sergio
Girard, Lourdes
Peralta, Humberto
Mora, Jaime
A Tar aspartate receptor and Rubisco-like protein substitute biotin in the growth of rhizobial strains
title A Tar aspartate receptor and Rubisco-like protein substitute biotin in the growth of rhizobial strains
title_full A Tar aspartate receptor and Rubisco-like protein substitute biotin in the growth of rhizobial strains
title_fullStr A Tar aspartate receptor and Rubisco-like protein substitute biotin in the growth of rhizobial strains
title_full_unstemmed A Tar aspartate receptor and Rubisco-like protein substitute biotin in the growth of rhizobial strains
title_short A Tar aspartate receptor and Rubisco-like protein substitute biotin in the growth of rhizobial strains
title_sort tar aspartate receptor and rubisco-like protein substitute biotin in the growth of rhizobial strains
topic Microbial Physiology, Biochemistry and Metabolism
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8914248/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35077343
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.001130
work_keys_str_mv AT vargaslagunascarmen ataraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT morayolanda ataraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT aguilaralejandro ataraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT reyesgonzalezalmaruth ataraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT arteagaidealejandra ataraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT dunnmichaelf ataraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT encarnacionsergio ataraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT girardlourdes ataraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT peraltahumberto ataraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT morajaime ataraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT vargaslagunascarmen taraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT morayolanda taraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT aguilaralejandro taraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT reyesgonzalezalmaruth taraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT arteagaidealejandra taraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT dunnmichaelf taraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT encarnacionsergio taraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT girardlourdes taraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT peraltahumberto taraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains
AT morajaime taraspartatereceptorandrubiscolikeproteinsubstitutebiotininthegrowthofrhizobialstrains